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====Police department==== The city's police department includes 85 employees, of whom 79 are sworn officers and an additional six dispatchers.<ref>[http://www.cityofenglewood.org/content/9264/9272/9298/default.aspx Police Department] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220811172526/http://cityofenglewood.org/content/9264/9272/9298/default.aspx |date=August 11, 2022 }}, City of Englewood. Accessed August 19, 2022. "Englewood is served by a full-time professionally trained police department consisting of 79 sworn Police Officers, 6 civilian dispatchers."</ref> After a no-confidence vote against the department's leadership in December 2020, the police union suspended a group of eight officers, seven of them Black, who had supported the chief and deputy chief.<ref>Tully, Tracey. [https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/31/nyregion/englewood-nj-pba-police.html "This Police Union Suspended 8 Members. Seven Are Black."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210103032152/https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/31/nyregion/englewood-nj-pba-police.html |date=January 3, 2021 }}, ''[[The New York Times]]'', December 31, 2020. Accessed August 19, 2022. "In November, the union suspended eight officers who had expressed support for the chiefs. The suspensions, which last a year, meant the union would not provide the officers with legal representation if they had trouble on the job during that time. Like the chief and deputy chief, seven of the eight officers who were suspended are Black.... Mayor Wildes, a former federal prosecutor who has participated in more than a dozen Black Lives Matter marches in Englewood, said he believed that each of the city's 72 police officers, individually, was committed to serving the public."</ref>
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