Every subway train in NYC will have a uniformed police officer on board between 9 p.m. and 5 a.m. daily, Gov. Kathy Hochul said during her State of the State address in January. Photo by Dean Moses
“We had a lot of officers that graduated, they came, and then a lot of them are going to transit, or they’re going for better jobs that all of a sudden call them because it’s a lateral transfer now, and a lot of the times, if they got two, three years on our job, it travels over with them right from the beginning,” Joe said. “The people that do leave, they say the quality of life is better, you know, they see their family more. They’re not pushed to do overtime constantly.”
What is being done?
NYPD brass recognize the staffing problem exists and are looking for ways to attract more recruits, including by changing educational requirements for the job.
In February, Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch announced that she would be lowering the college credits needed to become a cop, adding, “The NYPD is in a hiring crisis.”
The main crux of Tisch’s strategy is immediately lowering the number of college credits needed to become an officer from 60 to 24; that impacts more than 5,000 candidates on 29 active civil service lists who were previously ineligible to join the NYPD. Police officials hope that this will attract more applicants and increase the ranks.
In exchange, the NYPD is also boosting the number of college credits officers receive upon graduating from the academy. Each academy graduate will enter the NYPD having earned a minimum of 69 college credits — which qualifies them for an associate degree.
That alone won’t solve the problem, the commissioner acknowledged at the time. Years of anti-police rhetoric also dissuaded many New Yorkers from pursuing NYPD careers, and she acknowledge more action was needed to close the gap between cops and the community.
“We are still seeing the very real impact of the defund and anti-police movement. A lot of the rhetoric aimed at our police is vile, and the pendulum has swung too far away from what I consider to be the most important and noble job one could do,” Tisch said in February.
However, in a conversation with amNewYork, Police Benevolent Association President Patrick Hendry — whose organization represents about 21,000 cops — says the NYPD’s academic changes will do very little to convince cops to stay on the job when they can leave earlier elsewhere. Hendry says the current attrition rate is extremely disturbing.
“Just a few weeks ago, we lost 24 police officers in one day to another department. I mean, that’s an alarming number. It’s real, and I’ve never seen anything like this,” Hendry said. “You know, we’re going into the summer, which is known to be a lot busier.”
“We have been operating in a heightened threat environment since October 7, and we remain vigilant. The public can expect to see the tremendous amount of police resources deployed throughout the area and across the city, which includes members of some of our elite specialized units,” Commissioner Tisch said. “Our drones will be deployed overhead to monitor the crowds in real-time and watch for any specific suspicious or unusual activity.” Photo by Dean Moses
Police brass say they expect everything from mournful vigils to large-scale protests to grip the Big Apple in over 80 separate events citywide. Photo by Dean Moses
Looking to the pension
Hendry himself brought up the pension concern, believing that in addition to the plethora of issues that cops are facing, another major struggle to stay comes as a result of money and retirement concerns. Hendry believes officers are leaving primarily because they don’t want to work longer for less.
The PBA head charges that if cops in NYC received the same pension benefits for serving two decades rather than two and a half decades, the retention rate would be better. Hendry is pointing to a new state bill that he hopes could help mitigate the crisis by only requiring new cops to work 20 years.
“This bill would affect approximately anywhere between 22,000 and 23,000 members,” Hendry said. “That would be huge for recruiting police officers. This would be equal to everyone else in the state instead of taking an inferior pension and then all the issues that we have to deal with on a daily basis. It’ll help police officers, instead of running out the door to go to another department, this would be a way to get them to rethink.”
“This scene was chaos, multiple victims, a house on fire and a madman on a rampage, on a mission,” PBA president Patrick Hendry said in an impassioned speech from Jamaica hospital. Photo by Dean Moses
The bill, S2710/A3968 was included in the Senate and Assembly’s “One House” budget proposals last month and is gaining support from a number of elected officials.
“We have 66 co-sponsors, which is very overwhelming. We had this bill last year. This is three times more than we had the year prior. We have huge support from the elected leaders,” Hendry said.
amNewYork reached out to NYPD officials for comment on this issue and is awaiting a response.