By Martin B. Cassidy
Staff Writer
September 10, 2007
If the town fights a verdict promoting one police officer to
captain while demoting another, officials will not be able to
replace a police command staff depleted by retirements, First
Selectman Jim Lash said.
"The judge made it crystal clear we won't be able to fill
any of the leadership positions until the litigation is
resolved," Lash said. "We're looking at all of our
options."
Attorneys for the town and Capt. Michael Pacewicz said they feel
there is a strong legal basis to appeal state Superior Court
Judge Michael Shay's decision last week, which reversed
Pacewicz's 2003 promotion and promoted in his place Lt. Gary
Honulik, who outscored Pacewicz and other candidates on a
promotional exam.
An appeal must be filed by Sept. 24, according to the ruling.
Shay ruled that former Chief James Walters, who retired this
summer, violated the town's merit promotion system by passing
over Honulik, the top-ranked candidate on an eligibility list
compiled by the town. Walters chose Pacewicz after adding an
interview to the evaluation process after the test results were
known.
"I think it is likely that my client will ask me to take an
appeal," said William Kupinse, Pacewicz' Bridgeport-based
attorney. "As someone who has done some labor law I think
this is a case where the judge was clearly wrong."
An injunction currently blocking the hiring new captains and
deputy chiefs would remain in effect pending the outcome of an
appeal, Shay said in his ruling.
In the meantime, Walters and Deputy Chief Pat Chila have retired,
leaving just Ridberg and Pacewicz in the upper ranks of the
department. Two deputy chief positions and one captain position
remain unfilled.
Since being promoted in June, Ridberg has said he has run the
department with Pacewicz by delegating tasks usually handled by
deputy chiefs and captains to lieutenants.
Former Chief Peter Robbins said that a lack of administrators to
oversee the department's 155 sworn officers and dozens of other
employees for another extended period of time could hurt
operations.
"I think this is unprecedented to have a police chief in
this position where he doesn't really have an administrative
staff," Robbins said. "It's a big police department,
about the eighth or ninth largest in the state with close to 200
employees, and that's kind of difficult to manage that kind of
operation without help."
Town Attorney John Wayne Fox said Shay misinterpreted the town's
employment policies and state labor law, and that the town was
allowed to pass over Honulik. Fox said an appeal is a
possibility.
"The bottom line concern is that the person who scores the
most points on a given examination is not necessarily the best
candidate for that position," Fox said. "I think the
municipality has to have some discretion in that selection
process."
Former Chief Robbins said "I think Capt. Pacewicz might have
a claim because he took a test in good faith and was given the
position. You can't change the rules in the middle of the game
and I think that's where they got in trouble."
By failing to follow the tradition of promoting the top ranking
candidate on the eligibility list and failing to notify
candidates about the additional interview, officials invited
litigation by hurting Honulik and leaving Pacewicz vulnerable,
Robbins said.
Joan Caldwell, of District 10/Northwest Representative Town
Meeting, said that rather than facing a shortage of department
senior commanders, the department could have had an improved
management structure had the judge fairly interpreted the town's
motives.
Sgt. James Bonney, head of the Silver Shield Association, said he
hopes the town will comply with Shay's ruling but also deal with
Pacewicz' fairly without a lengthy appeal that would delay
Ridberg from promoting Honulik and other new captains and deputy
chiefs. The department must move beyond the divisiveness between
the union and police brass that marked Walters' time as chief,
Bonney said.
He said the town should hold to its practice of promoting the top
ranking candidate on the eligibility list for police leadership
positions.
"I think the best thing to do is to just offer the captains'
test again and make it fair," Bonney said. "There are
different ways to go about it but we need a decision that is fair
to everyone."
Ridberg and Walters could not be reached for comment.
Copyright © 2007, Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc.