Zo no, NYPD! Experienced cops see little incentive to stay at NYPD

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More than half of the NYPD’s Joint Terrorism Task Force cops can retire right now, along with thousands of sergeants, lieutenants and captains, worrying officials about the future of terror and crime fighting in Gotham, The Post has learned.

Forty-five of 82 JTTF detectives – or 55% – have 20 years under their belts, which is enough time on the job to leave with a full pension, according to union data.

There are 2,161 active detectives in the NYPD and 1,232 of them — or 57% —  are in the same boat, eligible for a full pension after 20 years.

The NYPD stands to lose 57% of its detectives beause they’ve served 20 years and could retire, officials said. REUTERS

Another 698 lieutenants, or about 42% of the total 1,669, could retire today; 518 captains, or 66% of the 780, could leave; and 954 sergeants, representing about 22% of the 4,300 total, could exit at any time, according to union data. 

Police are concerned the thousands of veteran NYPD bosses and gumshoes will flee if Mayor Mamdani cuts overtime, which would significantly reduce their pensions, union officials said. 

Officers hired after 2000 get a pension that is half of what they make in their full final year.

So if they think anti-cop Mamdani will cut their future OT pay, it would make sense for them to retire now, and use their 2025 pay under cop-friendly Mayor Adams as the basis for their pension.

“If they have a big overtime year, they have to go,” said Detectives Endowment Association President Scott Munro, who has been lobbying Albany for the three-year average.

He said a perceived lack of mayoral support, and public anti-cop sentiment that it creates, is also pushing cops to leave.

“What’s happening is people are getting in our police officers’ faces,” Munro said. “They’re harassing them out there in the street.”

Unions are “losing control of people leaving,” Lieutenants Benevolent Association President Lou Turco said.

Detectives Endowment Association President Scott Munro has been lobbying Albany to get pension rules charged to keep cops from leaving. Helayne Seidman

“Once you hit 20 [years], the department loses control,” he said. “If I have a really good year of overtime and the department decides it wants to cut overtime, I have to leave.”

At the beginning of the year, officers were told they needed to reduce their overtime by nine to 11 hours in February as part of a cost-cutting initiative, The Post reported.

The cuts came during the shortest and coldest month of the year when there were few major events, a spokeswoman said at the time, calling the move “management 101.”

But cops “see the writing on the wall,” said retired NYPD Detective Michael Alcazar, an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice who served in the NYPD for three decades before retiring in 2019.

Lieutenants Endowment Association Persident Lou Turco could see see 42% of his lieutenants retire. STEFAN JEREMIAH

“I did 30 years because it was a good job, I was getting good overtime, and I was enjoying it,” he said.

“But now these guys are not because they’re backfilling patrol,” he said of veteran supervisors forced back to the street to make up for a loss of manpower. 

“Detectives and lieutenants are back on patrol,” he said.  “You know when you’ve got 20, 25 years you don’t want to put the bag back on and get on foot post, which is what they’re doing.”

Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch testified at a City Council budget hearing this week that 2025 retirements lined up with projections based on the number of cops hired two decades ago.

SBA President Vincent Vallelong is trying to find ways to keep his officers from leaving. ZUMA Press Wire via Reuters Connect

She added that the NYPD had the “largest hiring year on record – more than 4,000 officers” last year.

“We are not in a hiring crisis anymore,” she told the City Council. “We ended 2025 at a headcount of 34,769 — just 250 shy of our authorized headcount.”

“It’s the senior people we do not want to lose,” Sergeants Benevolent Association President Vincent Vallelong said.

There are 220 sergeants who are bosses in the detective bureau who don’t get special assignment money, which is basically lieutenant pay, he said.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani has been a longtime critic of the police department. Stephen Yang for NY Post

“If they gave them special assignment money, I promise right off the bat these guys wouldn’t leave,” the union boss said.

Part of the problem with watching veteran officers walk away is that there’s nobody left in the wings to replace them, said Munro.

“I have senior detectives telling their kids, ‘Do not come on this job,’” said Munro, who has two police officer sons. “And that’s not the way this job used to be.”

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