Bill de Blasio and Bill Bratton’s NYPD is ushering in a new kind of policing, and to do it right they might need a new kind of cop. That was one takeaway from the Times’ richly detailed story on Monday about the community policing experiment underway in Far Rockaway.
Community policing as a concept isn’t exactly new, but the attempt to introduce it amid high distrust between cops and communities represents a novel challenge. Hence the need for cops who are less interested in making busts than in solving problems—more sociology than Starsky & Hutch. “The department,” wrote reporter J. David Goodman, “wants more applicants who can incorporate a measure of social work into a job that has long been defined almost exclusively by a willingness to face difficult situations and confront dangerous people.”
If that’s true, it might be time for the NYPD to revisit its age limit on recruits.
Right now, a person can take the NYPD exam only until age 35, although if a person served in the military he or she can extend the age limit for up to six years. The thinking behind the age restriction is pretty obvious: Younger people are more likely to be able to handle the physical requirements of training and, over the course of a career, any job.
That is true, on average. All else being equal, a 20-year-old is probably going to beat a 40-year-old in a foot race, and a 40-year-old is likely going to best a 50-year-old over the same distance.
But being 40 or 50 today is very different from what it was 20 years ago. People are living longer. They are smoking less. Folks who care about their health are eating better and exercising more. Plenty of people in their 50s, even in their 60s, are in extremely good physical condition. There are 40-year-olds playing professional baseball and football, even boxing. If you have run in a road-race recently, chances are someone who was 20 or 30 years your senior finished with a better time. While there is certainly a drop-off in physical assets—especially reflexes and the ability to recover from injuries—as one ages, exercise and diet can slow those declines and prevent steep losses in strength and stamina. I’d bet that many people in their late 30s and 40s reading this are in better shape now than they were in their mid-20s.
An NYPD that permitted older recruits would have to rigorously test the physical abilities of aging members, because being a police officer is, sometimes, a physical job: Police officers have to be capable of stuff like making rescues and prevailing in combat. Their lives and those of bystanders, victims and even perpetrators depend on a certain level of cop fitness.
But that is only one aspect of the job. Defusing tense situations, making decisions under pressure, communicating across lines of class, language and race—these are a more regular part of cop life than fistfights. And these elements of the job will only become more important as community policing takes hold.
Of course, there are young people who are very good at those things. And there are older people who are terrible at them. It also could be argued that older people are more likely to suffer from stone-set stereotypes, while younger people are more open to new views.
But older rookie cops would certainly offer the city some advantages. They’d be more likely to have had helpful life experiences before joining the force, which might allow them to better relate to and talk with the citizens they police. They’d have had time to acquire more education, which can’t hurt. They might have a little more of the self-confidence that can be a helpful thing in a tense situation. They may have less interest in the action-packed image of police work, meaning they’d be more likely to feel fulfilled by the sometimes mundane, managerial aspects of the actual job.
On the other hand, physical abilities aren’t the only advantage younger recruits offer the NYPD. Younger minds might be easier to mold and more comfortable accepting a paramilitary authority structure. Younger workers are more likely to be able to live on an NYPD salary and less likely to have family responsibilities that make the demands of night shifts, the rigor of weekend and holiday work and the risks inherent in the cop’s job even more burdensome.
However, most cops will eventually age into those attitudes, needs and responsibilities regardless of when they start on the force. The underlying truth is that not everyone is cut out to be a New York City police officer. It takes a special person to do the job well, and it seems unlikely in this era, given the evolving needs of modern law enforcement and the changing meaning of age, that a person’s time on the planet really bears on whether she or he belongs among The Finest.
What we have learned the hard way over the past few decades is that nothing on a person’s birth certificate—neither race nor gender nor ethnicity nor citizenship—really matters when it comes to the ability to protect New Yorkers and uphold the law. The date of birth probably doesn’t either.
17 thoughts on “Maybe New York City Needs Older Cops for Community Policing”
How about making these jobs mostly for NYC tax payers? Promote jobs to minority populations; women, Asian, Latino and Black. Make 60% of the police jobs to locals & 40% to outside NYC boundaries.
That is most likely unconstitutional.
I am 46. I was a Sheriffs Deputy for 7 years. I know how to deal with people in all circumstances unlike a young rookie. Younger cops can be hot headed. I can be very physical,fight,run,or talk my way out of a situation. I am just as good as a 21 yr old,but better cause of my experience,age,and what I’ve learned in life. New York is losing out on who could be a great officer.
is this true? I just took the last NYPD test and did almost all of the paperwork only to get a call from the candidate assessment division stating I was too old I am just one year shy of the age requirement with my 6 years of service deducted from my age. I served my country honorable and after working on many movies as a NYPD cop in the background I decided I wanted to become a real NYPD Officer like my family members who were all Police Officers. It’s really sad nowadays no one wants to do the job because of the way cops are treated and here I want to be a cop but am being turned away!
Support the U.S. as a whole… honestly why would you say that? Like NYC is it’s own country. GTFOH
A sensible idea that is worth discussing.
Its true, people in their 40’s 50’s or 60’s are way different than people in their 20’s; and even 70’s I have to get up early to beat the 70+ group into the YMCA
There is precedent for a workaround of the NYPD 35-year-old age limit rule in the case of retired Detective Michael Cusumano. Also there is New York State senate bill s1886 pending to lift the age requirement. A new class starts this year and many should get the chance.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-metro-nypd-oldest-cop-retires-20190303-story.html%3foutputType=amp
is this true? I just took the last NYPD test and did almost all of the paperwork only to get a call from the candidate assessment division stating I was too old I am just one year shy of the age requirement with my 6 years of service deducted from my age. I served my country honorable and after working on many movies as a NYPD cop in the background I decided I wanted to become a real NYPD Officer like my family members who were all Police Officers. It’s really sad nowadays no one wants to do the job because of the way cops are treated and here I want to be a cop but am being turned away!
When is that law goin to take effect?
I strongly agree with the NYS senate bill to lift the age limit for joining to the nypd. I also believe that a lot of people of 50s and 60s are physically far better than some people of 20s and 30s. I think if a person pass the physical test of JST (job standard test) then he or she should be allowed to apply to become a police officer in nypd. It will go with our constitution as well, otherwise not. It can’t be only, I repeat only 35 anymore!! So the demand is lift the age limit of nypd from this year!!! Thanks.
Makes sense, no age restrictions.
It sucks for the people who were born & raised in NY and are unable to return due to the age restriction. My husband has been a cop in New Orleans for 7 years. (We couldn’t afford the NY academy at the time he was looking into this career, so he went somewhere that paid him for it instead). We planned to return to NY before his 35th bday, but he broke his ankle on duty 1.5 years in, was out for 2 years healing & during that time surpassed the maximum age requirement. Now we’re stuck & can’t return to where we grew up. The experience he’s gained in NOLA is enough to surpass any minimum qualifications NY could possibly need in a candidate. I’m angry that we are stuck somewhere we don’t want to be due to such a stupid restriction.
So, what can we do about getting them to drop the age limit? I’m so pissed off with NYC. There are other states that don’t have age limit, but I be in NYC my whole life, I want to be a police officer here, but noo I’m too old for them.
I totally agree..!!!
My Son is 35 years old not have a criminal record and wants to be a NYPD OFFICER .
Why are New Yorkers treated with such disregard??.
We need to Rally for justice.
Take a look at those State Senate Bills and write to your representatives. But look to see if those that proposed those bills are still in office or not. If whoever proposed the bill in still office, try to set something woth that particular representative.
I applied, because I know a bunch of cops who are friends and they helped me apply.
After waiting a year to hear back from NYPD, I finally got a call back saying
I am too old by 1 year.
NYPD only want kids, they don’t want to hire adults for the job who are level headed and much older with more life experience.
I have a friend of mine who was also denied. he is 57 years old and can run for blocks without catching a heart attack & can keep up with any young adult in their 20’s. He can do 50 pushups, 50 pull-ups, jump over fences & gates and run several blocks straight.
He even does the firefighter stairs workout and can reach 10 floors in just a little over 1 minute. He has a clean record and never been in prison for anything.
And they turned him away.
People in their 40’s, 50’s and even 60’s these days are much healthier and
more athletic than the past. And the department still does not recognize that.
If people over 40 can pass the JST, then they should be able to get hired as NYPD.
These days age is just a number.
Hell, if the NYPD want to make sure, just make the older people do the JST twice in a row, in order to pass for entry.