"The veteran officers are the Toronto Police Service's most enthusiastic enforcers of the province's driving laws, with Thompson earning $162,000 in 2008 and Virani $151,000 - almost doubling their salaries due largely to overtime racked up sitting in courtrooms.
Their names appeared on a list released by the city showing who on the force made more than $100,000 a year.
And those pay packets don't include lucrative "paid duty," where off-duty officers, paid by private companies, earn between $60 and $70 an hour to perform a host of duties, such as directing traffic around construction sites.
"It's the best game in town," Mike Walt, a retired police officer turned paralegal, said of the money officers can earn from overtime.
And as the Toronto Police Accountability Coalition noted in its most recent bulletin, the number of highly paid officers is climbing rapidly."
http://www.thestar.com/article/609928
Their names appeared on a list released by the city showing who on the force made more than $100,000 a year.
And those pay packets don't include lucrative "paid duty," where off-duty officers, paid by private companies, earn between $60 and $70 an hour to perform a host of duties, such as directing traffic around construction sites.
"It's the best game in town," Mike Walt, a retired police officer turned paralegal, said of the money officers can earn from overtime.
And as the Toronto Police Accountability Coalition noted in its most recent bulletin, the number of highly paid officers is climbing rapidly."
http://www.thestar.com/article/609928