Search This Blog

Wednesday, March 1, 2023

NYPD lowers fitness standard by scrapping timed, 1.5-mile run for new recruits

 The NYPD has again lowered its requirement for police recruits, scrapping a timed, 1.5-mile run in the police academy, the department’s head of training told The Post.

The controversial move — which training Chief Juanita Holmes said will help more women applicants make the cut — sparked an intra-agency battle between Holmes and NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell that Mayor Eric Adams had to settle.

The internal squabble boiled over just months after The Post reported in July that the NYPD dramatically relaxed the police fitness test amid a record wave of retirements. The department has also had trouble recruiting new cops, many of whom can find better paying jobs in Long Island or elsewhere in the country.

Without the timed run, the only physical fitness criteria for NYPD hopefuls is the Job Standard Test, a multi-step course that needs to be completed in 4-minutes and 28-seconds.

But Holmes insisted the timed run — which needed to be completed by men and women in 14-minutes and 21-seconds — isn’t necessary to be a cop.

“No cop on patrol runs a mile and a half,” she said. “No one’s chasing anyone a mile and a half. Not to mention every day in the gym you’re doing a mile and a half [as part of training.]”

Chief Juanita Holmes
Training Chief Juanita Holmes believes removing the run requirement will help more women applicants.
Brigitte Stelzer

The requirement was also holding back otherwise-qualified candidates — especially women, who now make up about a fifth of the force, she said.

But Sewell and now-retired Chief Kenneth Corey were dead-set against it, prompting a conference call with Adams on Feb. 21, Holmes said.

“They said, ‘We’re going to keep it in,” she recalled.

Although Holmes refused to address the call, she acknowledged that she won the mayor’s approval in the end, saying: “We no longer have that run in place.”

Sewell, meanwhile, didn’t want to seem like she was lowering the entry standards, sources said.

“The [police commissioner] is in favor of the run,” a high-ranking police source said. “She didn’t agree with this.”

Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell
Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell is against removing the 1.5-mile requirement.
Kevin C. Downs

A City Hall spokesman refused to comment about Adams’ conference call with the police brass.

“We don’t discuss private conversations,” he said. “The NYPD would be best to discuss training requirements.”

But the NYPD was equally opaque, ignoring specific questions about the run requirement but saying that the state accepted the city’s Job Standard Test as meeting the training standards.

“To date, the NYPD is in compliance with the physical fitness standards set by the [state’s Municipal Police Training Council],” the NYPD said. “The requirements to complete the daily physical training and tactics of our Police Academy, including running nearly every day, remains unchanged.”

cop training
The department has experienced trouble recruiting new cops.
woman running
“No cop on patrol runs a mile and a half,” Holmes said.

Still, rank-and-file cops heckled the decision to scrap the run, which one veteran Brooklyn officer called “embarrassing” because most recruits are in their early 20s.

“You can probably just about walk it,” the officer said. “I mean, a mile-and-a-half in 14 minutes? It’s a brisk walk … Listen, the standards have been lowered for years. Shame on them for not trying to push people.”

One Manhattan cop asked if the department was going to bring back people who failed the run and flunked out of the academy.

fitness test
Footage from the physical standards test in April 2021.
Youtube
training
The department lacks women on the team and hopes the change will increase applicants.
Youtube

“Cops are already out of shape,” the officer said. “What’s going to be coming in here now?

Eugene O’Donnell, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice who is also a former NYPD cop and Brooklyn and Queens prosecutor, blamed the changes on the “defund the police” movement.

“They’re the ones that did this, and they’re the ones who are going to have to live with the consequences of a department where the utterly unfit are all that’s left in the pool,” O’Donnell told The Post.

“This is not being driven by some considered research,” O’Donnell continued. “This is being driven by sheer desperation because you need somebody … There’s nothing but disadvantages to public safety from this decision.”

As of 2021, the NYPD must meet training standards set by the NYS Department of Criminal Justice Services’ Municipal Police Training Council, officials said.

The department submitted the long run and the standard test each for state approval. But state officials rejected the run and told the NYPD it could lead to a class-action lawsuit, Holmes said.

nypd training
“The requirements to complete the daily physical training and tactics of our Police Academy, including running nearly every day, remains unchanged.”
Youtube

The JST — a timed course developed in 2002 — is now the sole physical fitness hurdle for police hopefuls.

A rather simple test, it demands recruits continuously sprint 50 feet, scale a wall, climb the stairs, demonstrate they can restrain someone, run in pursuit, drag a 176-pound mannequin 35 feet and trigger pull an unloaded gun several times.

If wannabe-cops can do that — and pass the other necessary requirements, such as a background check and drug test — they’re in.

The New York State Police, on the other hand, have kept the distance run, according to their website. And they’ve staggered the times so men and women meet different goals.

For instance, a man between the ages of 20 – 29 must run a mile-and-a-half in just under 11 minutes to reach the 70 percentile, the site said. A woman in the same age range must finish in 12:53 to reach the same benchmark.

New York City Police Officer Recruit Job Standard Test
City Councilman Robert Holden also opposed ditching the run, and said he was worried the city was making it too easy to become a cop.
Youtube

The decision to further relax the NYPD fitness standards comes after officials replaced a fake 6-foot wall inside the Police Academy gym with a chain-link fence that’s easier to climb, according to official recruiting videos posted online.

That change followed cellphone video showing of a series of out-of-shape, wannabe cops laughably trying — and failing — to scale the barrier.

City Councilman Robert Holden also opposed ditching the run, and said he was worried the city was making it too easy to become a cop.

“I don’t get it,” Holden said “I think there’s more women that are fit than men! I’ve seen cops that are not fit and they can’t run more than one block — they are at a distinct disadvantage if they’re not fit.”

Holden, a member of the council’s public safety committee, suggested the NYPD just change the time of the run.

“If women can’t do it in 14 minutes, make it 15,” he said. “You can change it. You’re gonna’ get the B-team if you start lowering standards.”

nypd training
In 2021, the NYPD must meet training standards set by the NYS Department of Criminal Justice Services’ Municipal Police Training Council.
Youtube

Holmes said the run was arbitrarily added to the NYPD requirements in 2007.

The time deadline was also the same for men and women, which differs drastically from the requirements of agencies from the State Police to the US Marine Corps.

Still, the decision had immediate effects. On Monday, the NYPD graduated 42 cops who weren’t fast enough to pass the run test, Holmes said. 

“There were 42 cops awaiting this decision,” Holmes said. “It was so ridiculous. I’m glad the mayor saw it as a barrier as well.”  

https://nypost.com/2023/03/01/nypd-kills-timed-run-requirement-for-new-nyc-cops/

California fertility clinic sued for using embryo with deadly cancer gene

 A California couple sued a Pasadena-based fertility clinic on Wednesday, saying it allegedly implanted an embryo carrying a rare gene that causes deadly stomach cancer and then falsified records to cover up its mistake.

In their lawsuit against HRC Fertility, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, Jason and Melissa Diaz said their son, now a year old, will require total stomach removal surgery as a young adult to prevent or treat the cancer. They said they went to HRC Fertility specifically to avoid having a child with the gene, which Jason carries.

Jason had total stomach removal in 2018 after developing the rare cancer, known as hereditary diffuse gastric cancer, and two of his aunts died of stomach cancer in their 40s, according to the lawsuit, which also names the HRC doctor who worked with the couple, Bradford Kolb, as a defendant.

"We went to HRC Fertility to break the family curse of cancer and early death," he said in a statement. "Trusting Dr. Kolb and HRC turned out to be the biggest mistake of our lives."

Melissa Diaz in 2020 had her eggs retrieved. Those eggs were fertilized with Jason's sperm to create embryos to be implanted, a process known as in vitro fertilization or IVF.

All of the embryos were tested for the cancer gene. Kolb transferred one embryo without the gene in 2020, but that pregnancy ended in a miscarriage, according to the lawsuit.

An HRC employee then told Melissa that they had another embryo without the gene, and she responded that the couple wanted to transfer that embryo. In fact, the employee was wrong and the embryo did carry the gene, the lawsuit said.

In January 2021, Kolb transferred the embryo. The Diazes said they did not learn that their son carried the gene until after he was born that September, when they saw it mentioned in handwritten notes on a report of the January 2021 transfer.

Melissa then requested her medical records, and HRC produced a "falsified" version with the handwritten notes removed, according to the lawsuit.

Biden says other companies will slash insulin prices after Eli Lilly move

 U.S. President Joe Biden said on Wednesday that other pharmaceutical companies will have to lower their insulin prices in the wake of Eli Lilly's decision to slash its prices for the popular diabetes treatment.

Eli Lilly said on Wednesday it will cut list prices by 70% for its most commonly prescribed insulin products, Humalog and Humulin, beginning from the fourth quarter of this year.

"Guess what that means?," Biden told Democrats gathered in Baltimore for an annual retreat. "Every other company making it, someone's gonna have to lower their price."

Biden’s signature legislative achievement, the Inflation Reduction Act, has capped insulin prices for Medicare recipients at $35 per month but the law does not extend to patients with private insurance or without insurance from higher prices. He wants Congress to extend the cap beyond Medicare.

"Once you expose these things, it's awful hard to defend it," Biden told reporters at the White House before leaving for Baltimore "Once one major carrier or one major operator changes it, it changes everything. So I think we've made a lot of progress."

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/1-biden-says-other-companies-003022782.html

Taiwan reports second day of large Chinese incursion into its air defence zone

Taiwan reported on Thursday a second day of a large scale Chinese air force incursion into its air defence zone, with its defence ministry saying that in the past 24 hours it had spotted 21 aircraft, as part of Beijing's ongoing military pressure campaign.

Taiwan, which China views as its own territory, has complained for the past three years or so of stepped up Chinese military activities near the island as Beijing seeks to assert its sovereignty claims.

China has said its activities in the area are justified as it seeks to defend its territorial integrity and to warn the United States against "colluding" with Taiwan, despite the anger this causes in Taipei.

Taiwan's defence ministry said the aircraft, 17 J-10 fighters and four J-16 fighters, had flown into the southwestern corner of Taiwan's air defence identification zone, according to a map the ministry released.

The J-10s, an older fighter model that first entered service two decades ago, flew closer to the Chinese coast than Taiwan's, while the J-16s, a much newer and more advanced fighter, flew in an area to the northeast of the Taiwan-controlled Pratas Islands, the map showed.

The lightly-defended Pratas are strategically located at the top of the South China Sea and many of China's fly-bys happen nearby.

Taiwan's forces monitored the situation, including sending up its own air force planes, the ministry added, using the normal phrasing for its response to such Chinese incursions.

The ministry on Wednesday reported 19 Chinese aircraft flying in Taiwan's air defence zone.

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/taiwan-reports-21-chinese-air-012245933.html

US seeks allies' backing for possible China sanctions over Ukraine war

 The United States is sounding out close allies about the possibility of imposing new sanctions on China if Beijing provides military support to Russia for its war in Ukraine, according to four U.S. officials and other sources.

The consultations, which are still at a preliminary stage, are intended to drum up support from a range of countries, especially those in the wealthy Group of 7 (G7), to coordinate support for any possible restrictions.

It was not clear what specific sanctions Washington will propose. The conversations have not been previously disclosed.

The U.S. Treasury Department, a lead agency on the imposition of sanctions, declined to comment.

Washington and its allies have said in recent weeks that China was considering providing weapons to Russia, which Beijing denies. Aides to U.S. President Joe Biden have not publicly provided evidence.

They have also warned China directly against doing so, including in meetings between Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping as well as during a Feb. 18 in-person meeting between U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and top Chinese diplomat Wang Yi on the sidelines of a global security conference in Munich.

The Biden administration's initial steps to counter Chinese support for Russia have included informal outreach at the staff and diplomatic levels, including the Treasury Department, sources familiar with the matter said.

They said officials were laying the groundwork for potential action against Beijing with the core group of countries that were most supportive of sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine a year ago.

Asked about the consultations, a White House National Security Council spokesperson said Russia's war made it difficult for China with Europe and others.

"It's a distraction for China and a potential blow to their international relationships they do not need nor should they want," the spokesperson said.

Tesla shares fall 5% as Elon Musk's 'Master Plan 3' is short on details about both cars and finances

 Investor-day presentation largely focuses on sustainability efforts and efficiency, with no solid news about new or refreshed car models or financial projections

Tesla Inc. shares declined more than 5% in the extended session Wednesday after the electric-vehicle maker teased a "next generation" electric-vehicle platform but stopped short of presenting details.

Tesla's stock (TSLA) had advanced right after the closing bell having ended the regular trading day down 1.4%. The stock then saw losses accelerate as the event in Austin, Texas, progressed.

Tesla had to "fully rethink" the manufacturing process with the goal of improving assembly and making EVs faster and more cheaply, and with a smaller powertrain and lighter weight, executives said.

But they stopped short of giving a timeline for the promised more affordable next-generation platform, which they said would be the base for more than one vehicle. The presentation lasted more than three hours, with most of it dedicated to highlighting Tesla's technological prowess.

At the start, Chief Executive Elon Musk said that he didn't want the day to be for only Tesla investors but for "anyone invested in Earth," and he wanted to offer "hope and optimism based on actual physics and calculations."

"There's a clear path toward sustainable energy" that doesn't require destroying natural habitats or austerity, combining energy storage, EVs and other aspects of electrification, Musk said.

Chief Financial Officer Zachary Kirkhorn was the final scheduled speaker in the session, and he provided information about how Tesla was cutting costs and planned to reduce the operating cost for owners of the next-generation but still-under-wraps vehicle platform.

Kirkhorn did not provide long-term financial targets, a common offering during investor-day presentations, and the livestream carried on the Musk-owned Twitter platform stopped during his presentation as it reached a three-hour time limit.

Tesla then opened another livestream so the executives could take questions from the audience.

"Probably the most exciting announcement of the day is that we're going to be building a gigafactory in Mexico," Musk said at the beginning of the question-and-answer session after the scheduled presentation. The next-generation vehicles would be made there.

Mexico's president beat Musk to that announcement earlier this week, however.

Musk tweeted nearly a year ago that he was "working on" a new master plan. "Master Plan 2" was released in March 2016, promising a few things that have fallen short of reality, especially around Musk's hopes for self-driving cars and car sharing. The first so-called master plan, from 2006, outlined Tesla's strategy of starting off with a pricey and highly desirable sportscar as a springboard and a funding source for future affordable EVs.

The newest blueprint comes as Tesla's stock regained the $200 level after trading as low as $109.10 in late December. The stock has gained 64% in the quarter so far, though it is down 30% over the past 12 months. That compares with a decline of about 8% for the S&P 500 index in the past 12 months and contrasts with a quarterly advance by that stock-market benchmark of around 3%.

Tesla in late January reported mixed fourth-quarter results, with revenue slightly below Wall Street expectations, but injected some optimism in its production outlook for 2023 and promised to rein in costs faster.

Musk also told investors that demand for Tesla's EVs was not a problem.

https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/202303011203/tesla-shares-fall-5-as-elon-musks-master-plan-3-is-short-on-details-about-both-cars-and-finances