Portland reaches agreement with police union as new study sheds light on low officer morale

Independent study of Portland Police Bureau reveals officers' distrust in 'anti-police' city leadership

Portland, Oregon and its major police union reached a tentative contract agreement Tuesday, as a new study indicates morale among the ranks and trust in city leadership is at a record low. 

Mayor Ted Wheeler announced that the city’s new collective bargaining agreement with the Portland Police Association (PPA) negotiators serves as "an investment in accountable and forward-thinking policing and includes the ability for Portland Street." The mayor’s office said the agreement is tentative and "does not include a body worn camera policy which will continue to be negotiated by the parties." 

KOIN reported that body cameras were recommended by the federal government after the Justice Department found the Portland Police Bureau was not in compliance with a 2014 joint settlement following its investigation into use of force used during 2020’s ongoing demonstrations in Portland. 

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This comes after a new independent study sheds light on declining morale withing the ranks at the Portland Police Bureau. The 80-page report, conducted by an independent law enforcement investigatory agency called the OIR Group, was based on information collected from voluntary surveys of 277 employees – 27 percent of the entire bureau – and interviews with the police department’s management, city commissioners, other city staff, and retired officers, Portland Mercury reported. 

A Portland, Ore., police officer scans the crowd while dispersing protesters, Aug. 21, 2020.  (Getty Images)

Protesters block a police car after the full acquittal verdict of teenager Kyle Rittenhouse in his Wisconsin fatal shootings trial, in Portland, Oregon, U.S. November 19, 2021. (REUTERS/John Rudoff)

Protesters and Portland police clash while dispersing a crowd gathered in front of the Portland Police Bureau North Precinct early in the morning on August 22, 2020 in Portland, Oregon.  ((Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images))

"The repeated references to a ‘lack of support’ from City government seemed even more acute than frustrations with protesters — and have seemingly contributed to a self-perpetuating dynamic of distrust and resentment," the report stated. "Such feelings are particularly focused against those in City government who are perceived to be ‘anti-police’ and therefore undermining to Bureau operations."

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The mayor’s office said the full agreement will be publicly provided next week, no later than Tuesday. A public question and answer session with City negotiators Steven Schuback and Heidi Brown is scheduled Thursday. The agreement will be brought to Council for public testimony on Feb. 17. 

The ordinance is scheduled to then come back to council for a vote on Feb. 24, the mayor’s office said in its statement, declining to comment further at this time. 

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