Sgt. Brad Paplham joined the Ramsey Police Department 20 years ago, fresh out of the Army and in top shape, but years of grabbing fast food on the job has packed on the pounds.
Then Ramsey Police Chief Jim Way launched a voluntary fitness program in 2011 that changed everything, presaging similar changes now underway at other metro agencies. Paplham, 45, joined the program and has lost 20 pounds and gone from a 42-inch to 34-inch waist.
"Every day I wake up and I feel better," Paplham said. "Going up four flights of stairs, I'm not huffing and puffing."
Although fitness is often at the core of many police activities, several factors of the job — long hours, high stress levels, patrolling in squad cars — don't lend themselves to a healthy lifestyle. Those are some of the reasons fitness requirements vary from department to department in Minnesota, and much of the nation, or may not exist at all.
There's little uniformity in industry standards and expectations, but some agencies are opting to up the ante themselves. The Washington County Sheriff's Office is hosting a training session in May with leading fitness research and educational nonprofit the Cooper Institute; Lakeville and Bloomington police plan to start new fitness programs this year, and St. Paul police want to incorporate core strength training and testing for the first time.
"You go from two hours of quiet to two minutes or 30 seconds of extreme exertion, and your body needs to be able to handle that," said Bloomington Cmdr. Vic Poyer.
St. Paul officers already are tested annually in the month of their birthday, a more stringent practice than others in the metro. Officers are not required to pass to retain their posts.
About three-quarters of the approximately 610 sworn officers pass their annual test, said Marsha Panos, St. Paul police's fitness coordinator. In February officer Josh Lynaugh, 30, suffered a heart attack after a foot chase and died of complications a week later. The details of his health cannot be discussed because of privacy laws, but Panos said the department does provide extra care for officers with pre-existing conditions and requires an exercise stress test at a doctor's office for officers age 40 and 45, every two years after 50 and every year after 60.