Brown promises more bobbies on beat - News in brief - Evening Standard
       

Brown promises more bobbies on beat

Gordon Brown promised that more people would see a return of beat bobbies to their streets under police reforms.

The Prime Minister said the new policing Green Paper would "clear the decks" and cut down on bureaucracy so officers could spend more time tackling crime instead of filling out forms.

Speaking at 10 Downing Street alongside Association of Chief Police Officers president Ken Jones, Mr Brown said visible policing on the streets had cut violent crime.

He added: "We are clearing the decks, cutting the red tape, cutting back on bureaucracy, making it possible for policemen and women to spend far more time on the beat answering people's inquiries, in touch with local communities - a visible presence on the beat so that more and more people will see a policeman or woman there and able to help them."

Mr Jones, who is chief constable of Sussex Police, said senior officers were "very happy that they had been listened to in the creation of the Green Paper".

He went on: "These are significant changes to reduce bureaucracy.

"No targets are going to be set from the centre, other than those on confidence, although we will be setting targets locally according to what's happening in your neighbourhood, your street.

"We will work very hard through the summer to make sure that we land the advantages of these reforms, which fundamentally are about doing more in neighbourhoods."

Responding to annual crime figures revealing the true extent of knife crime across England and Wales, Mr Brown said he wanted to make carrying a blade as unacceptable as having a gun on the streets.

He said: "It is because we have identified the problem of knife crime, and particularly in some hotspots of the country, that we have stepped up our action dramatically."

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