dave, do you put a rep into silver ? if so whose ? how are you directed ?
3 XYZ AGREE TO:
3.1.....
3.2.....
3.3.....
3.4
Provide full public liability insurance cover and car insurance to ABC 4x4 Response personnel whilst they are deployed in assisting XYZ.
3.5
Provide individual personal accident/death insurance cover to ABC 4x4 Response personnel whilst they are deployed in assisting XYZ.
It was originally directed at davemud but thanks :thumb2
I was wondering how your effort is directly co ordinated, who takes responsibility for risk assessing (no I'm not an h&s beast) bearing in mind liability whilst requesting or requiring resources.
Also who in your organisation takes overall responsibility for co ordination and advice at the tactical level? operational , no problem , you trundle off where you are asked to go
Do you work to an mou? (they're not legally binding but can be referred to at any enquiry.
The one bit about this that has leapt out at me isn't the humanitarian bits, I can see how those requirements will override many normal considerations but .....transporting prisoners
Bit of a problem with that one, first off all risk from them, health, cleanliness and not least violence within your vehicle. Secondly , bit of a conundrum really, if they're violent, or committing crimes of a level that require immediate dealing with , I cant see a terrano being the proper vehicle vehicle for that. if theyre bot in the above category do they really need arresting and transporting when you balance the risks? Legislation now covers a requirement to consider do they really need arresting or can they be dealt with buy other means.
transporting prisoners only with officers present, bear in mind that many 4x4R drivers are ex mod, trained to a high standard
terrano is no different from a ford focus wrt health and cleanliness
Insurance wise a lot a lot depends on the precise details of the MOU/SLA in place. Some put the responsibility on the user service to provide full insurance cover
From a SLA in place between one group and a Constabulary.
I was one of two on-site controller working with the Hospital Emergency Planing Officer and the Council EPO
we do have some MOU but we had to adjust the procedure to include new request because of the
unprecedented level of requests, all our drivers our instructed to only cover thing they are comfortable with
and decline if they feel the request is to much, and we will then appoint a suitably trained driver and vehicle.
Interesting and commendable stuff :thumb2
Good job the guy in the audi has an orange beacon and a high viz jkt, wouldnt have made it through otherwise :augie
Nice one handed style of arm resting driving in adverse conditions and he's an instructor :augie......hmmmmmm.
Yes I thought that, and on TV too:doh
I (almost) bumped into another disco tonight strugling with a bit of snow:augie
To be fair he was trying to avoid some planks van abandoned in the ditch and half covered in snow. Trouble was then he got his wheels in the other ditch:doh
Anyway we got it sorted easy enough only to find a dirty great truck coming out of the snow drift we'd been fighting through
He had one of those things for digging telegraph poles into the ground , you know , a sort of thunderbird 4 mole thing:lol
He was out the back of the truck putting this hydraulic arm onto the ground and pushing himself up the snow drift a metre at a time:sly Determined or what, I reckon he must be on a promise tonight:lol
So it took me about an hour to do three miles from disco to the pub
Not really relevant I'm afraid :nenau
Thats why for all but the lowest cleanest grade prisoner movement we have vans.
If the criteria applies that the only option is to arrest and remove a person they are in a situation where I WOULD NOT and more to the point HAVE NEVER moved such a prisoner by Ford Focus. They are going to be stressed and potentially hostile although it may not show.
I and others have fallen foul of that and lived (after a couple of ops and a lot of sickness time) to tell the tale, others have not.
A colleague form a neighbouring force was killed by an arsehole he was transporting and graded as low risk who decided it would be a hoot if he made it to and applied the handbrake whilst travelling at speed. He should have been in a van.
I have seen initially compliant and restrained prisoners kick out transit van rear doors on more than one occasion. I have dealt with prisoners who started off calm and by the end of the journey refused to come out of the van and took on all comers....more than once!
You used to always be able to tell an ex police van because unlike builders transits, the dents in the side were from the inside pushing outwards.
I have also seen a prisoner who pissed themsleves deliberately in the back of a fiesta. They were "hello mate" and "yeah no sweat lets get this sorted" at the start.
There is no such thing as a fully compliant and predictable prisoner.
We all make mistakes at the start but no one seems to learn from them
I really do struggle with this one, ie effectively involving the untrained public in jobs with real risk. I dont doubt your motives but I really do believe that the local force has it wrong. The frequency of serious incidents with damage and injury occurring may be low but it happen regularly and only takes one to kill you. Your not joining in at the lower level. The prisoners you describe are potentially up there...thats why theyre being moved :nenau
Remember, and theres several members on here will tell you just cos the cop says, it doesnt mean its right.
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