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Chateauguay cops dress up as Wild West sheriffs

Police officers in Chateauguay have taken to dressing up as lawmakers with a different look, replete with cowboy-style boots and hats. Châteauguay Police

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.

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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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