There seems to be plenty of publicity when the Police do something they apparently shouldn't have done (I'm speaking generally, not specifically) but little on the terrible conditions, circumstances and situations they face.
They are understaffed, under equipped and often not sufficiently trained for the job ie, Specials and Community Support Officers made to attend calls that they are not able to deal with and Beat Officers expected to do the jobs of Sergeants.
Sometimes they work back to back shifts (2 x 14 hours) because no one turns up to take over.
Following recent shake ups and changed of boundaries, they can be drafted anywhere and have no say in the matter.
A few weeks ago I witnessed the aftermath of a theft in Cambridge. A Community Support Officer was first on the scene. A gang of youths turned on him and he was pushed and shoved. He handled the situation extremely well, trying to calm down some hysterical and angry youths whilst also trying to defend himself and call for back up. When back up finally arrived most of them ran off.
Dealing with horrific situations is part of the job, but they no longer get support in dealing with the effects of the aftermath.
There was a complaint in the local press about an Officer who failed to attend the last few neighbourhood watch meetings and who cancelled a talk on road saftey at a local school. This was followed by many letters of agreement about how wrong and unacceptable this was. The Officer concerned was not allowed to publicly defend himself, but I know that he was drafted to a secret operation, as well as being expected to police a 90 mile radius. As he has said to me in the past; 'when the opportunity arises to catch ***** in the act, or you have a 999 call and you are the only one on duty, you really can't go and see Mrs Smith about the dog pooh on footpath 26, but when she complains publicly it does nothing for the force or the individual on the receiving end of the complaint.'
No wonder they have such a high level of stress related absence.
There are bad apples in every barrel. Let's salute the good ones.