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Hertfordshire Constabulary

 
Wikipedia: Hertfordshire Constabulary
Hertfordshire Constabulary
Herts Const logo Colour smaller.jpg
Logo of the Hertfordshire Constabulary.
Motto Creating A Safer Hertfordshire [1]
Agency overview
Formed 1964
Preceding agencies
  • Hertford Borough Police
  • St Albans Borough Police
Employees 3,990[2]
Volunteers 266[2]
Annual budget £171.4 million[2]
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction* Police area of Hertfordshire in the country of England, UK
EnglandPoliceHertfordshire.png
Map of Hertfordshire Constabulary's jurisdiction.
Population 1.5 million
Legal jurisdiction England & Wales
Governing body Hertfordshire Police Authority
Constituting instrument Police Act 1996
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters Welwyn Garden City
Constables 2,428 (of which 266 are special constables)[2]
Police Community Support Officers 246[2]
Agency executive Frank Whiteley, Chief Constable
Areas Central
Eastern
Western
Stations 26
Facilities
Airbases RAF Benson & RAF Henlow
Helicopters 2 Eurocopter EC 135s
Website
http://www.herts.police.uk/
Footnotes
* Police area agency: Prescribed geographic area in the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

Hertfordshire Constabulary is the territorial police force responsible for policing the county of Hertfordshire in England. Its headquarters is situated in Welwyn Garden City. The force is headed by Chief Constable Frank Whiteley and its manpower consists of over 3,900 Police Officers and staff, supported by more than 250 Special Constables.

Hertfordshire Constabulary is consistently rated[by whom?] among the top 5 forces, making Hertfordshire one of the safest counties to live in.[citation needed]

Contents

History

The Constabulary was founded in 1841, under the County Police Act, five years after the Hertford Borough Police and St Albans Borough Police had been formed. In 1889, the Hertford Borough Police force was merged into Hertfordshire. St Albans remained independent until 1947.

Until 2000, parts of Hertfordshire (Hertsmere and part of Broxbourne council areas) were in the Metropolitan Police District and covered by the Metropolitan Police Service.

In 1965, the force had an establishment of 1,317 officers and an actual strength of 885.[3]

Organisation

Since 2001 the Constabulary has been divided into 3 Areas (having formerly been divided into 9 Divisions A – K) each headed by a Chief Superintendent. (Stations in italics)

Eastern Area (Area Headquarters in Stevenage)

Central Area (Area Headquarters in Hatfield)

Western Area (Area Headquarters in Watford)


Each Area comprises various units including:

  • Intervention & Response (responding to 999 calls and on general patrol),
  • Neighbourhood (covering local & quality of life issues),
  • Plain clothes and Detective Units (Local Crime, Case Investigation, Tactical Team),
  • Intelligence and Tasking Units,
  • Roads Policing (Traffic)

The Areas are supported by numerous centrally based units (H) operating from the Force Headquarters in Welwyn Garden City, such as Firearms, Dog Section, Air Support, Control Room, Forensic Services and Major Crime.

Contacting

Hertfordshire Constabulary operates Emergency (999/112) and non-emergency (0845 3300 222) telephone numbers. The Force Contact Centre receives an average of 3000 calls a day and prioritises Police responses according to the nature of the received call.

The Constabulary also complies fully with the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and has been approved by the Information Commissioner. The Force maintains a 'transparent' service, whilst restricting some information for security purposes.

Joint Operations

Hertfordshire Constabulary regularly co-operates with its Neighbouring Forces in joint operations, including a joint Major Crime Unit and two Police Helicopters that operate from RAF Benson and RAF Henlow in partnership with Thames Valley Police and Bedfordshire Constabulary.

X-Ray Alpha 99: One of Hertfordshire, Thames Valley and Bedfordshire Constabularies' helicopters

Merger proposal

Proposals made by Charles Clarke, the Home Secretary, on March 20, 2006 would see the force merge with neighbouring forces Bedfordshire Police and Essex Police to form a strategic police force.[4] However in July 2006 Prime Minister Tony Blair signalled that police force mergers will not be forced through by the central government, and given the amount of local opposition to such mergers it is not expected that any voluntary mergers will be carried out.[5]

See also

References

External links


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