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In Politics Commentary
Chief's civilian plan stymied
The Common Council rebuffed police chief Ed Flynn's plan to hire civilian staffers.  
By Doug Hissom RSS Feed
Special to OnMilwaukee.com

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Published March 19, 2008 at 5:26 a.m.
Tags: ed flynn, mpd, tim carpenter, seniorcare, martin luther king drive, tom ewart, milwaukee county parks department, lake park lumberjack

It is the unthinkable. Civilians running the Milwaukee Police Department. That vision, at least part of it, was the brainchild of new Police Chief Ed Flynn, whose plan to reorganize the command structure at MPD was thwarted by the Common Council this week.

Flynn wanted to turn three deputy police chief positions into assistant police chief posts, as well as hire an IT computer systems person and a chief of staff, all of which would likely be filled by civilians.

The chief of staff position would fall under the chief and be responsible for bringing police department concerns to various City Hall functionaries and overseeing positions such as the public information office.

The switch would have required about an extra $50,000 a year in funding from the city. Flynn told a Common Council committee last week that he would look to promote the current deputy chiefs to assistant chiefs since "a bump up in pay means a bump up in accountability."

Some members of the Council's Finance Committee were skeptical, noting that rank and file cops would be suspect of having civilians -- a.k.a. "unsworn personnel" -- helping run the shop. The police union has long fought the idea of civilians even handling desk jobs and clerical functions, preferring that those jobs be held for officers on light duty assignments.

"We're not a castle," Flynn told the committee. "We feel we can't cowboy this thing along," he said of the task of running a modern big-city police department.

King Drive Project Comes Up Short: One of the key catalysts in redeveloping Martin Luther King Drive has come up short of city expectations. The city put up $400,000 to rehab the old Home Bank building near the corner of King and North Avenue some 17 years ago, but the combination of apartments and retail space has failed to live up to its promoted promise.

The building at 2200 N. MLK Dr. has decreased in value since it was converted into 41 apartments and 15,000 sq. ft. of retail space. The retail component has been a revolving door of tenants, helping the value to decrease. One noted initial apartment tenant in the building was then-Ald. Marlene Johnson.

The city has been asked by the building's new owners to settle for a $300,000 payoff of the $400,000 interest-free loan that's due in May 2011.

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thughes I applaud the Chief Flynn with wanting to bring about change to the police department...to ...
nikker77doodle Great idea. Would improve accountability and save us, the taxpayers money. Will ...