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A new scoring policy established by Eric Holder's Justice Department requires that potential police officers in Dayton, OH, to get only a 58% and a 63% on parts one and two of the entrance exam, where prior the thresholds were 66% and 72%, respectfully. The new standards establish the equivalent of an ‘F' and a ‘D'.
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Holder's Justice Dept. Forcing
the 'Dumbing Down' of Police Tests

ABC News (Dayton, OH)
The Dayton, Ohio, Police Department is lowering its testing standards for recruits. It's a move required by the US Department of Justice after it says not enough African-Americans passed the exam.

Dayton is in desperate need of officers to replace dozens of retirees. The hiring process was postponed for months because the DoJ rejected the original scores provided by the Dayton Civil Service Board, which administers the test.

Under the previous requirements, candidates had to get a 66% on part one of the exam and a 72% on part two. The DoJ approved new scoring policy only requires potential police officers to get a 58% and a 63%. That's the equivalent of an ‘F' and a ‘D'.

"It becomes a safety issue for the people of our community," said Dayton Fraternal Order of Police President, Randy Beane. "It becomes a safety issue to have an incompetent officer next to you in a life and death situation."

"The NAACP does not support individuals failing a test and then having the opportunity to be gainfully employed," agreed Dayton NAACP President Derrick Foward...

The lower standards mean 258 more people passed the test. The city won't say how many were minorities.

"If you lower the score for any group of people, you're not getting the best qualified people for the job," Foward said...

The DoJ has forced other police departments across the country to lower testing standards, citing once again that not enough black candidates were passing.

The Dayton Firefighter recruit exam is coming up this summer. The chief said it's likely the passing score for that test will be lowered as

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