The Philadelphia Police Department has faced a critical shortage of
officers for months — one that's all but certain to get worse as
hundreds more cops plan to leave.
With the police force already
operating about 20% below its target staffing level, more than 800
officers and civilian employees have set retirement dates within the
next four years by enrolling in the city's deferred pension program.
The decades-old program helps officials prepare for the departure of
longtime employees by allowing city workers to begin collecting on
pension benefits four years before they retire. Fresh pension records
analyzed by The Inquirer show the number of Police Department enrollees
doubled in four years.
The figures mean officers are leaving
faster than the department can recruit them. The force is virtually
guaranteed to see about 200 retirements for each of the next four years.
But this year, just 120 cadets will be eligible to graduate from the
police academy.
The wave of impending retirements comes atop
nearly 600 existing officer vacancies, soaring resignations, and
hundreds of injury claims that have taken more cops off active duty. All
told, the force is already some 1,300 officers short of its full
complement of 6,380.
The growing officer shortage within one of
the nation's largest police forces is colliding with the highest rates
of gun violence Philadelphia has seen in generations. Last year, there
were 562 homicides, the most in recorded history — and so far this year,
the pace has not slowed.
Police Commissioner Danielle
Outlaw invoked the staffing crisis following a West
Philadelphia shooting that on Tuesday night left five young men wounded
and 100 shell casings outside a recreation center.
Outlaw said adequate staffing allows police to have a more "visible presence."
"We
will never, ever be able to truly quantify how much violence would
never occur," she said, "if prospective offenders see police in the area
before they act."
The officer exodus coincided with both a
political shift around policing and a broader trend of municipal workers
leaving their jobs in droves. Outlaw has said for months that morale
among officers is low, which she has attributed in part to politics and
increased scrutiny.
Ranks have dwindled in almost every unit, and
the effects are noticeable. Police response times have slowed since
2020. Some officers were redeployed to boost patrol strength.
Officials
admit recruitment has faltered, blaming both the city's uniquely
stringent hiring requirements and a nationwide shortage that has made
the market for recruits more competitive.
They emphasize that the
problem isn't unique to Philadelphia. Police departments across the
country have faced severe challenges recruiting officers, with some
offering massive signing bonuses or retention pay.
"It's been very
difficult across the country to have people wanting to get into
policing and law enforcement," Mayor Jim Kenney said during a recent
news conference. "I can't force people to become police officers."
A department hemorrhaging cops
While
agencies across city government have buckled under persistent
short-staffing over the last year, police in Philadelphia are leaving
more quickly than other municipal workers. They also make up a
disproportionate amount of expected retirees, according to city
employment records.
As of July, 809 Police Department employees
were enrolled in the city's Deferred Retirement Option Plan, known as
DROP. While uniformed police and civilian staff account for about a
quarter of the city workforce, they make up more than 40% of the workers
enrolled in DROP.
The full number of department retirees in the
coming years will likely be even higher, because not all Police
Department retirees enroll in DROP — over the past three years, more
than a third did not.
In all, the department is likely to see more than double the 100 annual retirements averaged before the pandemic.
In
addition to those retiring, some officers will inevitably quit. And
resignations similarly surged last year: According to the department,
128 officers quit in 2021, more than twice the year prior.
While
resignations across the municipal government as a whole slowed this
year, the same cannot be said for the Police Department. Eighty-seven
officers have already resigned this year, meaning the department is on
track for more resignations than 2021.
Atop it all, injury claims
are keeping hundreds of paid officers out of work — a trend driven, in
part, by some exploiting disability programs. Today, about 580 police
officers report being too injured to work, and another 110 are on
"limited duty."
Aaron Chalfin, an associate professor of
criminology at the University of Pennsylvania, said shortages have a
real effect on crime.
He said research shows lower police staffing
is linked to increases in both violent and property crime. Experts
believe that's because when more officers are in an area, they're making
more arrests, and their mere presence deters crime.
"It doesn't
mean every city and every year there will be an impact," Chalfin said.
"But at a 30,000-foot view of it, murder is responsive to the number of
police officers. Overall violent crime is responsive. Property crime is
responsive."
Others see the shortage as an opportunity to fill the void with
support systems outside law enforcement to curb those same problems.
The
city's police budget grew by about $30 million this year, with some
money earmarked for recruitment. But Kris Henderson, executive director
of the Amistad Law Project, advocated for using the reduction of the
force to reinvest some of those funds in quality-of-life services, job
programs, and community-based violence intervention.
"People in a
few neighborhoods of the city are really hurting, really need something
holistic," Henderson said, "and it's frustrating that the only thing
that's really being given is more money for cops."
Why hiring is not keeping pace
Recruiting officers was a struggle even before the pandemic.
Some
police brass recall days when academy classes had more than 100
recruits each. But even in 2019, four different classes saw an average
of just 57 cadets.
Then, hiring virtually ground to a halt during
the pandemic. Today, according to police data, there are 160 cadets in
the academy who will be eligible to become new officers within the next
year. But they are hardly enough to dent 600 existing vacancies — let
alone the hundreds more anticipated.
The slow hiring can be chalked up to a handful of social and regulatory factors.
Across
the nation, departures from police departments accelerated dramatically
in 2021, creating an overwhelming demand for officers.
At
home, Philadelphia's transit police have also struggled to staff up,
while in other Pa. cities, like Pittsburgh, police staffing has reached
critical levels. The Los Angeles Police Department has 650 fewer
officers than before the pandemic, and officials from Seattle,
to Phoenix, to Atlanta all say they're similarly scrambling to hire
cops.
But some argue local policies have exacerbated the staff shortages in the Philadelphia Police Department.
The
city's residency requirement has been a major barrier to hiring,
department leaders have said. In 2020, City Council passed a law
requiring applicants live in the city for a year before
applying. Philadelphia is the only large American city with such a rule.
During a spring City Council hearing, police leaders said after the rule took effect in 2021, applications dropped by 30%.
In
April, the Kenney administration waived the pre-residency requirement
for police officers. But it contributed to a deficit the department has
not recovered from.
Additionally, the vast majority of applicants fail to pass a battery of screening programs.
The department said last year, for example, it invited nearly 3,800 applicants to attend spring orientation.
Just
900 showed up. Upwards of 500 failed the reading test or agility test.
More were eliminated following drug tests, background checks, and a
psychological evaluation.
The department ultimately offered jobs to 65 people. Forty-eight started training at the academy.
Just 41 graduated.
'I'm very concerned'
Kenney
said the Police Department, which has a nearly $800 million budget, is
recruiting on campuses and at job fairs but "it's difficult to get
people to want to be in public service."
The city is trying
several tactics to widen the pool. The department slightly reduced the
age to apply from 21 to 20, a change that follows reductions to age and
education requirements made in 2017.
The department also partnered
with local colleges and the YMCA to prepare recruits for the reading
and agility tests. In June, City Council allocated an additional
$250,000 for recruitment.
But with gun violence still at historic
highs, the police shortage is likely to be a sticky issue — just as the
campaign for Philadelphia's next mayor heats up.
Former City
Councilmember Allan Domb, who last week resigned and is considering
running for mayor, led a hearing on police staffing in the spring. He
says the city isn't equipped to fix the shortage on its own and should
hire outside firms to help find cadets, promote the benefits of being a
police officer, and study the department's pay scale.
"I'm very concerned," he said. "You can't improve our public safety if we don't have a police department."
Others
have suggested the city could replace some uniformed officers with
civilians, including at-large City Councilmember Helen Gym, who is also
considered a potential mayoral contender. She has championed policies
like assigning health care providers to respond to people in mental
health crises.
Gym said the "alarming" vacancy rate means police
should civilianize as many functions as possible to free up uniformed
officers.
"The public has made it very clear that the top priority
is focusing on violent crime," she said. "Trained officers are the ones
most suited to be able to do that."
1 comment:
Maybe they should try not treating the cops like shit. Just a thought.
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