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The Texas Ethics Commission fined the San Antonio Police Officers Association for breaking elections code by misfiling hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign expenditures. Reform advocates say they were trying to hide their influence.
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With negotiations happening in secret, there's also less transparency regarding a potential conflict of interest on city council this year.
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In a surprisingly close election Saturday, a proposal to repeal the San Antonio Police Officers Association’s right to collective bargaining fell short by a couple percentage points.
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If successful the measure will repeal Chapter 174, which was originally passed in 1974 by San Antonio voters. It allows police employees to collectively bargain their contracts over healthcare, salaries, disciplinary procedures and more.
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Sheryl Sculley retired in early 2019 after more than a decade managing the City of San Antonio and disagreements with its public safety unions that…
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Former San Antonio City Manager Sheryl Sculley will release a book later this summer called Greedy Bastards: One City’s Texas-Sized Struggle To Avoid…
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A group that raises money for police officers subjected to investigation or lawsuits is using a simulator program to help outsiders understand the challenges of the job.
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Prosecutor Marilyn J. Mosby said at a news conference that the officers will be arraigned July 2. The charges against them are mostly similar to those announced May 1.
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With less than three weeks to early voting, San Antonio Mayor Ivy Taylor is increasingly taking aim at the perceived front-runner who’s competing to…