Would you feel safer seeing a bobby on the beat? - 24 Nov 13
Putting more police officers on the beat should be at the
forefront of efforts to restore public confidence, according to a
blueprint for reform by a former Scotland Yard commissioner.
Lord Stevens will unveil the Independent Police Commission report later
today and set out a raft of recommendations to transform policing in
England and Wales.
Writing in the Sunday Telegraph, Lord Stevens, who introduced
neighbourhood policing to the Metropolitan Police 10 years ago, said a
community approach was needed.
Police are "sadly deteriorated" in the public's eye, he said, and fewer crimes are being solved.
The commission believes the Government should have a Local Policing
Commitment, giving every neighbourhood a guaranteed level of policing.
It says there should be guaranteed response times and that every crime
should be investigated - or an explanation given as to why not.
Lord Stevens said: "This is the level of service that the public has a
right to expect but that has deteriorated in front of its eyes."
Police are returning to a "discredited" style of policing, reacting to
incidents rather than responding to the root causes of crime, he said.
Among the 37 recommendations by Lord Stevens' commission are that the
social purpose of the police should be enshrined in law, bringing
"much-needed consensus" to what the public expect of the police.
Lord Stevens, who was commissioned to carry out the report by the
Labour party, said the current programme for reform was "confused" and
"fragmented".
He said: "With fewer crimes being solved, a return to merely reactive
policing that the public do not favour, Plebgate, Hillsborough and the
identity crisis of Police and Crime Commissioners, it is no secret that
policing in England and Wales faces challenges."
At the Labour-commissioned report's launch, Labour leader Ed Miliband
will say the threat to neighbourhood policing highlighted in Lord
Stevens' report is of "profound concern".
He is expected to say: "This review is the first step in setting a new direction for policing in the 21st century.
"Neighbourhood policing was pioneered by Labour. It wasn't just a
slogan, it was a different philosophy of policing: policing rooted in
local communities, doing more than reacting to crimes by also preventing
them, and working in partnership with local authorities, schools and
the NHS.
"So it is of profound concern to me that the independent commission
concludes that neighbourhood policing is under threat. We don't want to
see services retreating back to their silos, becoming more remote from
communities."
http://www.lbc.co.uk/policing-more-bobbies-on-the-beat-needed-81859
Sunday, 1 December 2013
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