CHATEAUGUAY, Que. – There’s a new sheriff in town on Montreal’s South Shore.
In fact, there are several dozen of them.
Police officers in Chateauguay have taken to dressing up as lawmakers with a different look, replete with cowboy-style boots and hats.
The garb is in protest against provincial pension legislation aimed at establishing a 50-50 split between municipalities and unionized workers on contributions and future deficits.
Municipal employees like police officers, firefighters, public transit and other blue- and white-collar workers have been dressing down across the province for months.
Montreal police, for example, have donned bright red ball caps and shed their work-issue slacks for camouflage, fluorescent and multi-coloured pants to show their anger.
IN PHOTOS: Quebec pension protests get creative
Meanwhile, city vehicles, public transit buses, police and fire trucks have been plastered with slogan stickers in dozens of towns.
The Liberal government introduced its proposal to overhaul the municipal pensions in mid-June, saying those plans carry a collective deficit of about $3.9 billion and aren’t sustainable in the long-term.
WATCH: Hundreds of demonstrators took over the downtown streets of Montreal
The bill proposes freezing the automatic indexation of pensions for about 20,000 workers already retired and sets out a timeline for negotiating a settlement, including possible arbitration.
Premier Philippe Couillard’s government says it wants Bill 3 adopted by year’s end.
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