Police in Greater Manchester are to be ordered to wear name badges on duty to improve 'customer service'.
All 8,100 officers along with 4,000 civilian staff will be ordered to wear the magnetic tags which will display their full name and rank. GMP is the first force in the country to require all officers to display their names, although others have trialled similar schemes for selected staff.
Plain clothes detectives will not be exempt from wearing the badges, which are similar to those worn by shop assistants and bank clerks.
But police working undercover or officers wearing riot gear will be allowed to take off the badges.
At the moment, officers are only publicly identified by a collar number woven into their jackets.
Criticism
The Metropolitan Police announced plans last month to require some officers to wear name badges in response to criticism that officers failed to display their ID numbers during last April's G20 demonstrations.
However, the badges will only have to be worn by about a quarter of officers at the Met who work in specific areas of policing.
GMP Chief Constable Peter Fahy, who has already started wearing his badge, has brought in the policy as part of a drive to improve the force's image with the public.
The cost of issuing the badges to every officer and staff member has been put at £21,000.
The force last year started giving officers lessons in courtesy after rising numbers of complaints about rudeness and incivility shown by police.
Mr Fahy, said the name badges would also help create a better relationship between the police and public.
He said: "It's part of our commitment to customer service and will make us more open and accountable.”
The new GMP name tags have been welcomed by most officers but some have expressed concerns.
Ridicule
One said: “A name badge could be regarded as a trophy for some people if they get involved in a tussle with an officer and it could then be used by someone who wants to pose as a police officer. Officers with unusual names might be left open to ridicule.”
The Greater Manchester branch of the Police Federation, which represents 8,000 rank-and-file officers, has questioned whether the investment is appropriate as the force struggles with a £5m budget shortfall, with plans to axe 300 posts and 150 civilian jobs at risk.
Federation spokesman Inspector Ian Hanson said: “We have some reservations as to whether this is appropriate spending with the cutbacks the force is looking at making in police officer numbers.
“The federation has no issue with this in principle and neither do most police officers. It's a question of whether it is the appropriate time and I'm sure the public of Greater Manchester would rather use the money on another police officer than on badges. This is something we should be looking at in two or three year when we have the books balanced.”

Showing comments 1 to 25 and replies | View All
Moorlok, London (05/02/2010 at 08:50)
Being an eternal optimist I wake every day believing things can't get worse, but unfortunately they do!!
Eric Le God, Manchester (05/02/2010 at 08:54)
Stickman, Bury (05/02/2010 at 09:05)
Hurry O'Caine - the Irish Whirlind, Typhoon Tipperary (05/02/2010 at 09:05)
They need to change the culture in British policing not keep coming up with silly ideas that improve nothing.
castlefieldres, manchester (05/02/2010 at 09:06)
Obviously all officers are not like this but it's not fair on the good ones that the odd idiot lets them down.
The above post is just the usual dross on these boards. Not all customers of the police are 'scrotes, scumbags and criminals', normal members of the public and business people use their services when needed and it's good to be able to have a contact.
Well done.
Audenshaw Bob (05/02/2010 at 09:06)
What is it with the Police these days? It isn't about 'customer service ' or 'reaching out to transgender communities' etc.
A business needs high customer service levels because it has competition and if a consumer doesn't like that of one company it can go to a competitor. The Police doesn't have competition.
All we want is if we report a crime such as a burglary the Police respond to it quickly. We know your number and will phone if needed. All we need to know is that you are there when we need you, which hopefully we won't.
How will knowing a copper's name help? He/she has their number on their epaulets - that is all we need to know.
In Dubai they are encoraging the public to report a crime QUICKLY so the Police can react QUICKLY and apprehend the criminal. The public there are being criticised for losing vital seconds. Here we are told if you leave it on show it WILL get stolen.
Name badges! Imagine a policeman called Humphrey, Tristram or Rupert telling a drunk bunch of football hooligans to stop throwing chairs through the pub window. Go figure.
Stop wasting so much time on image and get out and police.
canonball, inside the helmet (05/02/2010 at 09:08)
abbott71, bolton (05/02/2010 at 09:09)
canonball, inside the helmet (05/02/2010 at 09:10)
Drew Peacock (05/02/2010 at 09:11)
This will wind GMP right up! hahahaha
Knowledge Poverty, The Range (05/02/2010 at 09:23)
Not so long ago, an officer turned up at my door (investigating something or other) and i asked to see his warrant card for identification.
Initially he wouldn't show me it (i'm pretty certain that there's a specific regulation stating they have to show their warrant card when requested). he just said 'i'm a police officer'. How do i know? think of all the uniforms that get nicked. I said i wanted to see some ID. He said 'i'm wearing a police stab vest' (!!!).
I've got a replica Barcelona shirt i play 5-a-side in. Does that mean i'll be lining up alongside Xavi, Iniesta and Messi against Valencia saturday week? No!!
Dave (05/02/2010 at 09:30)
to the point, bury (05/02/2010 at 09:31)
Maynard Kitchener Lampwick, Hulme. (05/02/2010 at 09:32)
Rammylad (05/02/2010 at 09:38)
Audenshaw Bob (05/02/2010 at 09:38)
I remeber the day when I was living in Benchill and I would have this plastic wallet with a perpex fold on the inside and I would have a ploice badge from a police fancy dress kit or something and I would flash the badge at a rival gang memeber before sorting him out.
These days I would have to go to Staples or the Shoe Repair shop to get a small name badge with my name on it. It doesn't carry the same weight does it.
'Police, everybody freeze' as you raise up the dainty librarian style badge slightly above your left breast.
You know what will happen next though - the public will also be asked to wear them so we can respond in kind.
Better that they police focus on having guns strapped to their belts.
Almighty God, Salford - vote Green (05/02/2010 at 09:40)
amir khan (05/02/2010 at 09:40)
Black Flag (05/02/2010 at 09:42)
Maybe that's the problem.
Audenshaw Bob (05/02/2010 at 09:52)
donner, manchester (05/02/2010 at 09:55)
Mark,Radcliffe. (05/02/2010 at 10:02)
BLUE DIBBLE, ashton (05/02/2010 at 10:07)
j John (05/02/2010 at 10:11)
cris_ (05/02/2010 at 10:13)