Greater Manchester Police
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Greater Manchester Police | |
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Coverage | |
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Greater Manchester Police area |
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Area | Greater Manchester |
Size | 492 square miles[1] |
Population | 2.5 million |
Operations | |
Formed | 1974 |
HQ | Chester House, Manchester |
Budget | {{{budget}}} |
Officers | 8,167 |
Divisions | 12 |
Stations | 62 |
Chief Constable | David Whatton Acting |
Website | http://www.gmp.police.uk |
Greater Manchester Police ("GMP") is the Home Office police force responsible for policing the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester, in North West England.
The Force's headquarters is at Chester House in Old Trafford, Manchester. The Force was formed in 1974 after leaving the Lancashire Constabulary and amalgamating with Manchester and Salford Police and certain areas of Lancashire and Cheshire counties.
GMP employs 8,167 Police Officers, 380 volunteer Special Constables, 3,769 members of support staff and 270 community support officers[1] (soon to be 1,000 community support officers). It is the second largest force in terms of organisation size in England and Wales after the Metropolitan Police in London.
The Force was once led by Sir James Anderton, a man that was respected by his officers for his no nonsense approach.
The Force was headed by the Chief Constable, Michael J. Todd, until his death on 11 March 2008,[2] and each division is headed by a Chief Superintendent who is known as the divisional commander.
Under proposals made by the Home Secretary on February 6, 2006, which proposed the mergers of many other forces, Greater Manchester would stay as a standalone strategic police force.[3]
The Force also has its own newspaper and is distributed to thousands of officers, making "The Brief" one of the largest in circulation. Each 20 page issue has a mix of news about police initiatives, policies and crime successes, in-depth articles on specialist units, social and sports news, as well as regular features. The slogan for Greater Manchester Police is: Fighting Crime, Protecting People.
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[edit] Uniform and equipment
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For more details on this topic, see Uniforms and equipment of the British police.
Uniformed officers when on duty carry a handheld encrypted Police radio (made by Sepura) which makes use of TETRA technology, on their duty belt they carry: an expandable baton which has recently been switched from the Monadnock PR-24 Baton to the now Monadnock Autolock Baton, CS spray, hiatt speedcuff rigid handcuffs,[4] a first aid pouch (containing: Medical gloves, CPR mask and Antiseptic wipes) and are required to wear a stab/ballistic proof vest whilst on operational duties.
[edit] Divisions and departments
Greater Manchester Police is split into a number of geographical divisions, each corresponding to a metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester (except for Manchester city area itself which has 3 divisions), which provide local patrols and investigate crime:
- North Manchester (A) Division (which includes Manchester city centre)
- Metropolitan (B) Division
- South Manchester (C) Division
- Salford (F) Division
- Tameside (G) Division
- Stockport (J) Division
- Bolton (K) Division
- Wigan (L) Division
- Trafford (M) Division
- Bury (N) Division
- Rochdale (P) Division
- Oldham (Q) Division
[edit] City centre policing
GMP has rolled out a Neighbourhood Policing Structure in Manchester city centre. The city centre area (also known as A1) now consists of;
- City 1 - Canal Street
- City 2 - Castlefield
- City 3 - Chinatown
- City 4 - Piccadilly Gardens & Northern Quarter
- City 5 - Southern Gateway (Covering parts of Oxford Road and the Student Village)
- City 6 - Business & Commercial District
[edit] Other departments
In addition, the S, V and X departments provide specialist support force-wide, e.g. the air support unit (call sign "India 99") flying a McDonnell Douglas MD902 Explorer helicopter, which is of NOTAR design (NOTAR stands for no tail rotor, based at Barton Aerodrome), and a Britten-Norman BN-2B-26 Islander fixed-wing aircraft (call sign "India 66", presently based at Manchester Airport but will be moved to Barton if and when a hard runway is constructed there), traffic and motorway patrol units, firearms units, police dogs, communications services, as well units specialising in serious crime and major incidents. GMP is also responsible for policing Manchester Airport.
During the 1990s, GMP had one of the worst rates of car crime in the UK. A specialist unit was set up in the mid 1990s and has operated ever since, going by the call sign "sierra" or T.A.S.S., (Tactical Vehicle Crime Unit) they operate high performance pursuit vehicles that can keep up to most of today's cars on the road. Car crime has halved since the early 1990s partly due to this unit.
The force also has an Anti-Terrorism Unit, which sits in Special Branch and has carried out several operations since being formed in April 2005.
[edit] Tactical Firearms Unit
Officers, as in the rest of the United Kingdom, are not routinely armed, although the force does have a specialised department of armed response teams (known as the Tactical Firearms Unit), who drive Armed Response Vehicles (ARV) whose officers carry MP5 carbines, Glock handguns, and TASER electronic incapacitation devices.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Greater Manchester Police
- GMP Training
- Greater Manchester Police Authority
- Greater Manchester Police Federation
- New Heywood Police Station is on its way
- Police & criminal justice
[edit] References
- ^ a b About GMP FAQs (2006). Retrieved on 2007-04-05.
- ^ Top UK police chief is found dead (2008). Retrieved on 2008-03-11.
- ^ Police mergers outlined by Clarke (2006). Retrieved on 2007-04-05.
- ^ A History of Greater Manchester Police (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-06-05.
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