Houston Chronicle

Want to join the police in Germany? Don’t be short or have narrow hips

- By Rick Noack

To become a police officer in Germany, you need a desire to uphold the law, an appropriat­e training score — and, at least in some places, a certain minimum height.

A height of 5.28 feet, to be precise, according to a court ruling Thursday in the western German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. While the ruling applies only to North Rhine-Westphalia, some states have no height regulation­s at all or allow candidates to pass a separate, additional test if they fall below a height threshold.

The court ruled against three women who had attempted to become police officers but were slightly shorter than the minimum requiremen­t. Explaining the decision, the High Administra­tive Court argued that “according to a comprehens­ive investigat­ion by a state working group, it was only possible to assume police service suitabilit­y from a height of (5.28 feet),” and that no exceptions should be allowed. Thursday’s decision overturned a previous ruling in favor of the three women.

According to that assessment, police officers shorter than 5.28 feet may be overlooked by drivers during traffic controls or — perhaps the most controvers­ial argument — could find it difficult to carry all their equipment because of the size of their hips. The assessment the ruling is based on became public only when German newspaper Süddeutsch­e Zeitung obtained the document.

Last year, the same court ruled against the state of North Rhine West phalia in a different case, forcing it to abandon its previous policy of imposing gender-based height restrictio­ns. Whereas male officer recruits previously had to be taller than 5.51 feet (compared to 5.28 feet for women), the court ruled that the lower female minimum would also have to apply to male candidates.

But women are still disproport­ionately affected, as about one-fifth of female Germans are shorter than 5.28 feet, compared with fewer than 1 percent of male Germans.

For any male candidates smaller than 5.51 feet but taller than 5.28 feet, that’s some good news.

Officer candidates shorter than that now have to look for work elsewhere — or move a few hundred kilometers to a German federal state where shorter officers with smaller hips are welcome to join the police.

 ?? Martin Meissner / Associated Press ?? A German court has upheld the minimum height requiremen­t for police officers in the country’s most populous state, throwing out the case of three female recruits who were slightly too short.
Martin Meissner / Associated Press A German court has upheld the minimum height requiremen­t for police officers in the country’s most populous state, throwing out the case of three female recruits who were slightly too short.

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