Sat. Nov 2nd, 2024
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The Queensland Police Service (QPS) is trying to poach new recruits from interstate, offering to pay up part of the HECS debt of some university graduates who then go through the police academy, in a bid to bolster the thin blue line.

The $90 million recruitment drive to address police employment challenges includes a raft of incentives to lure officers to join Queensland police, like the service paying up to $20,000 for the relocation costs of police officers from interstate or overseas.

Up to 400 police recruit graduates who hold a university degree in areas such as psychology, criminology, social work, counselling or other human service-related fields will be able to receive up to $20,000 paid off their HECS debt.

New recruits will also receive a “cost of living” allowance of $183 per fortnight on top of their current recruit wage during the almost eight-month training course.

Police Minister Mark Ryan said it will boost a recruit’s wage to the equivalent of $52,000 per annum.

Mark Ryan compared Queensland’s police recruitment benefits to that of New South Wales.()

“That’s a significant increase and contrasts us with most other policing jurisdictions around Australia,” he said.

“In fact, New South Wales don’t even pay their recruits.

“So this supports people into a full-time role in the Queensland Police Service.”

All accommodation costs at the state’s two police academies will also be waived for new recruits, which the state government says will save them almost $200 per week. Police recruit application and pre-selection test fees will also be waived.

Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll said the incentives were a “game changer” and it would help address employment challenges.

“We’ve never had such offerings before for people coming through the academy and into our organisation,” she said.

Police Commissioner Katarina Carroll labelled the initiative a “game changer” for Queensland Police.()

“We’ve been quiet up front that in the last several months with the labour markets, the retirements and low attrition … that we have to do things very, very differently to get more people through our academy, to get more people into our organisation over the next few years.”

Changes follow formal inquiry

Last year, a Commission of Inquiry looking at Queensland police responses to domestic violence found a “failure of leadership” allowed cultural issues within the service to fester “unchecked” for years. 

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