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April 24,
2008
For Immediate Release |
Contact: Albert O'Leary
PBA Communications Director
212-298-9190
or
Joseph Mancini
212-298-9150 |
PBA MAKES EFFORT TO CORRECT MAYOR’S MISINFORMATION
EFFORTS
NYPD DOCUMENT PINS RECRUITING PROBLEM TO INCREASE
IN COLLEGE REQUIREMENTS THREE YEARS BEFORE AN ARBITRATION PANEL LOWERED
STARTING PAY
UNCOMPETITIVE TOP PAY CAUSED RECRUITING PROBLEM
An
NYPD document issued to hire outside consultants to boost recruiting
efforts cites the 1995 increase in educational requirements to
become a police officer as the cause of the NYPD’s recruiting
problem supporting the PBA’s argument that uncompetitive
top pay is making potential candidates look elsewhere for fair
paying jobs in law enforcement.
The NYPD sought a recruitment consultant three years before the
June 27, 2005 arbitration award that lowered police starting pay
to $25,100. An NYPD RFP (request for proposal) dated
May 8, 2002 sought to hire a consultant to perform “recruitment,
advertising, and production services” pinpointed the 1995
increase in college requirements as the cause of the NYPD’s
inability to recruit adequate numbers of qualified police recruits.
The contract was valued at $30 million over five years.
PBA president Patrick J. Lynch said: “In May of 2002,
three years before an arbitration panel lowered starting pay at
the city’s behest and over the PBA’s vehement objections,
the NYPD put out for consideration a contract worth $30 million
dollars for advertising and marketing help to attract recruits. The
document states specifically that the difficulty attracting qualified
recruits was a direct result of increasing the college requirements
and that the NYPD had no problem finding adequate numbers of candidates
when only a High School diploma was required.
“ The increased educational requirements and
an increase in minimum age to become a police officer came from
the same mayoral commission that also recommended a significant
increase is police salary. Despite the constant
repetition of the Mayor’s misinformation message, it was
the city’s failure to raise the salary when raising the educational
requirements that laid the groundwork for the NYPD’s current
recruiting crisis and gave birth to a massive increase in the numbers
of veteran officers – almost 1,000 a year -- who quit for
better paying jobs. The only way the NYPD will be able to
attract mature and better educated candidates and to keep fully
trained and experienced veteran officers on the job is to offer
a top pay that is competitive with other local jurisdictions. If
the PERB arbitration panel fails to make police top pay competitive,
it will not only have condemned the future of the NYPD but it will
imperil the safety of New York’s streets and neighborhoods.”
Click here for an excerpt of the pertinent section of the 2002
NYPD RFP. Copies of the entire
document are available at the PBA office.
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