A decorated Navy SEAL is no longer “too old” to join the FDNY’s Bravest.
On Veterans Day eve, Gov. Cuomo is poised to sign a bill to extend the window for active military members to qualify as NYC firefighter candidates by one year.
“We intend to sign this legislation in the coming days,” Cuomo spokesman Richard Azzopardi told The Post.
That will open the door for SEAL Shaun Donovan, who was turned away because he missed the application deadline by six months and 25 days while serving in Naval Special Warfare.
Three other military members also rejected for their age will now qualify, said FDNY spokesman Frank Dwyer.
Donovan, whose parents hailed from Staten Island before raising him in Tucson, Ariz., was born on September 11. The 343 Bravest killed in the 9/11 terror attacks inspired him to apply.
“I am grateful that myself and several other veterans who are also now eligible will have the privilege to attend the FDNY academy,” Donovan, now 38, told The Post. “I am beyond humbled to have the chance to be a part of the FDNY and look forward to doing my part to keep the people and property of New York City safe.”
With Mayor de Blasio’s blessing, the state Legislature unanimously passed the bill at the end of its session in June, after The Post reported Donovan was appealing his rejection to the Civil Service Commission.
Donovan, who has earned medals for valor during four combat tours in Iraq, Afghanistan and Yemen, used military leave to fly to New York City twice at his own expense to apply.
He scored in the top one percent of 43,900 candidates on the written exam, and passed the Candidate Physical Ability Test.
“The city and FDNY are getting a great firefighter candidate. Shaun will make us all proud,” said his lawyer Kevin Carroll, of Wiggin and Dana, an Army reservist who represented Donovan pro bono.
A booster behind the scenes, Mindy Franklin Levine, the wife of Yankees president Randy Levine and a volunteer for veteran groups, called it wrong to penalize Donovan for the length of his military service.
“We want to show our veterans that they’re welcome in the workplace, they’re valued members of society, and they should not fear leaving military service for lack of work in the private sector,” she said.
Currently, of 17,000-plus FDNY members, including EMS and civilians, more than 1,300 are veterans or military reservists, Dwyer said.