The issue that started this thread was the inability of a part-time officer (defined as less than 32 hours per week official duty) to make the much higher hourly rate that full time off-duty LEO's are able to command. We have many different opinions about the proper use /misuse of police authority being used for private benefit. The fact is that there are official regulations in place that prevent part-time/reserve officers from serving in the private sector with full official authority...something I was not aware of before this. As JMRA stated, I suspect that the primary purpose of this statute is to use legislation to create a market demand for the off-duty officers, allowing them to sell their official authority at a higher rate. I'm not in favor of this for reasons I've previously stated.Excaliber wrote:Alf wrote:OK, but commissioned officer pay is a lot less than my normal pay too. Apples and oranges.
A part time officer has only a certain number of hours available for private security work. If at the commissioned officer rate he can't make enough during those hours combined with his LEO salary to make ends meet, I think the distinction is quite important.
I'd rephrase the above statement to apply to anyone: A person working as __(insert any occupation)__ has only a certain number of hours available for additional employment. If, at the prevailing market rate for that job, he/she can't make enough during those hours, combined with his regular salary, to make ends meet, then he shouldn't take THAT job.
The complaint being made is not that a part time officer can't go out and get another part time job...it's that he can't go out and get a part time job that pays 2-3 times more than he's making on his regular job. That's not an injustice. That's pretty much a universal situation for everyone else in any other occupation.