20. Aug. 2010. – 13:02:17
A couple of definitions of the word “fashion” are a prevailing custom or conventional usage. The word itself is often associated with dress and especially female attire; hemlines up, hemlines down, necklines up or more usually down.
But the same word can safely be applied to policy whether by government or any agency which purports to be “engaging with the public requirement”. One such is “targets” or “targeting”. In my own courthouse there is an area of wall in the retiring room about 10ft x 5ft with graphs, histograms and pie charts about how long it has taken to do this or do that or to get to this stage or that stage in proceedings, how much of this and how much of that and all compared with “targets”. One factor missing is “results”. This seems to be common. It was due only to somebody`s Freedom of Information enquiry that the numbers of those found guilty after trial at Magistrates` Courts for the last three years were made available and published on this site 16th August.
Well it seems for some bodies the fashion for targets is being rejected or so say Gloucester Police. In a 53 page document full of endless platitudes and clichés about their intentions and plans for the forthcoming year there is on p3 the following statement, “We will move away from the traditional culture of achieving performance targets and instead concentrate on improving public confidence.” What this means is that this agency does not want to be left pursuing what was considered the optimum way forward, when the previous government pushed achieving “targets” as the means to cure all society`s ills, when the fashion has changed. We have all manner of senior people who as soon as they are safely squirreling away their largely tax payers` provided generous monthly pension payments begin pontificating on the mistakes made by others when they were in positions to have been able to make positive criticism but about which they kept silent.
I suppose it goes back to the old adage, “Do not bite the hand that feeds you”. And that`s why Gloucester Police are now changing track. I wish good luck to Tony Melville the new chief constable who will no doubt carve out his own path in compliance with time honoured trends.
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