Only three months into the fiscal year, the Police Department has said it will likely need more overtime funds transferred to its account.

The investigation and extra patrols added to Olson Drive after the July 15 murder of Bernice McFadden have soaked up 16 percent of the year’s overtime budget already, according to Police Chief Kevin Hale.

In the July 15 incident, a man fired a gun into a crowd of people standing outside the apartments about midnight. McFadden, 39, was killed. Police are still looking for the man who shot her.

Extra patrols have been set up around the Riverside Apartment complex to ease the nerves of residents there and to make sure no one who is barred from the complex is hanging around.

The overtime for investigators and police patrols has cost the department $28,000 so far, Hale said.

“We have worked around the clock on that case for a number of days to try to get a quick resolution,” Hale said. “At the same time, we’re beefing up patrols. As we indicated, we don’t believe (McFadden) was the intended target.”

The department has $175,000 budgeted for 2009-10, and while Hale said it’s not close to hitting that mark yet, it’s still early in the fiscal year.

Monday, Hale will go before the Board of Apportionment and Taxation to let them know the department will likely need for more funds before the end of the fiscal year.

“Our overtime account isn’t going to make it until the end of the year,” Hale said.

It’s not just the McFadden murder draining the overtime funds. Police have been unusually busy all summer.

Last week, police were thrown into the investigation of a “suspicious” death of a 3-month-old girl. The father of the baby, Rodney Lee Brown, has been charged with one count of risk of injury to a child in connection with the death, police said.

But they won’t say what role, if any, Brown played in the death. Police are waiting for autopsy results from the baby to determine whether to lodge more charges against Brown, or to drop the risk of injury charge.

Hale hasn’t calculated the cost of overtime in that case yet, but said the investigation is ongoing.

“With major crimes, you work around the clock,” Hale said. “You can’t just punch out at the end of your shift.”

Mayor James DellaVolpe said the city sets its budget with the understanding that police overtime might fluctuate.

“Unfortunately, it’s come up early in the budget,” DellaVolpe said.

Any extra funds transferred to police overtime will come from the city’s contingency account.

“That’s why we have a contingency fund. We put money aside just in case there’s a need for it,” DellaVolpe said.

2 replies on “Ansonia Police Overtime Runs Over”

  1. I don’t want any more money spent for a place like this who are nothing but freeloaders. We have spent enough there and it is time the place comes down and these people get jobs and become a part of the working community or leave. They just breed generations of pfeople living off the system. Time it stops. I don’t want my tax money going to them. I work to hard to give it to uses

  2. Maybe now people will realize the financial burden low income housing has on the community. I could almost guarantee that the family whose baby died on Jewett Street were on Section 8. Half of Ansonia is multi-family housing and a good chunk of that is filled with Section 8 renters. It’s good they’re knocking down the projects, but in the meantime, the rest of Ansonia has been going downhill with people from all over creation moving in and bringing their problems and baggage to what were nice neighborhoods in Ansonia. Look at the shooting in Derby. They were all from Bridgeport and Bridgeport crime followed them up. Can’t they cut back on people renting to section 8 in Ansonia? The freebies have to end at some point or there is no incentive for these people to improve their lives. Three or four generations living in the projects or collecting state should be illegal. And now the hard-working taxpayers have to foot the bill, again.

Comments are closed.