
An audit found that Nassau County, N.Y., does not have an accurate inventory of its take-home vehicles.
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City of Opa-locka, Fla., police officers rejected a take-home vehicle program offered by the police chief that would have cost them $50 per paycheck.
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The Torrington (Wyo.) Police Department is looking to replace its entire patrol fleet and allow officers to take home vehicles.
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The City of Kent, Wash., is adding 14 new police vehicles, part of a new car-per-officer take-home program.
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An internal audit concluded that the City of Anchorage, Alaska, needs better controls on its take-home vehicle program.
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A spokesman for the the Albuquerque (N.M.) Police Department said the new take-home policy may allow officers to use their vehicles while in the community coaching youth league teams or being involved in faith-based organizations.
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The City of Elkhart, Ind., established a new program beginning Jan. 1 that allows more officers to have take-home cars. The majority of officers now have them.
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The City of Waveland, Miss., may change its take-home vehicle policy, and is considering charging employees a use tax to cover vehicle costs.
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The City of Portage, Ind., has tightened its rules about take-home vehicles, giving the city council more say over who gets to take home municipal vehicles.
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The City of Providence, R.I., is considering a program that will allow police officers who live in the city to take vehicles home.
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