any policeman that can help?
#31
Originally Posted by fatherpierre
Before you post about that, you should learn the way police work.
TRAFFIC do camera stuff, and other police do the burglary, theft, abh, murder and drugs stuff.
Traffic are about 5% of police.
TRAFFIC do camera stuff, and other police do the burglary, theft, abh, murder and drugs stuff.
Traffic are about 5% of police.
If there are not enough of them then they need to apply some common blo0dy sense and prioritise. Currently they WILL put a trained policeman in a van for a day and tot up the revenue at 17:30. Meantime stuff that is a genuine danger to us all goes unoticed or a blind eye is turned in the name of enhancing statistics and balancing the books. I simply want proper policing back as this thread illustrates.
D
Last edited by Diesel; 21 April 2006 at 10:44 PM.
#32
Diesel
The trained bloke who is sat in th van will be a civillian - not police.
As far as prioritising, you will find that it is done for us by the control room. We currently have about 150 jobs on the queue waiting for officers to attend with an average shift strength of about 10-15 officers. A normal shift will see anything between 100-200 new jobs which come in of various priorities (from emergency downwards). And also bare in mind that each officer has about 10-15 inquiries ongoing at any one time – and I haven’t started to mention paperwork and bureaucracy.
So, its not that we turn a blind eye. We can only work within the law, we can only be in one place at time and we are all busy - all of the time.
The trained bloke who is sat in th van will be a civillian - not police.
As far as prioritising, you will find that it is done for us by the control room. We currently have about 150 jobs on the queue waiting for officers to attend with an average shift strength of about 10-15 officers. A normal shift will see anything between 100-200 new jobs which come in of various priorities (from emergency downwards). And also bare in mind that each officer has about 10-15 inquiries ongoing at any one time – and I haven’t started to mention paperwork and bureaucracy.
So, its not that we turn a blind eye. We can only work within the law, we can only be in one place at time and we are all busy - all of the time.
#33
Scooby Senior
Thread Starter
Felix
whats the best way to deal with this twot and his un safe car? ring the council first?
whats the best way to deal with this twot and his un safe car? ring the council first?
#34
Originally Posted by fatherpierre
Before you post about that, you should learn the way police work.
TRAFFIC do camera stuff, and other police do the burglary, theft, abh, murder and drugs stuff.
Traffic are about 5% of police.
TRAFFIC do camera stuff, and other police do the burglary, theft, abh, murder and drugs stuff.
Traffic are about 5% of police.
Mart
#35
Originally Posted by salsa-king
Felix
whats the best way to deal with this twot and his un safe car? ring the council first?
whats the best way to deal with this twot and his un safe car? ring the council first?
#36
Scooby Senior
Thread Starter
the car was back last night with a TAX disc that runs out in two months time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I've ran Lichfield police this moring telling them whats going on.. and they are going to check it over
I've ran Lichfield police this moring telling them whats going on.. and they are going to check it over
#39
Scooby Senior
Thread Starter
Originally Posted by jameswrx
Perhaps it was taxed and he's only just put the disc in? but then again the police should know this when they check it from the no. plate.
Phil
#42
Originally Posted by Felix.
Diesel
The trained bloke who is sat in th van will be a civillian - not police.
As far as prioritising, you will find that it is done for us by the control room. We currently have about 150 jobs on the queue waiting for officers to attend with an average shift strength of about 10-15 officers. A normal shift will see anything between 100-200 new jobs which come in of various priorities (from emergency downwards). And also bare in mind that each officer has about 10-15 inquiries ongoing at any one time – and I haven’t started to mention paperwork and bureaucracy.
So, its not that we turn a blind eye. We can only work within the law, we can only be in one place at time and we are all busy - all of the time.
The trained bloke who is sat in th van will be a civillian - not police.
As far as prioritising, you will find that it is done for us by the control room. We currently have about 150 jobs on the queue waiting for officers to attend with an average shift strength of about 10-15 officers. A normal shift will see anything between 100-200 new jobs which come in of various priorities (from emergency downwards). And also bare in mind that each officer has about 10-15 inquiries ongoing at any one time – and I haven’t started to mention paperwork and bureaucracy.
So, its not that we turn a blind eye. We can only work within the law, we can only be in one place at time and we are all busy - all of the time.
I think in fact you read me wrong and we actually agree that you need greater resources and better political focus and directive to do what people actually want rather than what out of touch Chief Cons or politicians deem best. That includes less of the paperwork that I'm sure you hate! D
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