The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Police ease some of their policies to find more cadets

- By Brooke Schultz

>> Faced with gaping vacancies in its police force and concerns about public safety, the Philadelph­ia Police Department had to think creatively about how to get more candidates in the door. The answer? Fewer pushups.

The city’s move to lower requiremen­ts for the entry physical exam at its police academy is part of a broader effort nationally to reevaluate policies that keep law enforcemen­t applicants out of the job pool amid a hiring crisis.

To close the gap, policies on tattoos, previous drug use, physical fitness and college credits are all being reconsider­ed. Los Angeles is offering housing subsidies. Other department­s, like Washington, D.C., are offering signing bonuses of more than $20,000. Several states have expanded eligibilit­y to noncitizen­s, while others have changed the minimum age of officers to 18.

A law signed by Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro at the end of last year lowered the physical fitness requiremen­ts applicants are assessed on — from situps to timed distance running and pushups — in Philadelph­ia. The city, buffeted with high crime rates like other big cities during the early pandemic, has struggled to fill vacancies in its police department.

Under the new law, candidates can pass their exam at a lower threshold than previously required, now in the 15th percentile of the standards the force uses to test its cadets. Depending on your age and sex, it’s the difference of about three to five situps or pushups, or a few minutes

added to the 1.5-mile run.

Philadelph­ia is already seeing the payoff of its amended fitness entry exam. Since the law took effect, 51% of people testing have passed, compared with 36% previously, said Capt. John Walker, who handles recruitmen­t for the department.

Cadets still need to graduate by passing the current standard of being in the 30th percentile, but over the nine months of training, it gives candidates time to grow, Walker said.

“Getting them in at a reasonable, logical number, gets us more people and better opportunit­ies,” he said.

Megan Bortner was one of the 100 out of 265 candidates who passed their exams during a recruitmen­t event in February. She’s moving to the city after four years as an officer in Indiana, where she completed the same physical fitness exam as everyone else.

Applying for Philadelph­ia’s force, Bortner, who is 33, had to complete the 1.5-mile run in under 20 minutes to pass the exam under the new entry standards. Previously, she would have had to do it in roughly 17 minutes. She

thinks the lower threshold for entry helps more recruits have a chance at becoming officers, meaning a more diverse pool working in the community.

“If you’re having selfdoubts or you’re not feeling as confident in your athletic abilities, I think this would be a great starting point,” Bortner said.

Concerns about crime and public safety have been top of mind for Philadelph­ians. It was a leading factor in the recent mayoral election, with voters choosing Democratic candidate Cherelle Parker, who vowed to be tough on crime and is pushing to hire hundreds more officers.

The hope is to get more recruits hired to plug about 836 vacancies the department faces in its 6,000-officer force. Combined with around 470 officers who aren’t able to be on street duty due to injuries, the department is well below the staffing levels it has the budget for.

When evaluating their policies to try to bring on more cadets, officers saw the impact a graduation­level physical fitness exam had. In 2024, they hope to hire a minimum of 350 recruits — a 167% increase in personnel hired.

 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Philadelph­ia police academy applicants warm up before the physical fitness entry exam in Philadelph­ia lat month.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelph­ia police academy applicants warm up before the physical fitness entry exam in Philadelph­ia lat month.

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