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Australia: Labor trials "rent-a-cop" plan
By Richard Phillips
26 February 2002
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Since his appointment by the state Labor government as New
South Wales (NSW) police minister three months ago, former trade
union leader Michael Costa has unveiled a series of measures to
bolster the 14,000-strong state police force. They include a 12-week
trial allowing private companies to hire uniformed police for
security work, the shortening of police training courses to speed
up recruitment and a major restructuring to boost operational
numbers by over 800 officers.
The most far-reaching of these initiatives is the police
for hire trial. Shopping mall owners, retail outlets and
other government-approved businesses will be able to rent off-duty
police officers, fully armed with service revolvers, batons, radios
and other equipment. The officers will have the same power to
stop, question, detain and arrest people as if working on a normal
police roster. They will not be employed directly by the businesses
involved. Rather, the companies will pay the NSW Police, which
will pay the officers wages and pocket a commission.
Costas plan, which reverses long-standing restrictions
on police moonlighting in second jobs, has attracted
sharp criticism from several quarters. The NSW Council of Civil
Liberties immediately denounced the scheme. For years now
we have noticed the increasing influence of business and the private
sector and their ability to undermine rights, it stated.
Now they are going to be able to purchase the States
police force and have policing conducted in a way that suits them.
A Sydney Morning Herald editorial voiced concerns that
contracting out could lead to inferior levels of security for
those businesses not able or prepared to pay for police protection.
It recalled conditions in the 19th century, when insurance companies
funded their own fire services and if uninsured properties caught
fire they were often left to burn. The Labor government, the Herald
concluded, should drop the proposal, stop tinkering with the
system and make more funds available to increase police numbers
and salaries.
Numerous political and legal questions are raised by the scheme.
Rules against moonlighting were adopted for two major
reasonsto ensure that second jobs did not affect the physical
and mental performance of normal police duty and to preserve the
façade of an arms-length relationship between major companies
and the police. Costas proposal threatens to undermine the
carefully-cultivated fiction that the police operate as a neutral
force and that everyone is equal before the law.
What will happen to police neutrality if conflicts
arise between their hirers and ordinary citizens or a rival business?
What happens if hired police are confronted with a major accident,
serious assault or murder outside their place of employment? Do
they leave the premises to attend the crime or remain on the job?
Who has final jurisdiction over the officers actionsthe
company hiring them, or police operations command?
The most important question is: why have Costa and Premier
Bob Carr proceeded in the face of these obvious complications?
Whilst currying favour with major retail outlets, such as the
Westfield shopping mall chain, the trial is part of the governments
increasingly desperate law and order campaign for
the state elections due in March 2003. Over the past seven years
since he came to office in 1995, Carr has sought to divert attention
from growing social problems by whipping up fears of crime and
rapidly expanding the size and powers of the police force. But
his efforts have only served to shine a spotlight on the parlous
state of the police force itself.
Carr boasted he would lift police morale and clean up the notoriously
corrupt NSW force. Instead graft is endemic and, according to
media reports, morale is at an all-time low. Recent public hearings
into police operations in the Sydney suburb of Manly revealed
that drug-running and bribe-taking permeate the force. Police
confessions, as well as video evidence of police taking cash and
liaising with major drug traffickers, have fuelled growing media
criticism of Peter Ryan, Carrs handpicked Police Commissioner.
At the same time, bitter conflicts are raging within the force
over appointments and promotions. Senior officers and officials
who have opposed Ryan have been unceremoniously sacked. According
to Edd Chadbourne, who was fired as head of police human resources
last week, the police force is shambolic and its management
is in chaos. To quell dissent, Costa has appointed
detective Tim Priest, a much-publicised internal critic, to his
advisory committee and another critic, police commander Clive
Small, has been transferred to the Premiers Department.
One significant reason for the police for hire
proposal is to satisfy the NSW Police Association and its demands
for police pay increases. While not offering a pay rise, the scheme
will allow police to supplement their income by working off duty.
This move, Costa hopes, will help secure the support of rank-and-file
police as well as senior officials, who will be able to access
funds outside the annual government budget.
Similar considerations lie behind Costas plans to increase
frontline police by reducing basic training by six months and
revamping the police structure. The shortened induction course
will eliminate units on ethics and corruption and, in Costas
words, be less academic so as to overcome the high
failure rate among recruits.
Above all, Carr and Costa are anxious to maintain political
support from right-wing commentators such as radio talk-show host
Alan Jones and the Murdoch-owned Sydney tabloid, the Daily
Telegraph. Carr is so closely connected to this constituency
that Jones specifically vetted his appointment of Costa as police
minister. Almost as soon as he took the post, Costa offered Jones
and Daily Telegraph editor Campbell Reid positions on the
board of the Police and Community Youth Clubs (PCYC). Jones and
Reid later declined the invitation, after it provoked uproar within
the PCYC. One director resigned and another wrote to Carr protesting
over the growing influence of the media on the processes
of government.
Unable to address or even discuss the deteriorating state of
public health, education and other social services, the Carr governments
rent-a-cop proposal is the first shot in its campaign
for next years law and order election.
See Also:
Radio talkback host
anoints new NSW Police Minister
[3 December 2001]
Unprecedented police
raid on nightclubs in Australias largest city
[25 October 2001]
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