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Pittsburgh police file grievance for uniform rules

Pittsburgh police car
WTAE
Pittsburgh police car
SOURCE: WTAE
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Pittsburgh police file grievance for uniform rules
The city's uniformed police officers have been given more time to comply with new rules that they wear bullet-proof vests under their shirts and not wear baseball-style caps, even as their union filed a grievance to prevent the changes.VIDEO: Watch Marcie Cipriani's reportStephen Bucar, a former FBI supervisor hired as the city's public safety director in June, agreed to delay the new rules until Sept. 10, according to a memo obtained by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. The rules were to have taken effect Monday, but are being delayed, in part, because the more formal uniform hats Bucar wants officers to wear weren't available in time.MORE: Read the letter sent by Public Safety Director Stephen BucarMeanwhile, the Fraternal Order of Police filed a grievance, saying officers have developed rashes or have found wearing the vests under their shirts were too hot or restrictive. The union also argues the more formal hats are "cumbersome," the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.Bucar met with the union last week and believes the vests make police look too "military" and that ball caps make them look like "mall guards," according to the grievance.Public safety spokeswoman Sonya Toler said research, including studies done by the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice, shows "that even slight alternations to the style of the uniform will change how citizens, including criminals, perceive the officer."City officials refused to comment on the grievance specifically, but Toler said Bucar wants uniforms to project an image of "power" and "authority.""However, he wants that message to be conveyed in a professional manner, not a tactical manner," Toler said. "Wearing the vests on the outside conveys a tactical message that (Bucar) believes is not necessary during normal patrolling."Bucar was hired to address what Mayor Bill Peduto has said is poor morale in the police bureau and a troubled relationship with the city's black community.Cameron McLay, a former police captain from Madison, Wisconsin, was hired as police chief on Tuesday and has a reputation for promoting diversity and community relations.The city's last full-time police chief, Nathan Harper, is serving 18 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to diverting city fees into an authorized slush fund from which he spent $32,000 on personal expenses.

The city's uniformed police officers have been given more time to comply with new rules that they wear bullet-proof vests under their shirts and not wear baseball-style caps, even as their union filed a grievance to prevent the changes.

VIDEO: Watch Marcie Cipriani's report

Stephen Bucar, a former FBI supervisor hired as the city's public safety director in June, agreed to delay the new rules until Sept. 10, according to a memo obtained by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. The rules were to have taken effect Monday, but are being delayed, in part, because the more formal uniform hats Bucar wants officers to wear weren't available in time.

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MORE: Read the letter sent by Public Safety Director Stephen Bucar

Meanwhile, the Fraternal Order of Police filed a grievance, saying officers have developed rashes or have found wearing the vests under their shirts were too hot or restrictive. The union also argues the more formal hats are "cumbersome," the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.

Bucar met with the union last week and believes the vests make police look too "military" and that ball caps make them look like "mall guards," according to the grievance.

Public safety spokeswoman Sonya Toler said research, including studies done by the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice, shows "that even slight alternations to the style of the uniform will change how citizens, including criminals, perceive the officer."

City officials refused to comment on the grievance specifically, but Toler said Bucar wants uniforms to project an image of "power" and "authority."

"However, he wants that message to be conveyed in a professional manner, not a tactical manner," Toler said. "Wearing the vests on the outside conveys a tactical message that (Bucar) believes is not necessary during normal patrolling."

Bucar was hired to address what Mayor Bill Peduto has said is poor morale in the police bureau and a troubled relationship with the city's black community.

Cameron McLay, a former police captain from Madison, Wisconsin, was hired as police chief on Tuesday and has a reputation for promoting diversity and community relations.

The city's last full-time police chief, Nathan Harper, is serving 18 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to diverting city fees into an authorized slush fund from which he spent $32,000 on personal expenses.