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Britain
UK to privatise police
2012-03-05
[Dawn] PRIVATE companies could take responsibility for investigating crimes, patrolling neighbourhoods and even detaining suspects under a radical privatisation plan being put forward by two of the largest police forces in the country.

West Midlands, in central England, and Surrey, in south-east England, have invited bids from G4S and other major security companies on behalf of all forces across England and Wales to take over the delivery of a wide range of services previously carried out by the police.

The contract is the largest on police privatisation so far, with a potential value of £1.5bn over seven years, rising to a possible £3.5bn depending on how many other forces get involved.

This scale dwarfs the recent £200m contract between Lincolnshire police in northeast England, and G4S, under which half the force's civilian staff is to join the private security company, which will also build and run a cop shoppe for the first time.

The interior minister, Theresa May, who has imposed a 20 per cent cut in grants on forces, has said frontline policing can be protected by using the private sector to transform services provided to the public, but this is the first clear indication of what that will mean in practice. May said on Thursday that she hoped the 'business partnership' programme would be in place next spring.

A 26-page 'commercial in confidence' contract note seen by the Guardian has been sent to potential bidders to run all services that "can be legally delegated to the private sector". They do not include those that involve the power of arrest and the other duties of a sworn constable.

Companies who have applied through the Bluelight emergency services e-tendering website have been invited to a 'bidders' conference' on March 14, with an anticipated contract start date of next February.

The timetable for the programme means it will be subject to final sign-off by the first police and crime commissioner for the West Midlands after their election in November. The existing police authority only gave the go-ahead for the tendering stage last month after a "robust and forthright discussion" which ended with a rare 11-5 split vote.

The joint West Midlands/ Surrey 'transformation' programme, which has strong backing from the Home Office, looks set to redraw the accepted boundaries between public and private and the definition of frontline and back-office policing.

The programme has the potential to become the main vehicle for outsourcing police services in England and Wales. It has been pioneered by the West Midlands chief constable, Chris Sims, and Mark Rowley, who has moved to the Metropolitan (London) police from being Surrey chief constable. The pair lead on these matters for the Association of Chief Police Officers.

The breathtaking list of policing activities up for grabs includes investigating crimes, detaining suspects, developing cases, responding to and investigating incidents, supporting victims and witnesses, managing high-risk individuals and patrolling neighbourhoods.
Posted by:Fred

#9  Put it this way I once got put in the sin bun for moaning about my own queen and country, but yet when I support it you will suddenly back up otherwise. CUNTS, or is that too heavy in the English language. Funny cos I hear it 24/7 in the pubs I work in. Be a fucking man. Put your fists up and fight me you twat.
Posted by: Devilstoenail   2012-03-05 23:30  

#8  Christ you guys our fucked. so paraoid! Hey mate so quick to judge another country, go live their and come back and tell me the same. Mate I was in the USA and I shit you not I have never in all my time met such a nation of spastics. Your nation is so retarded with a lack of history and intelligence. I fucking mean it. also lacks a huge ammount of history, very boring.
Posted by: Devilstoenail   2012-03-05 23:27  

#7  Meanwhile, back in the NOT-YET-USSA-OR-USRoA ...

* CHINA DAILY FORUM > US STATES MOVE TOWARDS [Socialist-style = State-owned] "PUBLIC" BANKING | SEVENTEEN US STATES INTRODUCE BILLS FOR STATE-OWNED BANKS, + OTHERS ARE IN THE WORKS.

E.g. State-controlled Credit Unions.

Lest we fergit, NET = LOCAL POLICE, PUBLIC UTILITIES [Power], + even MEDIAS WANT THEIR OWN DRONE ARMIES RECCE'ING OER US STATE-LOCAL SKIES.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2012-03-05 21:40  

#6  I have never really had a problem with are police force, and I think you guys have got it all wrong. Basically the police and other public services have overpaid everyone, now they look to cut costs rather then create a socialist utopia? So rather then lay off the officers or give them the realistic pay drop they need. Employ the private sector, sure it creates a storm, but the latter option is a bunch of striking officers. Although I'm pretty certain there not allowed to strike.
Posted by: Devilstoenail   2012-03-05 11:40  

#5  Damn, PIMF. I'll blame my cold fingers for my typos:

"is the UK" should be "in the UK"
"Seconcarily " should be "Secondarily"

(sorry)

Posted by: AlanC   2012-03-05 09:49  

#4  The UK has forgotten its police founding in Peels Principles.

The police is the UK is seen as a profit center aimed at generating money from traffic fines and the like. Seconcarily it is seen as a tool to reform society as a socialist "utopia". Catching crim's?? that's waaaaaaaaaaay down the list.

The people in the UK as far as I can tell have little respect for the coppers and especially for their leaders.

Spending money to make your populace safe is one thing that doesn't seem to pertain.
Posted by: AlanC   2012-03-05 09:47  

#3  ...and in the "United States", may local communities allow not only gun ownership but the right of self defense of life and property. Although, crime seems to peak in areas where those tenets are not followed.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2012-03-05 09:44  

#2  The English government seems to have a real down on police. First they figured that by putting CCTV cameras everywhere they could lay off cops, and that didn't work, so now they want to try privatization.

Perhaps it is time to reevaluate the entire purpose of having police. In the US, it is much clearer.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2012-03-05 08:53  

#1  Here's an idea...what about privatising doctors. Just a thought.....
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2012-03-05 01:13  

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