St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell said he expects to hire 50 or 60 police recruits to start training this fall, but the department's pool of applicants is half of what it was five years ago.
Amid unprecedented scrutiny of law enforcement, including calls to reform or replace it entirely, police chiefs say they are seeing fewer men and women seeking to join the force. St. Paul received 178 applications from eligible candidates for its police academy this year — down 51% from the 366 the city got in 2016.
"This is an incredibly challenging calling," Axtell said. "And now, when you add in the dynamic of a significant amount of vitriol toward police in our community, it's a detriment to people who in the past have taken the calling. They are now thinking twice about doing the job."
A surge in violent crime in Minnesota's capital city has led Axtell and others to push for hiring officers to replace those retiring or leaving for other reasons. The chief has at times clashed with Mayor Melvin Carter over maintaining staffing levels at the St. Paul Police Department.
In an interview Monday, Carter said he does not know how many recruits St. Paul will ultimately hire but said the upcoming police academy could be "one of our largest ever."
Carter said the decline in this year's applicants doesn't concern him because he has not received any indication that filling St. Paul's openings this year will be a problem.
"Frankly, I think we've had a shift in the last year in what we expect of police officers," he said. "… If those shifts have made the profession less attractive to certain individuals, that actually might be a positive shift."
The mayor cut department budgets across St. Paul in 2021 to make up for COVID-related revenue losses. The Police Department was allocated about $104.7 million of the city's general fund, about a $800,000 decrease from the previous year — though an additional $3.7 million will be cut through attrition, Axtell has said.