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What percentage of police officers make law enforcement a career, from academy until retirement or pension eligibility?

The Pretenders!I will give you a breakdown in my department, but then I will educate you on the biggest scam in police work, which will shock and anger most of you.My statistical review is of the one urban, inner city department I worked for which was in an economically depressed area. During my last year, I worked at the department, I located a roster of departmental personnel. I was able to put all the officers who had left into one of four categories.Resigned at time of regular retirement 50%Resigned for other employment 15%Resigned or terminated for cause 5%Resigned due to permanent injury 30+%Here’s what I found in our department:Of all the officers hired, just under 50% retired from our department with a full 25-year career.About 15% left our department and completed a lateral transfer to another agency where they retired from or continue to work.About 5% of our officers were either arrested or given the choice to resign or be charged. These were mostly newer officers who should never have been hired in the first place.About 30% or one in three officers retired with a disability retirement. Some were justifiable in my mind, but many others were not. As long as you had five years in the pension system, and were injured or involved in a critical incident (shooting) you could get a lawyer and apply for disability retirement.MEET THE PRETENDERS!If an officer completed 25 years of service, they would receive 65% of their last year's salary. If an officer had at least five years of service and was injured they could hire a lawyer and apply for a disability retirement which is 66 2/3% of their salary at the time of the injury (TAX-FREE). Yes, that's right, its considered a settlement award. The wording reads permanently and totally disabled, but that part’s a joke.Now some officers are badly injured in a car crash or have to take a life in the line of duty and retire. I have no problem with them.Then you have the pretenders: These are the cops who were simply present during a critical incident and claim psychological stress, or get slightly injured and get a lifelong pension.I'll give you a couple of examples. One officer tried to punch a suspect while arresting him and punched his own car instead. It broke a small bone in the back of the officer's hand. Because his gun hand was injured, he applied for and received a full disability pension.He ran a home improvement business on the side and about a month after retirement I saw him climb a ladder and use a hammer with his injured hand working on the side of a house. Clearly a pretender!Next example; We had a critical incident where a murder occurred and the suspect was armed with a machine gun. Multiple officers chased the offender down. As he was carjacking a car, several officers engaged the offender using only handguns while taking fire. Also on the scene was one of our newer officers who was part of our rifle team and had deployed his military-styled .223 rifle with a combat sighting system.He was the only officer who did not engage the suspect or shoot, and the only officer who left the department on a psychological disability pension as a result. I would note that he was, at the time, in the Army reserve, and after retiring, he continued to be in the Army reserve. Permanently and totally disabled, my butt. This pretender has been sucking money out of our pension system for the past twenty years.It got so bad, police officers are getting disability retirements in one state and going to another state and getting hired as police officers, and no one is checking this. At the bottom is an article where an NYPD officer retired on disability and was hired as a police officer in Florida.This practice appears to be happening all over the country and it would be so easy to stop. Each state pension system could require any officer receiving a disability pension to yearly certify that they are still “Permanently and totally disabled.” If they were working at another job, this would have to be disclosed.If they are gainfully employed, pension benefits would only be paid up to the difference between their current salary and their disability award. State pensions across the country are going bankrupt while “Pretenders” continue to collect disability payments. They hold down full-time employment, robbing both taxpayers and the pension funds.If you take the time to read the link on New Jersey cops below, you will see why New Jersey is the most corrupt state in the country.“Once you have your pension in hand, you’re golden,” said Sierchio, a Bloomfield police detective who has served on the PFRS board of trustees since 2002. “You can do whatever you want to do.”NJ cops, others collecting millions in disability benefits . . . and paychecksMayo: How many disabled ex-cops from New York get police jobs in South Florida?

What do astronauts do once they leave NASA?

The NASA astronaut corps is a mix of civilians and active duty military officers, so what happens when they leave first depends on which of those camps they fit into.If they are active duty military, and do not retire from the military prior to leaving their astronaut position at NASA, they will go on to whatever assignment the military wishes to give them. For example, Susan Helms was a member of the Expedition 2 crew. She returned to Earth in August 2001. By 2002 she had completed her post-flight duties such as debriefs and PAO activities and she decided to leave the astronaut corps. At that time, she was a Colonel in the US Air Force. The Air Force assigned her to become a division chief at the US Space Command in Colorado. Since then she has become a Lieutenant General and is commander, 14th Air Force.Astronauts that are not active duty military at the time of retirement from the Astronaut office have a tendency to move on to executive positions in the aerospace industry. Commercial space companies often hire astronauts for the vast experience and network of contacts that they can provide. For example, Quora's new member, Garrett Reisman left NASA and became the Program Manager for SpaceX's Dragon-Falcon 9 crew vehicle. His AsCan classmate Chris Ferguson left NASA and is now Garrett's competitor, as he is the Director of Crew and Mission Operations for Boeing's Commercial Crew Program.Gregory H Johnson is an example of an astronaut that was active military, but retired from the military while still an astronaut. He retired from the Air Force in 2009, but stayed with NASA until this month. In September he will become the Executive Director for the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS). CASIS is a nonprofit that is responsible for managing payload science utilization of the ISS.Some astronauts do indeed go into politics. The most famous is, of course, John Glenn. Glenn went on to be a senator for the state of Ohio for 25 years. He also ran for President in 1984. Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt became a senator for New Mexico. Most recently, Jose Hernandez left NASA in 2011 to run for a House of Representatives seat in his home state of California.Astronauts are overachievers and some astronauts go on to very eclectic things. One of the most interesting astronauts is Story Musgrave. He was an active astronaut for over 30 years and holds the distinction of being the only astronaut to fly on all five space shuttles. While he was an astronaut he obtained 7 graduate degrees – math, computers, chemistry, medicine, physiology, literature, and psychology. In his spare time he was a trauma surgeon, pilot, and parachutist. Today he operates a palm farm in Florida, a production company in Australia, and a sculpture company in California. He is a landscape architect. He has worked for Disney's Imagineering team as a concept artist. He teaches design at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. And he's a public speaker with 20 honorary doctorates.Scott Parazynski left NASA in March 2009 and in May climbed to the summit of Mt. Everest. He is now the Director and Chief Medical Officer of UTMBs Center for Polar Medical Operations.Academia lures some astronauts. Barbara Morgan was Christa McAuliffe's backup to be the Teacher in Space in 1985-1986. Twelve years later in 1998 she was selected to become a full astronaut. In 2008 she left to become a Distinguished Educator in Residence in both engineering and education at Boise State University.Some leave the astronaut corps, but stay at NASA in management positions. Brewster Shaw became the Deputy Director, Space Shuttle Operations at KSC. Since then he has left NASA and been an executive at Boeing and for awhile was the Chief Operating Officer for United Space Alliance (the 10,000 employee contractor that operated the Space Shuttle and provides most of the operations personnel for the ISS).

What is the worst part about living in the state of Florida?

Original question:“What are the downsides of living in Florida?”Answer:Some things are obvious:Hurricanes.Tornadoes (Not as much as Oklahoma or Kansas, but still more than most states).Lightning. The Tampa area is the lighting capital of America.Flooding in a few very low-lying areas.Heat (during the summertime).Humidity (during the summertime).And some things that are not so obvious:VERY dry winters that lead to widespread wildfires about once every 10 years or so.Wintertime traffic congestion due to snowbirds (snowbirds are people, most of them elderly, that live in Florida only during the winter).Wintertime traffic ACCIDENTS due to snowbirds (Frankly, some elderly people should not have a driver’s license if they live in high population parts of Florida, imo. Driving in high traffic areas requires an agility at the wheel that many elderly people just don’t have). I’ve come VERY close (like stomping-on-the-brakes-tires-screeching-to-within-inches-of-the-other-vehicle-close) to some accidents because of elderly people making very poor driving decisions.Most of Florida (except for parts of northernmost Florida) is flat flat flat. Like no mountains, foothills, hills, or even bumps flat. Anything over 5 feet in height is called a “hill” or “highland”. I actually call it “Flat Florida”. No joke.There a LOTS of crawling type bugs down here. LOTS. Which is OK if they stay outside. But they won’t, even if you keep your house IMMACULATELY clean.The traffic lights down here are literally 4 times as long as traffic lights elsewhere. No joke, I’ve measured it. I found that traffic lights in most places that I lived in or visited before I moved down here lasted 30 seconds from beginning of green to the next beginning of green. Down here traffic lights are 2 minutes from beginning of green to the next beginning of green. As a result, there are more people that run red lights down here, and also much longer groups of cars between traffic lights, which causes some people on side streets to turn into traffic when it’s not safe.Much of the housing in some of the counties is located in developments that have restrictions, such as the colors you can paint your house, the type of mailbox you can have, what colors and types of Christmas decorations you can put up, and so on. If you try to disobey those restrictions, then the HOA/POA (Home Owners Association/Property Owners Association) for that development will fine you, and if you don’t pay the fine, they will put a lien on your house. No joke. Some people actually like such restrictions, so for them, this point would be a plus. But not for me.Many housing lots are tiny, like less than 1/3 of an acre. This is because it is the price of the land, as opposed to the house, that is more expensive, especially anywhere within about 20 miles of the ocean. So to get an affordable home, it is necessary to build it on a tiny lot, in much of Florida. There are many high-class type houses that are surprisingly affordable down here, as long as they are on very tiny lots.Lastly, what is by far the most negative thing about Florida, there are MANY girlie joints (you see the billboards for them all over the place) and pawn shops, which draw the criminal element.But for all of those (except the flatness), there are very common and/or easy work-arounds:As for hurricanes, houses in Florida nowadays are built to VERY STRICT building codes. We have among the strictest building codes, if not THE strictest building codes, in the nation. Plus some counties add even STRICTER building codes on top of the already strict state codes! The house I live in, for example, has withstood two MAJOR hurricanes (Frances and Jeanne in 2004, which hit very close by). Houses (and any other buildings) down here that have been built in the last 15 years or so aren’t simply houses; they are FORTRESSES. No joke. And if you are concerned about the week or two after a hurricane power outage, you can buy a generator, a gas stove, etc., or solar panels, which have been getting less and less expensive as of late. Plus solar panels cut your normal electricity cost. So if you are buying an existing house, be sure the house has been built after 2002. If you have a new house built, it will be built to the new codes. Just be sure to use only Florida certified builders, and keep an eye on them (take photos of the construction from time to time, say). If you are still concerned, hire builders that will build to the strictest codes in the state - the Miami-Dade building codes. Those are, by far, the strictest building codes in the state and, in fact, the entire nation.As for tornadoes, see my prior point.As for lightning, stay indoors and don’t touch anything plugged into electrical outlets. If you are outdoors, get indoors. Many public places have lightning detectors that go off even before you know there is a thunderstorm in the area. Florida thunderstorms are very short; they only last about 15-30 minutes or so on average, and usually occur around 4 or 5 PM during the afternoon on summer days, so it’s not much of an inconvenience anyway. And if you’re afraid of thunderstorms, one summer in Florida will cure you of that!Most areas that are prone to flooding have been declared nature reserves, or parks, or some other type of area that you can’t build in anyway. Plus the drainage system is very well built, and has been in continuous construction since the 1940’s (for more info, see the South Florida Water Management website https://www.sfwmd.gov/). If you still have any concerns, look up the flood zone map for the county that you plan to move into, then don’t buy or rent a house in a flood zone.As for the heat and humidity, just about every single property, be it houses, stores, malls, workplaces, etc., has central air conditioning. Plus EVERY car sold down here has good AC. In fact, there are state laws that REQUIRE certain places, such as nursing homes, etc, to have AC, and systems to back up that AC in case of power outage. So an average summer day consists of: Waking up in your air conditioned house, driving to work in your air conditioned car (be sure to park in the shade), working in your air conditioned workplace, running your shopping or other errands in air conditioned stores/banks/doctor offices/whatever, then driving your air conditioned car back to your air conditioned house. And the rest of the year, the temperatures are much nicer than in the rest of the country.As for the once per decade wildfires, they don’t occur everywhere, and when they DO occur, one of Florida’s many, very well equipped fire departments is usually on the scene in minutes. In the rare cases when they get out of control, most of those are in remote areas like the Everglades where nobody lives, and if one does get close to an inhabited area, people will be warned if there’s even a slight chance of the fire coming their way, and evacuated if needed. Plus extra fire departments are called in from other states in those cases. Plus a lot of warning/work is done to prevent fires from getting close to houses to begin with (towns/counties/state trimming roadside/canalside shrubbery, etc.) If, after all that, your house is one of the rare few to get burned down, your homeowners insurance will put you up at a hotel somewhere nearby (Florida has TONS of hotels), and your insurance will build you a brand new house, built to the latest codes, to boot! But check insurance company reviews before you buy any kind of insurance.As for the wintertime traffic congestion, try to avoid living in or near a city. Traffic is INSANE in south Florida (that is, the counties of Martin, Palm Beach, Broward, and Dade. Those all contain big cities. But Monroe and most other counties are OK). Plus, once you become a native Floridian, you will learn all the back roads to take to get around most of the congestion.As for the wintertime traffic accidents, see my prior point.If you like mountains, you are plain out of luck. You’ll have to go up to Georgia to see the Appalachians. But the very northernmost part of Florida, by Tallahassee, for example, has some hills.You can easily get around the bug thing by having a pest control guy spray around your house every month or two. If you don’t like bugs in your house, you will REQUIRE pest control spraying. It’s not expensive and it works. It’s kind of like of an extra utility bill that you have to pay, but it’s not that much; for us it has varied from $30 to $35 per month.As for the traffic light thing, learn the roads. We DO allow right-turn-on-red down here (like most of the nation), so when you come to a red light, and you need to take a right, you’ll be OK if there is a right turn only lane. Or if you see a traffic light about to turn red far down the road (99% of the roads down here are as straight as an arrow for long distances), you may be able to turn off the road that has the traffic light and use another road that doesn’t have a traffic light. I use these and other legal tricks all the time to avoid red lights. Also be extra careful at intersections (remember the red-light runners), and watch those side streets! Fortunately, however, the wider streets down here make it much easier to see traffic at intersections and coming in from side streets; so overall, even with the afore-mentioned issues, it seems safer to me.As for the housing developments thing, if you don’t like restrictions, make sure that any house that you buy or rent is NOT in such a development. Talk to your realtor, or ask someone in a nearby house, about it. In some counties, it’s easier to find houses that are not in developments; in other counties, it’s virtually impossible (such as Palm Beach county, say), unless you either: A. are willing to live in a high crime area, or B. have several million dollars in your bank account. About the only reasonable “work-around” for housing in a county like Palm Beach County would be for you to buy housing in a development that has fewer restrictions than other developments (get a list of the local HOA/POA rules and regulations BEFORE you buy a house), and then be SURE to attend all HOA/POA meetings, or better yet, become an actual MEMBER of the POA/HOA, to ensure that they keep the number and type of regulations down to a bare minimum.As for the girlie joints and pawn shops, sad to say, there’s not much you can do immediately except to avoid them and avoid the neighborhoods that have them (and no, I do NOT recommend the use of arson :D). Long term, I would like to see the state legislature ban such businesses, or if that is not possible, to regulate them so heavily that it becomes almost impossible for such businesses to exist in the state.I moved down to Florida from Albany, NY over 20 years ago, and OVERALL I AM VERY GLAD THAT I MOVED TO FLORIDA, for the following additional benefits:It’s much sunnier. We RARELY have days that are overcast or rainy all day long. Most of our rain comes from brief but very heavy rainfalls in afternoon thunderstorms; outside of that, it’s usually sunny.There are fewer social restrictions on what people can talk about (like church, prayer, and such; people are very open about that and many other things down here).They are also more open about fireworks and a few other things.I like the way people think down here, they are more down-to-earth.Folks are “warmer” down here; that is, they are more polite and welcoming. You will, of course, come across the occasional grouch, but that happens everywhere.Property tax rates are lower than many states.There is a 3% cap on how much the tax rate on your home can increase, annually, no matter how much the value of your house increases (if it’s your primary residence). So if your house increased 20% in value last year, they can’t increase your home property tax more than 3%. It’s actually in the state constitution.If your Florida home is your permanent residence, you are (in the majority of cases) eligible to have up to $50,000 worth of the value of your property exempted from the calculation of your total taxes. SWEET!!!There is NO state income tax. Yippee!!!!There is a moderate sales tax, but there are annual sales tax suspensions, such as a week in June for hurricane preparation items such as generators, plywood, etc; a week in August for school related items, and so on. During those weeks, the sales tax for the specified items is ZERO. Nice, eh?It’s MUCH easier to find your way around in Florida than many other states because 99% of the roads run either DUE North and South or DUE East and West, go straight as an arrow for long distances, have no hills, plus most of the roads are much wider (which also makes seeing at intersections and onto side streets much better and therefore safer). If you can navigate in any other state, Florida should be a snap for you.Oh, but bear in mind, once you get down to Dade, Broward, or Palm Beach counties, some of these things are really different, like #’s 2, 3, and 4 in this list. Those three counties are a different world entirely. But most of Florida is just fine.

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