Naples – A breath of fresh air for road safety and territorial control in the shadow of Vesuvius. The City of Naples is preparing to bolster the ranks of the Municipal Police with the hiring of 200 new officers.
The official announcement came directly from Mayor Gaetano Manfredi, speaking on the sidelines of the celebrations for San Sebastiano Martire, patron saint of the White Helmets, on the occasion of the 165th anniversary of the founding of the Neapolitan Corps.
Hiring begins after the budget
The timeline is clear: the hiring process will begin as soon as the council approves the financial statements. "We will proceed with the new hires immediately after the budget is approved," Manfredi stated, emphasizing that staffing expansion can no longer be postponed for a city undergoing constant transformation.
A garrison of legality and transparency
For the mayor, who also holds the position of national president of the ANCI, the Local Police is not just an operational arm for traffic, but a true administrative pillar.
"The Corps is a fundamental tool for managing cities, ensuring transparency and governing the processes of change in our communities," the Mayor explained.
In addition to their bureaucratic role, Manfredi emphasized their valuable contribution to urban safety, where the police work daily in synergy with law enforcement to monitor the streets in an "important and very challenging" context.
The crux of the reform
The announcement of the new recruits, however, comes amid a series of structural challenges affecting the profession nationwide. Manfredi made no secret of the need for broader legislative intervention: the Municipal Police is an evolving force that requires long-overdue regulatory reform, accompanied by more robust financial support and adequate resources to meet the new challenges of modernity.
With these 200 new hires, Palazzo San Giacomo aims to send a concrete signal of support to its citizens, filling the staffing gaps that have for years weighed on the efficiency of local services.
Source EDITORIAL TEAM






Comments (2)
Yes, it's important to have more police officers on the streets, especially in a city like Naples. Safety is essential, but I wonder if the resources will be sufficient to properly train the new officers.
The article discusses the hiring of 200 new officers for the Naples Municipal Police. This is good news for road safety, but we hope the budget approval is swift so as not to waste time.