Witnessed a SMIDSY tonight..

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Drago

Legendary Member
I have met several instructors who claim they have taught Bikeability to the police, but I have yet to see a PC who rides as though he as been trained accordingly.
That's funny, because I'm a senior instructor accredited with 2 different training bodies and don't rate Bikeability very highly, especially for EMS patrol use where it's very lacking and not terribly appropriate.

That said its not uncommon to see my students in my own force ignoring their training, and if its dangerous or likely to bring the force I to disrepute, so I withdrew the privilege for a couple. Did that a couple of times and things started improving. Was actually out training a group from several other forces and one of ours came flying by, no lid, fluorescent, hand or eye protection ramping off kerbs into the road without looking, which wasn't a good advert for our syllabus.
 

davefb

Guru
Truth is very few coppers get any form of bike training at all. When they do, the public shout it's a waste of money and get hung out to dry by the press.
grrr. you're not wrong.

if I remember this correctly... there was a pcso killed locally and during investigation the HSE(?)/gmp HR?(whoever) found out that police/pcso would be effectively given bikes , then told to get on them without any training or testing or anything.. so some sense was seen and they banned the bikes and setup training.
what was the story? "thousands spent showing police how to ride bike"... unbelievable..

http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/s/1017030_police_bike_ban_after_death_
"they dont stop all pandas after one accident" moan moan.. err there'd be hell to pay if gmp let drivers just drive without even checking if they had a licence ffs..
 
Police aren't alone in that like most government agencies, you're damned if you do and damned if you don't.

There was even an example in this post, where the cop letting the driver off was setting a bad example of demonstrating that it didn't matter - whereas I can bet if he threw the book at him there would be a comment about the police not doing the same thing for a normal member of the public.
 

Drago

Legendary Member
Just to add to this training

Paramedics on bikes get training (in some place seeing this o
Yep, I've taught a few of them, some in Milton Keynes as well.

Whether public like it or not, the Provision and Use of Work Related Equipment Regulations (PUWER) make it a lawful obligation for an employer to properly train staff on any piece of equipment with the potential to cause death or injury. It has been deemed by the HSE that a bicycle is one such piece of equipment.

Bikeability is way to basic, and barely teaches riders to use the road, and the pre-ride checks of the machine they teach are woeful. It's totally inappropriate for the dibble as it does not cover a lot or road skills, group riding, nutrition, hydration, the skills needed to ride safely while top heavy with body armour, defensive tactics (normal ones don't work when sat astride or holding a cycle), and a load of other bits. Some forces have reckoned Bikeability is all they need, but one force has dropped it in favour of proper training after a PCSO fell off and injured herself, blaming a blackout caused by... inadequate hydration! Blooming common sense you or I might think, but sadly too many people lack it, hence PUWER making it law.

Whether the public like it or not, were a) not teaching them to ride bikes, and b) the training is a lot, lot cheaper than paying the compensation.

I agree with CC - I'd have stuck the driver on for that.
 

musa

Über Member
Location
Surrey
Just to add to this training

Paramedics on bikes get training (in some place seeing this on tv) what are people's views? Is it a waste of money too?

This is what was meant to be posted. Took longer to do
 

Drago

Legendary Member
The Paramedics training is interesting, because they lug a phenomenal amount of kit with them. A lot of it goes on control skills, especially balance and slow riding techniques, but we were able to bin a load of the UDT stuff from their syllabus.

It's akin to doing an 8 hour tour in the saddle, on a laden touring bike, while competing in 6 or 8 sprint races a day. Makes my legs tremble at the thought.

And yeah, I think it's worthwhile. You wouldn't expect them to operate any other piece of machinery safely and effectively without training.

If anyone's interested have a look at http://www.ipmba.org/ I'm accredited to them, though we teach the MIAS syllabus which is rather Anglicised for our domestic needs. That said a lot of Forces, such as GMP, directly teach the IPMBA syllabus, presumably without the unnecessary firearms stuff though.
 

hoski

Veteran
Location
Oxford, UK
As far as I can see, as has been mentioned before, training for any piece of equipment with the potential to cause death or injury is a no-brainer. I don't understand how anyone can expect someone to use a potentially dangerous piece of equipment for their work for which they have not been adequately trained.

I'm personally not a huge fan of police (or maybe policing) but I sincerely worry for the safety of the TVP officers/PCSOs I've seen on bike - kerb hugging, no signalling and veering into the middle of the road to turn right, rolling off the pavement without looking, etc. Any prejudice I may have is entirely overidden by concern for their safety and the need for employers (and the public) to take it seriously.

My two-penneth anyway.

Plus the driver in the OP should thank their lucky stars he was so lenient.
 
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