New York Police Commissioner James O'Neill announced the measures being taken towards ensuring religious accommodation to its officers following a graduation ceremony for new police recruits yesterday.
Under the revised policy, officers from the Sikh faith will be allowed to have beards that extend up to one-half inch from the face. The officers may also wear blue turbans - with a hat shield it affixed to it - in place of the traditional police cap.
Standing alongside Sikh officers after the grand graduation ceremony, O'Neill the measures were aimed at making the NYPD "as diverse as possible".
"We changed our beard policy and our head covering policy. It is a major change in our uniform policy, so we had to go about it carefully," he said, as quoted in a New York Post report.
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"We've been working with the Sikh officers to try to make sure we get this done. I had the opportunity to make the change and I thought it was about time that we did that. We want to make the NYPD as diverse as possible and I think this is going to be one way to help us with that," he said.
Of the 557 recruits who graduated from the Police Academy, 33 are Muslims and two are Sikhs, according to the Police Department.
According to the police department's patrol guide, officers are prohibited from having beards and headdresses that are not part of the uniform. However exceptions have been made for officers who receive a medical or religious accommodation to wear facial hair up to one millimetre in length.
"The Sikh Coalition has been working for over a decade to change the NYPD's policy that discriminated against Sikhs," the group said in a post on Facebook adding that in recent years, that work has continued with community partners, like the NYPD Sikh Officer Association.
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