Every household in England and Wales will be given a mobile
phone number to call new neighbourhood police teams, Prime Minister
Gordon Brown announced today.
Each home will also get an email address for the officer responsible
for their street and neighbourhood police chiefs will have to
hold regular public meetings under the plans, to be rolled out
by April.
The £325million-a-year plan, one of the UK's biggest
shifts from centralised policing, has been drawn up by Mr Brown
and Home Secretary Jacqui Smith.
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Under the system, trialled in Lambeth, south London, each council
ward will have its own neighbourhood policing team, made up
of police and community support officers.
Mr Brown and Mrs Smith met one of the teams in Clapham, south
London today to hear how people would be able to contact and
hold their local policing team to account.
Announcing the measures, Mr Brown said: "We know people
want more say about their community and a visible and accessible
police service that deals with local problems and anti-social
behaviour.
"Whilst crime is falling, too many people have a real
fear about their communities and feel detached from their police
service.
"That is why we've been working with the police on a new
style of policing to address local priorities, improve public
confidence and make neighbourhoods safer.
"Neighbourhood policing is about giving local people power
over how their streets are policed.
"It is a major step towards a new kind of policing, one
in which the citizen has real influence.
"The excellent progress made by established teams such
as the one in Lambeth are now starting to be rolled out across
the country so by April everyone will be able to get involved."
Mrs Smith said: "April will mark the start of a new kind
of relationship between the police service and the public.
Full
article here.