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Pueblo to purchase city-owned firearms for its police officers
Pueblo police officers will soon be issued city-owned firearms, instead of purchasing their own, thanks to a measure approved unanimously by Pueblo City Council Monday.
Pueblo Police Chief Troy Davenport told council members that funds for the firearms would be essentially “whipped cream on top of his budget,” as phrased by Councilman Bob Schilling. The funds would specifically be drawn from Federal Forfeiture receipts, which are drawn from large police seizures of cash or property associated with illegal acts.
Davenport told council that forfeiture cases are required to have more than $50,000 in seized cash or property to be eligible for inclusion in the pool of funding.
Pueblo Police Chief Troy Davenport presented the fee increase to Pueblo City Council on Monday night.
Since 2009, the city of Pueblo has received 70 cents each month from phones linked to Pueblo, collected by the state Department of Revenue. Council s change raises the emergency 911 surcharge to $1.72 for each phone per month.
The maximum rate for emergency telephone charges is set by the Colorado Public Utilities Commission, which raised it to $1.72 in July last year due to the rate of inflation and increased statewide costs of providing service. All phone lines in Colorado are impacted, from cell phones to land lines. The surcharge is based on each phone line, no matter the provider. The increased cost is driven largely by the statewide migration to the new Emergency Services IP-Network (ESInet), which is provided by CenturyLink.