The Oklahoman

OKC requires police and fire recruits to get COVID vaccinatio­n.

Current officers and firefighters will not be affected by new standard

- Hogan Gore

The City of Oklahoma City is requiring new recruits of both the police and fire department­s be vaccinated for COVID-19, or be willing to be vaccinated, before they are allowed to begin training. The move will not affect current officers and firefighters. Such a change for existing employees would require negotiatio­n and agreement with the police and fire unions.

“They (the recruits) are not in our bargaining unit yet, so we don’t have any say on whether a department does that or not,” said John George, president of the Oklahoma City Fraternal Order of Police.

One important motivation in requiring vaccines for recruits is the intensive and time-sensitive training they must go through, officials said. If sickness spreads through the training ranks, it could hold up the department­s’ pipeline of new hires and derail the schedule.

“It would just hamper the whole process, which again is very regimented, organized and planned, so that’s something we’d like to avoid if we can for sure,” said Benny Fulkerson, public informatio­n officer with the Oklahoma City Fire Department. “Of course, we’ve made the vaccine available to all incumbents from Day One, and it’s still available.”

Both department­s are contending with a host of retirement­s and departures from their ranks over the past year.

For Oklahoma City police, voluntary terminatio­ns, including retirement and non-retirement exits, increased by 183% from 2016-17 to 2020-21. Those departures and a city council vote to lift a hiring freeze mean the department has 160 vacant positions. The newest recruit class that began July 9 comprises 25 members.

“Will applicants go somewhere else or not? I don’t know. I hope not, because we’re hurting for applicants and we’re hurting for officers,” George said. “We’re already in a recruiting and retention crisis.”

Currently, the fire and police department­s state that 67% and 62%, respective­ly, of active personnel are vaccinated.

However, some employees may have been vaccinated outside of the city’s program.

The hope is that the new requiremen­t will not deter new recruits from joining either force.

“We’ve not had any push back on that at this point and we have not seen any decline in the number of applicatio­ns as a result,” said Fulkerson. “We’re going to be here until this thing is hopefully over at some point and continue to respond to these calls and just do what we’ve always done.”

There are no active conversati­ons or negations with either union to mandate vaccines for all fire and police personnel, officials said.

 ?? DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? A health care worker prepares vaccinatio­ns Monday at Mount St. Mary’s, where the Oklahoma City/Oklahoma County Health Department had a mobile vaccinatio­n clinic after school. Oklahoma City officials have required COVID vaccinatio­ns for future recruits to the city’s police and fire department­s.
DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN A health care worker prepares vaccinatio­ns Monday at Mount St. Mary’s, where the Oklahoma City/Oklahoma County Health Department had a mobile vaccinatio­n clinic after school. Oklahoma City officials have required COVID vaccinatio­ns for future recruits to the city’s police and fire department­s.

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