Collective Bargaining Rights and Police Misconduct: Evidence from Florida by Dhammika Dharmapala, Richard H. McAdams, John Rappaport :: SSRN

Authored by papers.ssrn.com and submitted by MoreOstrich

50 Pages Posted: 5 Jan 2018 Last revised: 27 Aug 2019

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Growing controversy surrounds the impact of labor unions on law enforcement behavior. Critics argue that unions impede organizational reform and insulate officers from discipline for misconduct. Yet collective bargaining tends to increase wages, which could improve officer behavior. We provide quasi-experimental empirical evidence on the effects of collective bargaining rights on violent incidents of misconduct. Our empirical strategy exploits a 2003 Florida Supreme Court decision (Williams), which conferred collective bargaining rights on sheriffs’ deputies, resulting in a substantial increase in unionization among these officers. Using a Florida state administrative database of “moral character” violations reported by local agencies between 1996 and 2015, we implement a difference-in-difference approach in which police departments (which were unaffected by Williams) serve as a control group for sheriffs’ offices (SOs). Our estimates imply that collective bargaining rights led to a substantial increase in violent incidents of misconduct among SOs, relative to police departments. The effect of collective bargaining rights is concentrated among SOs that subsequently adopted collective bargaining agreements, and the timing of the adoption of these agreements is associated with increases in violent misconduct. There is also some evidence consistent with a “bargaining in the shadow” effect among SOs that did not unionize.

AccomplishedPin5 on June 4th, 2020 at 00:22 UTC »

Unions: + will fight for wage increases and have your back against wrongful dismissals.

Unions: - will fight for wage increases even if the company isn’t making money, and have your back against rightful dismissals.

Source: I’ve worked for unions that did both those things.

I personally wasn’t fired for rightful dismissal. I saw it happen.

usernamedunbeentaken on June 3rd, 2020 at 23:21 UTC »

"While this effect may seem strikingly large, the baseline rate of violent incidents is low. The estimated effect implies an increase of 0.2 violent incidents per agency-year, relative to a pre-Williams mean among SOs of about 0.5. At a typical SO with 210 officers, this effect corresponds to one officer being involved in one additional violent incident every five years "

Hattix on June 3rd, 2020 at 22:12 UTC »

Yes, unionisation empowers the workers. You need to know if you want to empower them.

Usually you do, but sometimes you don't.