containing tips such as 'Don't lean on a disabled person's wheelchair', the guide points out that it is unhelpful for officers to cover their mouths when talking to somebody who is lip-reading, and suggests the phrase 'blind as a bat' may cause offence, the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland spent almost £5,000 on the project, consulting 75 different groups before handing out 7,000 copies of the booklet to all Scottish police forces,
the pocket- sized book includes advice such as: 'Do not lean on a person's wheelchair, it is part of their body space and may move.' when dealing with a member of the public with a facial disfigurement, it tells officers: 'Do not ask what happened to them', the book also points out that cheery traditional greetings such as 'hen', 'pet', 'love' and 'my dear' should never be addressed to a woman, and officers are reminded that a woman who is provocatively dressed and 'paying attention to passing vehicles' may not necessarily be a prostitute,
one serving police officer, who asked not to be named, told the Mail: 'In all my years of policing I've never seen a colleague leaning on somebody's wheelchair, or moving their walking stick without asking, 'Do we really need a 140-page booklet to tell us how to spot a prostitute, or not to describe a member of the public as "blind as a bat"? 'Give us some credit, for heaven's sake.'
I wonder when this important and informative booklet will be available to all of the police forces in the UK?
Some pictures of Diana and Myself, where we now live and places around us, things that we find interesting, amusing or just plain weird!
Friday, 3 April 2009
At Last The Scotish Bobby Will Be PC,
thanks to a 140-page 'diversity handbook'
containing tips such as 'Don't lean on a disabled person's wheelchair', the guide points out that it is unhelpful for officers to cover their mouths when talking to somebody who is lip-reading, and suggests the phrase 'blind as a bat' may cause offence, the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland spent almost £5,000 on the project, consulting 75 different groups before handing out 7,000 copies of the booklet to all Scottish police forces,
the pocket- sized book includes advice such as: 'Do not lean on a person's wheelchair, it is part of their body space and may move.' when dealing with a member of the public with a facial disfigurement, it tells officers: 'Do not ask what happened to them', the book also points out that cheery traditional greetings such as 'hen', 'pet', 'love' and 'my dear' should never be addressed to a woman, and officers are reminded that a woman who is provocatively dressed and 'paying attention to passing vehicles' may not necessarily be a prostitute,
one serving police officer, who asked not to be named, told the Mail: 'In all my years of policing I've never seen a colleague leaning on somebody's wheelchair, or moving their walking stick without asking, 'Do we really need a 140-page booklet to tell us how to spot a prostitute, or not to describe a member of the public as "blind as a bat"? 'Give us some credit, for heaven's sake.'
I wonder when this important and informative booklet will be available to all of the police forces in the UK?
containing tips such as 'Don't lean on a disabled person's wheelchair', the guide points out that it is unhelpful for officers to cover their mouths when talking to somebody who is lip-reading, and suggests the phrase 'blind as a bat' may cause offence, the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland spent almost £5,000 on the project, consulting 75 different groups before handing out 7,000 copies of the booklet to all Scottish police forces,
the pocket- sized book includes advice such as: 'Do not lean on a person's wheelchair, it is part of their body space and may move.' when dealing with a member of the public with a facial disfigurement, it tells officers: 'Do not ask what happened to them', the book also points out that cheery traditional greetings such as 'hen', 'pet', 'love' and 'my dear' should never be addressed to a woman, and officers are reminded that a woman who is provocatively dressed and 'paying attention to passing vehicles' may not necessarily be a prostitute,
one serving police officer, who asked not to be named, told the Mail: 'In all my years of policing I've never seen a colleague leaning on somebody's wheelchair, or moving their walking stick without asking, 'Do we really need a 140-page booklet to tell us how to spot a prostitute, or not to describe a member of the public as "blind as a bat"? 'Give us some credit, for heaven's sake.'
I wonder when this important and informative booklet will be available to all of the police forces in the UK?
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