Syracuse Police Department
TRADITION SERVICE INNOVATION EXCELLENCE
Public InformationJOIN SPD

The Recruitment Section is responsible for recruiting the most qualified applicants available for actual and anticipated vacancies within the department. Recruitment personnel strive to develop and maintain a racial and ethnic composition within the department that mirrors the demographic composition of the City of Syracuse.

For further information complete the online form, contact the Recruitment Section at (315) 442-5227 or e-mail Recruitment@syracusepolice.org.

 

Recruitment


 
 

Launch in external player



 

Next Civil Service Exam Date:

The next Civil Service exam for Police Officer is expected to be held on the second Saturday in November, 2013.

Applications are not yet available.

The deadline for filing will be posted when the exam date is announced.

Click on "Download the Civil Service application" under "Related Links" on this page 

You must mail the application, and a check for $35.00 to:

Onondaga County Personnel   John H. Mulroy Civic Center   421 Montgomery St, 13th Floor Syracuse, NY 13202-2959


Contact Information
511 S. State Street
Syracuse, NY 13202
Phone: (315) 442-5200
View Map
ContactsRecruitment User
Recruitment Section
Phone: (315)442-5227

NEWS & CURRENT EVENTS

I-5 bridge collapses in NW Wash.; no fatalities reported (update)
An Interstate 5 bridge over a river north of Seattle collapsed Thursday evening, dumping vehicles and people into the water, the Washington State Patrol said.
Syracuse Memorial Day Weekend weather: Your morning forecast (video)
The core of the cooler air will be over us today and Saturday. It will then begin to pull out of here, shifting to the east of us on Sunday and Memorial Day.
Seach for Ithaca man who went missing on Cayuga Lake to resume, authorities say
Christopher Dennis, of Cayuga Heights Road, left a campsite around 5 a.m. Wednesday in the town of Covert and put a canoe into Cayuga Lake alone.
Obama defends use of drones, offers to cut 'some slack' for heckler from anti-war group
Obama defended his controversial drone-strikes program as a linchpin of the U.S. response to the evolving dangers. He also argued that changing threats require changes to the nation's counterterrorism policies.