Chiltern Air Support Unit
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The Chiltern Air Support Unit are a police helicopter unit that operates under a consortium agreement between Bedfordshire Police, Thames Valley Police and Hertfordshire Police.
[edit] History
Before 1980, Thames Valley Police occasionally used helicopters at special events.
In 1963, Oxford City Police experimented using a Brantley helicopter with a dog basket attached to the skids.
In 1980, an aircraft was used on twenty separate days at various events, with further use taking place during 1981. It was not until June 1982 that the first formally contracted flights took place.
During the next four years the helicopter was used more frequently. A single engine Aerospatiale A350 Squirrel helicopter designated G-JORR was hired for day-time operations for each weekday of 1985. This aircraft was based at Oxford Airport and used exclusively by the Thames Valley Police. Seven sergeants were drawn from the Traffic and Operations Departments as part-time observers.
During April 1986, the Thames Valley Police Air Support Unit, as it had become known, was relocated to RAF Abingdon. Providing daylight cover only, the Unit was allocated a budget of 650 flying hours, but was still crewed by sergeant observers on an ad-hoc basis. It was recognised that the specialist skills required could no longer be met by part-time observers, and in 1988 the decision was taken to recruit and train dedicated observers.
Chiltern Air Support's Luton helicopter has now moved from London Luton Airport, it is now based at RAF Henlow, near Hitchin and Shillington
[edit] Helicopters used
Eurocopter EC-135s are used for the unit.