Minnesota
Related: About this forumFormer Hennepin Sheriff Hutchinson reinstated as Metro Transit police sergeant with a pay bump
https://www.startribune.com/former-hennepin-sheriff-hutchinson-reinstated-as-metro-transit-police-sergeant-with-a-pay-bump/600242373/According to the Metropolitan Council, Hutchinson was reinstated Jan. 2 as a sergeant at $55.09 per hour, or $114,587 annually. When he left Metro Transit as a sergeant in December 2018, shortly after his surprise election as county sheriff, he was paid $44.26 an hour, or $92,060 a year.
Metro Transit spokeswoman Terri Dresen declined to discuss Hutchinson's job status, duties or assignment, but in response to the Star Tribune's data practices request, he is listed as an "active" employee.
Dresen did, however, say that since Hutchinson's "reinstatement, a formal complaint has been filed. The Met Council takes this complaint very seriously and has begun a full investigation into the allegations." She did not elaborate on the nature of the complaint.
sarisataka
(20,983 posts)That I get a nearly 25% pay increase
WhiskeyGrinder
(23,830 posts)geardaddy
(25,341 posts)iemanja
(54,754 posts)progree
(11,463 posts)Metro Transit is an operating division of the Met Council
https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/fmr-hennepin-co-sheriff-dave-hutchinson-gets-previous-police-job-back-with-more-pay/
various excerpts:
Before he was elected sheriff in 2018, Hutchinson was a sergeant with MTPD. WCCO has learned that a state statute forced the department to give him that same job back once his term ended.
That statute also gives Hutchinson raises as if he never left, bumping his salary by about $20,000 to nearly $115,000 a year.
Now he's under investigation again. A spokesperson for the Met Council gave this statement to WCCO Tuesday evening: "Since Mr. Hutchinson's reinstatement, a formal complaint has been filed. The Met Council takes this complaint very seriously and has begun a full investigation into the allegations."
It's unclear what the complaint is regarding. WCCO has also learned he's on paid leave while that investigation continues.
. . . Met Council sources say they are furious they had to rehire him.
Late Wednesday evening, Minnesota State Sen. Warren Limmer says he is trying to get that statute repealed.
This article is from January 10. There might be more developments since then, I haven't checked.
iemanja
(54,754 posts)and now that voters made him king, he has even more power over them. Getting them to do their job has never been his priority.
Your excerpt says nothing about Frey's authority regarding the police.
progree
(11,463 posts)is a regional service that encompasses the greater metro area -- Minneapolis, St. Paul, many suburbs. I have never heard of Frey being in charge of all of the police in the metro area. So we will just have to disagree on that.
Before the new provisions granting Frey more power: "In the past, the Minneapolis mayor had sole control of only the police and civil rights departments. Oversight of other city departments was shared with the city council, through an executive committee. That now-defunct body was made up of the mayor, council president and several other council members.
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2022/01/10/new-era-in-minneapolis-as-more-power-shifts-to-mayor
progree
(11,463 posts)iemanja
(54,754 posts)My mistake.