RPT-U.S. police shootings make mark on recruitment, contract talks

(Corrects first paragraph to say "near" St. Paul, instead of "in" St. Paul, making clear the shooting was not within the city proper)

* Some police unions to demand higher pay in contract talks

* Dallas and Baton Rouge shootings heighten danger for officers

By Stephanie Kelly

NEW YORK, July 19 (Reuters) - Even before the July 6 police shooting near St. Paul, Minnesota of a black man during a traffic stop, the city's police union said there was difficulty with recruitment and retention of officers.

One day after the shooting, a black man ambushed and killed five Dallas policemen in a racially motivated attack aimed at white officers. Then last Sunday, a similarly-motivated gunman shot dead three officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Now, the St. Paul union will be discussing higher compensation in this year's contract negotiations, in part because of the heightened climate of risk and nationwide spotlight on the profession.

"If you want a very intelligent professional, a capable professional in that uniform, you're going to have to pay competitive wages because our job has become so less desirable for candidates," said David Titus, president of the Saint Paul Police Federation.

A Reuters analysis found that nearly half of the unions in about 30 of the largest municipalities in the United States have expired contracts or contracts expiring in the next year. Out of 13 unions reached, three were negotiating.

The attacks added to the anguish and fear felt across America over a series of police shootings of mostly black men in the past two years that have led to street protests, racial tension and the emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Other police unions, in St. Louis, Missouri; Minneapolis, Minnesota and New York - and the International Union of Police Associations umbrella group - cited declining recruitment and the shootings as reasons they might seek higher overall compensation.

Some police departments such as New York, the largest in the United States with 34,581 employees as of 2014, and St. Paul, disputed the assertion that recruitment was an issue.

Before this month's attacks on officers, NYPD spokesman Stephen Davis said the department was completing an increase in the base force by 1,300 and cited a waiting list to enter the police academy. St. Paul, the 64th largest municipality in the country, saw its officer force rise to 627 in 2014 from 542 in 2000, a 15.7 percent increase, Federal Bureau of Investigation data showed.

CHANGING POSITIONS, CHANGING TACTICS

Police unions in San Antonio, Texas; Nashville, Tennessee and Las Vegas, Nevada, said the increased danger for officers would not be a main negotiating point in their contract talks.