
British
Transport Police is the national police force for the railways providing
a policing service to rail operators, their staff and passengers
throughout England, Wales and Scotland. The Force is also responsible
for policing the London Underground system, the Docklands Light
Railway, the Midland Metro Tram System and Croydon Tramlink. Between
them, these rail businesses move some five million people every
day.
The railway environment presents its own particular policing needs
and British Transport Police - which now numbers 2,280 police officers
and 704 support staff - exists to provide a specialist
policing service to meet those needs.
The Force can trace its history back to 1825, to the origins of
the police service in Britain.
Policing the railways is an integral part of policing the community
generally and today the Force forms part of the national policing
structure which safeguards the citizen. The majority of the Force's
activity, like that of any other police force, is law and order
policing, maintaining the Queen's peace and protecting staff and
public.
During the early years of railway policing, Constables had specific
responsibility for the surrounding area as each Constable was sworn
in as a County Constable as well as a railway company police officer.
Nowadays, the Force is constantly giving help to, and receiving
help from, local forces to provide the best possible service to
its customers.
Crime and criminals do not hesitate to cross county boundaries and
crimes can be committed on the move with rapid means of escape.
The network nature of the railway system also means that incidents
affecting its operation in one location can reverberate down the
system creating knock-on effects for thousands of people many miles
away. This is why the railway has special policing needs and why
a national police force for the railways is a cost-effective solution.
In the late 19th century, the continually spreading rail network
gave criminals new opportunities to move around the country. Nowadays,
British Transport Police makes full use of modern technology to
track, prevent and detect crime across the nation.
The railway police have been an innovator in other areas as well
as in the use of technology.
The
modern British Transport Police force aims to provide a quality
policing service and that means staying in the forefront of developments
within the railway industry and within policing in general.
A major reorganisation of the Force's structure to anticipate the
future needs of the restructured railway industry was carefully
planned and implemented in April 1992.
Throughout its history, the Force has evolved to meet the increasing
demands of the industry it polices. The present eight Area organisation
is designed to deliver the best possible value for money policing
service to the railway industry and its users into the next century.
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