Hampshire force’s new response vow over non-999 calls

9:20am Saturday 21st November 2009

By Andy Tate

POLICE across the south will pledge to visit anybody making a “non-emergency”

call within 48 hours, under a £2m advertising blitz launched today.

They will promise that “neighbourhood policing teams” will spend 80 per cent of their time on the beat, rather than hidden away in police stations.

The twin guarantees are designed to give teeth to the wide-ranging “policing pledge” signed by every chief constable earlier this year, but little known to the public Now adverts will run on TV, radio, in newspapers and on websites, urging residents to help ensure the pledge is being met and to counter claims that policing is “remote and impenetrable”.

Six million leaflets setting out the “standards of service”

will be delivered in 60 areas of higher crime, including Southampton.

The leaflets set out other key planks of the policing pledge, committing forces to: ● Answer 999 calls within ten seconds and respond to emergencies within 15 minutes in urban areas, or 20 minutes in rural areas.

● Arrange monthly public meetings, giving people a chance to meet their beat officers, as well as surgeries, street briefings and visits to 'mobile police stations'.

● Provide online crime maps, with information on specific crimes, what happened to suspected criminals taken to court and support for victims.

● Allow residents to nominate sites for “Community Payback” work for criminals wearing orange jackets, such as removing graffiti, or clearing up litter.

Launching the “Justice Seen, Justice Done” campaign, Home Secretary Alan Johnson said the blitz was designed to close the “gap between people’s expectations and their experience”.

More than half of people expect to wait longer than 48 hours for an appointment with a police officer about a neighbourhood problem, according to new research – despite the “policing pledge”

being signed ten months ago.

Similarly, just three per cent of residents thought their neighbourhood officers spent the vast majority of their time visible on local streets.

Mr Johnson said: “There is no point people having rights if they don’t know about them.”

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