NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch says her plan to split the Bronx patrol zone in two will add nearly 200 officers in an effort to sharpen the department’s focus on persistent crime in the borough.
The plan also adds administrative staff and new leadership to oversee the commands. But while some Bronx officials say they are eager for the extra resources, others are raising questions about where the officers will actually come from.
Tisch announced Tuesday that the change will be implemented this spring, creating Bronx North and Bronx South commands, each with its own leadership structure. Other than Staten Island, the Bronx is the only borough currently operating under a single patrol command overseeing all of its precincts.
The Bronx accounts for more than a third of all citywide shootings and nearly as much major crime as Brooklyn, which has a much higher population, according to Tisch. NYPD data shows crime in the Bronx has remained stubbornly high amid declines in other parts of the city since the pandemic.
"They're not asking for special treatment," Tisch said. "They're asking a reasonable question about fairness and capacity."
The department declined to provide a detailed cost or staffing breakdown for her plan. A November budget plan made public when the split was first decided showed the NYPD added $16 million in Bronx-related spending in the fiscal year 2028 budget.
Kenneth Quick, a policing professor at DeSales University and a former NYPD inspector in charge of personnel, said the department has a long history of shifting resources so “the cost gets masked." He questioned where the roughly 200 officers for the Bronx would come from.
“You sort of robbed Peter to pay Paul," Quick said. “They could just get those officers from a unit that was there anyway and change their command code and now they're saying we have extra officers there."
The NYPD has struggled with recruiting in recent years and has come close to its budgeted head count only after lowering its education standards.
Quick said the split will also double administrative overhead by adding extra chiefs and civilian staff. He said more managers overseeing fewer precincts could increase pressure on officers to generate summonses and arrests.
But George Grasso, a former NYPD first deputy commissioner and a Bronx judge, said the tighter structure should improve results.
"You're tightening up the chain of command, you're tightening up the span of control," he said. “Therefore, in theory, you're going to get a better bang for your buck with the resources that you have."
Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark said she does not expect the new command structure to lead to more arrests. Instead, she said, a greater police presence could deter crime.
"We've always been under-resourced," she said. "We've never gotten what everybody else has, and then they wanna know why the crime is up in the Bronx."
Clark stressed that community engagement will be critical to the plan’s success.
"It won't be effective unless the police department engages with the community," she said.