Police Chief and Deputy Chief Received Recruitment Bonuses For Bringing on New Staff

By Erica C. Barnett

Editor’s note: This post has been updated to reflect the fact that SPD would not tell us whether two new executive-level SPD officials received $50,000 hiring bonuses and told us to file a records request. The story also reflects that Mayor Bruce Harrell’s office did not respond to our request for this information.

Seattle’s new police chief, Shon Barnes, and Deputy Police Chief Yvonne Underwood each received recruitment bonuses for hiring new high-level staff, including a second deputy police chief, when Barnes became police chief earlier this year. Both Underwood and Chief Barnes make more than $300,000 a year.

Barnes received $2,000 for recruiting a new assistant chief overseeing investigations, Nicole Powell, and a second deputy chief, Andre Sayles. Yvonne Underwood received $1,000 payment for recruiting Sayles. Sayles came to the department from Beloit, Wisconsin, a town about 50 miles south of Madison, where Barnes was previously chief. Powell came to Seattle from New Orleans, where she was the lieutenant in charge of recruitment.

According to a spokesman for SPD, the bonuses—part of legislation passed in August 2022 intended to increase police hiring in Seattle—are available to any city employee, with a few exceptions, and were added to Barnes’ and Underwood’s paychecks once Sayles and Powell joined the department. Barnes makes $360,485 a year; Underwood makes $302,016.

Overall, the spokesman said, the city has made 21 $1,000 payments to city employees who recruit new SPD officers, including the three that went to Barnes and Underwood.

PubliCola also asked SPD if Sayles and Powell (whose salaries are $302,016 and $294,549, respectively) received the city’s standard lateral hiring bonus of $50,000. The department’s communications department refused to respond to our yes/no question, directing us to file a records request for the information.

As we have reported previously, SPD has adopted an official policy called “grouping” for individuals and media outlets that file multiple records request. Under the policy, SPD’s public disclosure division refuses to work on multiple records requests at one time. Instead, they work on one request until it is completely fulfilled—a process that can take years—before moving on to another request and beginning the same process again. The policy is designed to discourage multiple records requests—a standard part of reporting—and has made it essentially pointless to file records requests for information.

Although we have been unable to directly confirm the $50,000 payments, the fact that SPD would not answer this question is suggestive.

Mayor Bruce Harrell’s office also did not respond to a request for an answer to our question.

A 2024 amendment to the 2022 hiring incentive legislation, sponsored by Council President Sara Nelson, raised the size of lateral hiring bonuses, which were previously $30,000.

PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.

Support PubliCola

 

Barnes has brought on a number of new staffers since his appointment, including three new executive-level staff—Chief of Staff Alex Ricketts, Executive Director of Crime and Community Harm Reduction Lee Hunt, and Chief Communications Officer Barbara DeLollis.  Ricketts previously worked with Barnes in Madison, WI, where Barnes was chief before coming to Seattle, and in Greensboro, NC, where Barnes was a captain. Hunt worked with Barnes in Greensboro.

The new staffers’ salaries collectively cost $1.34 million, and most are new positions that add permanent costs to SPD’s budget at a time when other city departments have been asked to make cuts. The city is currently facing a two-year budget shortfall of around $150 million.

5 thoughts on “Police Chief and Deputy Chief Received Recruitment Bonuses For Bringing on New Staff”

  1. Um, I thought the incentive program only applied to new or lateral candidates for actual officer

  2. I don’t actually begrudge an outside chief wanting some of this own command staff, but FFS you don’t get a recruitment bonus for hiring your own command staff.

    Hard to be surprised at this point at how low crummy SPD management practices and pathetic oversight from Mayor Harrell can go, but…here we are!

  3. Breathtaking cronyism! Who can blame us for being disgusted with the Council and Mayor who are not only FAR overpaying the chief and deputy chief, but now sticking us with outrageous paychecks for all the cronies, and I’m guessing beyond the salaries we may also be paying moving and related and/or ancillary expenses. And there’s the suggestion that they are being paid hiring bonuses over and above what is normal/customary/required.

    And just to top it off, we’re having a stunning outbreak of gun violence, and now people are being held up at gunpoint while stopped in their cars.

    WTH??? Can’t we somehow stop this whole to operation? Who could even spend $300 k/month even if these folks merited it, which I submit no one does, especially when we have the homeless druggo untreated mentally ill whose needs we purport to want to meet, but then direct our funds to a myriad of small time providers whose interventions are obviously failing.

    This stuff is just maddening! Clearly we need some voter education so we’ll stop electing people who think all of this is a good idea.

    1. What we need is a complete restructuring of ethics.

      From cops to Trump. No accountability. No scrutiny. Corruption on every level. They want mass surveillances too. Typical military regime tactics. Trump took over the DC cops. We had more 1/6 cops that anywhere in ‘mercah. They wanted to hide their names too. Again, accountability is nonexistent. The union needs to go.

      1. Yes, the Police Union is all about loyalty; no role for ethics, morals, and even obeying the law.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.