Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Act 1992

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Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Act 1992 No. 54
Parliament of New South Wales
Long title
  • An Act to amend the Police Service Act 1990 to provide for the undertaking, on a trial basis, of certain aspects of police work by community volunteers.[1]
Passed24 September 1992[2]
Royal assent7 October 1992[1]
Introduced byThe Hon. Edward Pickering MLC,
Minister for Police
Amended by
Automatically repealed on 31 December 1994 by virtue of section 91H of the Act.[1]
Related legislation
Police Service Act 1990
Status: Repealed

The Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Act 1992 was an

New South Wales Police Association.[4]

The Act was automatically repealed by virtue of a

sunset clause on 31 December 1994.[1]

Background

The

auxiliary constabularies respectively. The intention of the Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Act 1992 was to adapt the principle of voluntary part-time police service for New South Wales.[2]

The volunteer police

The Act established the position of 'police volunteer' within the Police Service and collected these volunteers under the title 'the volunteer police'.

Commissioner of Police
was given the powers to appoint, discipline and dismiss police volunteers and also to determine their functions, with the requirement that police volunteers be under the supervision of police officers at all times.

Appointment as a police volunteer conferred on a person the same powers and privileges of a

firearms
.

Debate

There was much parliamentary debate on the Act. When the Opposition called a

division, the vote was split evenly and the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly used his casting vote to resolve the matter in the affirmative.[5]

Support

Supporters of the Act - members of the Liberals and the Democrats - argued that volunteer police would build upon the community policing practices implemented by the Government, would augment police in the event of an emergency, and would allow members of the public to contribute to a cause which they felt strongly about.[6]

Over recent years the New South Wales Police Service has adopted community-based policing as its primary operational strategy. The proposed introduction of volunteers in policing is a logical extension of community-based policing.... the tradition of volunteer service to the community is a particularly strong one in Australia. However, the concept of using volunteers in policing is new to Australia.[2]

— The Hon. Edward Pickering MLC, NSW Parliamentary Hansard

Volunteer involvement engenders a sense of community, a connection between paid workers and the ordinary public with both committed to a common purpose. Furthermore, the experience of volunteers and their different skills enhance the quality of the service.[4]

— The Hon. Elisabeth Kirkby MLC, NSW Parliamentary Hansard

Opposition

The Labor Opposition, backed by the principal unions in the Police Service - the New South Wales Police Association, the Commissioned Police Officers Association of New South Wales, and the Public Service Association - was opposed to the Act.[2] Arguments against the Act revolved around concerns that police volunteers would not be sufficiently trained, experienced or equipped for police work, and that the Government intended on tricking the public into thinking there were more police officers on the streets than was actually the case.[4]

If the Opposition had the opportunity to name the legislation, it would call it the hobby bobby legislation... The public needs, deserves and requires an accountable, trained and professional Police Service; it does not need well-intentioned amateurs.[4]

— The Hon. Ron Dyer MLC, NSW Parliamentary Hansard

In another place Reverend the Hon. F. J. Nile asked what would happen if an armed holdup were to take place, as happened at Chatswood recently. In an instance such as that involving an unarmed volunteer, what would have happened? A bloke with a gun would come out of the bank and the volunteer would say: "Do not shoot. I am a volunteer. He is not a volunteer, you can shoot him. I am a volunteer, I have no gun".[5]

— Peter Anderson MLA, NSW Parliamentary Hansard

Successor scheme

In 1995, the NSW Police Service introduced a scheme called Volunteers in Policing which allows community members to assist police by performing certain non-core police duties.[7] Such duties are limited to community engagement and basic administrative tasks, with no law enforcement responsibilities or powers granted to volunteers.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Act 1992 No. 54" (PDF). New South Wales Parliamentary Counsel's Officer. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d "Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Bill First Reading in Legislative Council". Parliament of New South Wales Hansard. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  3. ^ The New South Wales Police Service is now known as the New South Wales Police Force. 'Service' is used throughout this article as it was the correct name at the time the Act was in force.
  4. ^ a b c d "Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Bill Second Reading in Legislative Council". Parliament of New South Wales Hansard. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  5. ^ a b "Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Bill Second Reading in Legislative Assembly". Parliament of New South Wales Hansard. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  6. ^ "Police Service (Volunteer Police) Amendment Bill Second Reading in Legislative Council". Parliament of New South Wales Hansard. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  7. ^ "Volunteers in Policing - NSW Police Force". NSW Police Force. Archived from the original on 30 May 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2009.

External links