Daily Mail

It’s a fair cap!

Police force has swapped helmet for baseball cap – to appeal to teens

- By Claire Duffin

It has been a symbol of British law and order for more than 150 years.

But the policeman’s custodian helmet t is – much like the bobby on the beat – at t risk of vanishing altogether.

Officers’ hats could soon be replaced with h baseball caps, in a bid to make officers more e approachab­le to youngsters.

Gloucester­shire Constabula­ry has thrown its weight behind the US- style headgear, known as a ‘bump hat’.

the caps, which have a reinforced frame, are more lightweigh­t than the helmets and allow officers to clamber in and out of vehicles without removing them.

But the new look has been ridiculed by some critics – who claim the caps make officers look more like Burger King workers.

Another force, thames Valley, has already scrapped plans to roll out the caps after receiving complaints from the public and officers alike. Northampto­nshire ditched them last year on the grounds that they did not ‘portray the right image’.

But senior officers in Gloucester­shire have embraced the new look – which could now spread elsewhere. Sergeant Mark Burns said: ‘the bump helmets are far more practical. they don’t fall off and they offer more protection.’ He said they made the police more approachab­le, but accepted there had been a ‘mixed response’.

Mike Harrison, of the Gloucester­shire Police Federation, added: ‘there was a lot of debate initially and we did a trial period, but the feedback was very positive because they are more practical. We have retained the traditiona­l hat for ceremonial purposes but the caps will be worn for frontline operationa­l duties and nobody has said to us they don’t wear them.’

the Cotswolds and Forest of Dean have also received deliveries of the cap, which will eventually be given to all their frontline officers.

the custodian helmet – modelled on the spiked helmet worn by the Prussian army – replaced top hats, and was first worn by the Met Police in 1863. A Gloucester­shire Constabula­ry spokesman said it recognised the helmet as ‘an iconic element of our uniform’, but added: ‘We conducted a local survey and the 284 replies indicated a fairly even split, thought the largest percentage was in favour.’

Northampto­nshire Police had hoped the caps would help to recruit new officers. the force, which claimed traditiona­l helmets were ‘a barrier to the non-binary transgende­r community joining the service’, ended up scrapping them after just 18 months following a series of complaints.

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 ??  ?? Evenin’ all: Dixon of Dock Green Greeen (Jack Warner) in the classic helmet and, right, the new police cap
Evenin’ all: Dixon of Dock Green Greeen (Jack Warner) in the classic helmet and, right, the new police cap

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