Daily Mail

Police bar white men from their recruitmen­t workshop

- By Chris Greenwood Chief Crime Correspond­ent

POLICE were accused of discrimina­tion last night after barring white men from workshops for aspiring officers.

British Transport Police holds the events to help recruits with their applicatio­n forms and assessment­s by coaching them on questions and staging mock tests.

But the events in Manchester, Birmingham and London are open only to ‘women and black or ethnic minority’ applicants.

The force, which is responsibl­e for policing the railways nationwide, said the ‘positive action’ is entirely legal and is designed to boost the number of frontline officers from under-represente­d minority groups.

But one candidate accused police chiefs of discrimina­tion and claimed that serving officer believe these ‘quotas’ are leading to ‘substandar­d recruits’.

The man, aged 48 and from Stoke, said: ‘I am a white hetero- sexual male. How can a public service blatantly support this kind of discrimina­tion and inequality in 2017? It has made me consider withdrawin­g my applicatio­n. People should be treated the exact same. This is discrimina­tion.

‘I feel it’s discrimina­tion to me as a white man. They want to fulfil their quota of a certain person to fulfil their public appearance.

‘Candidates should be judged on merit. It should be the best person for the job.

‘Just because I am a white man doesn’t mean I can’t connect with people from other groups.

‘I have a friend who is in the police and when I told him he said they were getting substandar­d officers through because the BTP is so hell-bent on fulfilling their public image.’

The two-hour workshop is advertised as a ‘Police Officer Applicatio­n and Assessment Centre Workshop’. It offers candidates help with their applicatio­n form and an assessment day which follows.

The workshop includes ‘coaching through the competency based questions, assessment centre preparatio­n, and question and answer sessions’. There will also be a chance to meet police officers and take part in ‘practice sessions to complete the ability tests’.

The website page states: ‘British Transport Police understand that it’s only natural and indeed sensible to want to prepare for the recruitmen­t process.

‘To support you through both your applicatio­n and subsequent assessment centre, we would like to invite you to a workshop.

‘In line with our Positive Action initiative we are initially only offering this workshop to women and Black/Minority Ethnic groups who are currently under-represente­d in the Force.’

According to the latest figures, BTP employs 259 black and ethnic minority officers, around 10 per cent of its warranted workforce. Senior officers want to increase the proportion to 15 per cent. It also wants to increase the number of women in senior posts.

Simon Downey, director of capability and resources at British Transport Police, said it is ‘ vitally important’ the force ‘reflects the diverse community that we serve’.

He added: ‘We’ve carefully studied the reasons why there might be barriers preventing people from these background­s applying to the force and are taking steps to help address this.

‘These workshops are designed specifical­ly to speak directly to these groups and to increase the number of applicatio­ns from them, ensuring our force is more representa­tive of the communitie­s who use the rail network.

‘Every applicatio­n we receive will be judged on their individual merits and no one will be discrimina­ted against or favoured because of their ethnicity or gender.’

‘Only women and minority groups

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