JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Monday, June 16, 2025

New image for Police Service

by

20120718

A new ini­tia­tive called "Shift" with a $1.3 mil­lion price tag is the lat­est plan to trans­form the cul­ture of the Po­lice Ser­vice and by ex­ten­sion the at­ti­tude of po­lice of­fi­cers. The plan was de­signed by the Po­lice Ser­vice So­cial and Wel­fare As­so­ci­a­tion with in­put from the mem­ber­ship.

Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Jack Warn­er, who ad­dressed mem­bers of the busi­ness com­mu­ni­ty yes­ter­day dur­ing a break­fast meet­ing host­ed by the T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce, said $1.3 mil­lion was a small price to pay. The meet­ing was held at the cham­ber's build­ing in West­moor­ings. Shift stands for Ser­vice, Ho­n­our, In­te­gra­tion, Fo­cus and Tran­si­tion.

The plan, how­ev­er, was re­ject­ed by Po­lice Com­mis­sion­er Dwayne Gibbs in 2010 on the ba­sis of lack of fund­ing. The new ini­tia­tive, which Warn­er said was not a crime plan, aims at im­prov­ing at­ti­tude and em­pow­er­ing po­lice of­fi­cers to change their be­hav­iour and work ethics. Warn­er met with ex­ec­u­tive mem­bers of the as­so­ci­a­tion, in­clud­ing pres­i­dent Sgt Anand Rame­sar and sec­re­tary Sgt Michael Seales, at his min­istry at 5 am yes­ter­day.

De­scrib­ing the meet­ing as "ab­solute­ly su­perb," Warn­er said: "I met the as­so­ci­a­tion mem­bers, from a de­pressed bunch of guys to more pleas­ant guys they are now. "And I would say the mon­ey is worth it...it is a good in­vest­ment," he added. The plan would be mon­i­tored by the Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­istry and its key fo­cus was to "do a tran­si­tion" of the Po­lice Ser­vice, Warn­er said.

"This was not so in the past. This is not an an­ti-crime plan. This is a tran­si­tion plan to change the im­age of the Po­lice Ser­vice...they want to change the im­age and get bet­ter re­sults and bet­ter ser­vice, and this is what they are work­ing on. "The as­so­ci­a­tion has said the im­age is not the best and the ev­i­dence is there...I have seen this," Warn­er said.

About Shift

Rame­sar said the plan was in the mak­ing two years ago when the as­so­ci­a­tion be­gan an ex­ten­sive da­ta-col­lec­tion ex­er­cise. "The plan is re­al­ly about shift­ing the par­a­digm in the Po­lice Ser­vice and up­lift­ing its cul­ture," he said. "It is about im­prov­ing at­ti­tude and get­ting po­lice of­fi­cers to change their be­hav­iour and work ethics. "We are tak­ing the bull by the horns be­cause we want po­lice of­fi­cers to dis­play the right type of at­ti­tude to the pub­lic."

A main fea­ture of the plan will be awards for a po­lice­man and po­lice­woman of the year, to be cho­sen by the com­mu­ni­ty. He said the as­so­ci­a­tion hired a Unit­ed King­dom-based con­sul­tan­cy firm, Bar­rett Val­ues Cen­tre, to analyse da­ta gath­ered by the as­so­ci­a­tion and in­de­pen­dent con­sul­tants.

Rame­sar said fo­cus was placed on in­ter­nal trans­for­ma­tion, in­clud­ing fa­cil­i­ties in the Po­lice Ser­vice. "There is the as­pect of ex­ter­nal trans­for­ma­tion, which fo­cused on be­ing more proac­tive rather than re­ac­tionary," he said. "There is al­so the is­sue of strate­gic al­liances, which fo­cus­es on ar­eas the Po­lice Ser­vice needs to part­ner with."

The plan, he added, would not on­ly re­sult in a cul­tur­al change but al­so pro­duce more mo­ti­vat­ed po­lice. "When we pro­duce the po­lice of­fi­cer with the right at­ti­tude, this would tran­scend in­to the so­ci­ety and pro­duce im­proved com­mu­ni­ty links," Rame­sar said. "This would even­tu­al­ly change the so­ci­ety...this is not a cos­met­ic ap­proach to polic­ing."

Asked whether this plan would be du­pli­cat­ing some of the core fac­tors of the Po­lice Acad­e­my in St James, Rame­sar de­scribed the teach­ing at the acad­e­my as based on the­o­ry. "The acad­e­my fo­cus­es heav­i­ly on syl­labus, a lot of lit­er­a­ture and the­o­ry...It does not fo­cus on char­ac­ter-build­ing of a po­lice of­fi­cer," he said. "This plan deals with the re­moval of ego from the po­lice of­fi­cer."


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored

Today's
Guardian

Publications

Isaiah Cumberbatch, better known as Rodey the Entertainer, is a popular comedian and performer.

Isaiah Cumberbatch, better known as Rodey the Entertainer, is a popular comedian and performer.

Percival Arthur Sukhbir

Isaiah Cumberbatch, better known as Rodey the Entertainer, is a popular comedian and performer.

Isaiah Cumberbatch, better known as Rodey the Entertainer, is a popular comedian and performer.

Percival Arthur Sukhbir

Rodey the Entertainer: A decade of laughter and love

Yesterday
Stephen Boodoo, a proud father of two daughters—seven-year-old Skylar and four-year-old Seanna—is a welding inspector from Penal. He shared, “Father’s Day means having two beautiful daughters and waking up every day to them saying, ‘Love you, Daddy.’” “Becoming a father changed my life in many ways. With fatherhood came greater responsibility—and even greater love. The best part of having two girls is the constant love and kisses I get every single day.”

Stephen Boodoo, a proud father of two daughters—seven-year-old Skylar and four-year-old Seanna—is a welding inspector from Penal. He shared, “Father’s Day means having two beautiful daughters and waking up every day to them saying, ‘Love you, Daddy.’” “Becoming a father changed my life in many ways. With fatherhood came greater responsibility—and even greater love. The best part of having two girls is the constant love and kisses I get every single day.”

RISHI RAGOONATH

Stephen Boodoo, a proud father of two daughters—seven-year-old Skylar and four-year-old Seanna—is a welding inspector from Penal. He shared, “Father’s Day means having two beautiful daughters and waking up every day to them saying, ‘Love you, Daddy.’” “Becoming a father changed my life in many ways. With fatherhood came greater responsibility—and even greater love. The best part of having two girls is the constant love and kisses I get every single day.”

Stephen Boodoo, a proud father of two daughters—seven-year-old Skylar and four-year-old Seanna—is a welding inspector from Penal. He shared, “Father’s Day means having two beautiful daughters and waking up every day to them saying, ‘Love you, Daddy.’” “Becoming a father changed my life in many ways. With fatherhood came greater responsibility—and even greater love. The best part of having two girls is the constant love and kisses I get every single day.”

RISHI RAGOONATH

Honouring our dads: Happy Father’s Day

Yesterday
Kent Western and his wife, Anna, with their sons, Talon, left, Axel, front, and Eric.

Kent Western and his wife, Anna, with their sons, Talon, left, Axel, front, and Eric.

Antony Scully

Kent Western and his wife, Anna, with their sons, Talon, left, Axel, front, and Eric.

Kent Western and his wife, Anna, with their sons, Talon, left, Axel, front, and Eric.

Antony Scully

TSTT CEO Kent Western raising men, leading with love and purpose

Yesterday
Caretakers and supervisors for the Credo Home for Boys, Alwin Hunte, left, and Makemba Whitley.

Caretakers and supervisors for the Credo Home for Boys, Alwin Hunte, left, and Makemba Whitley.

ROGER JACOB

Caretakers and supervisors for the Credo Home for Boys, Alwin Hunte, left, and Makemba Whitley.

Caretakers and supervisors for the Credo Home for Boys, Alwin Hunte, left, and Makemba Whitley.

ROGER JACOB

Fathers by choice: The men who raise forgotten boys

Yesterday