Ticker

6/recent/ticker-posts

Header Ads Widget

Responsive Advertisement

Cops in caps: New baseball-style headgear to grace constabulary craniums

Constables Daniel Stone, in the forage cap, and Gertrud Kikajon in the new cap. Photo / NZ Police

Police will start wearing new baseball caps from September after months of head-scratching and trials.

The baseball caps went on trial in November across five police districts and the police college in Porirua.

Police say new baseball hats designs are based on staff feedback and trials. Photo / NZ Police
Police say new baseball hats designs are based on staff feedback and trials. Photo / NZ Police

“Rollout of one cap to each constabulary member is expected to start in September and run through to March 2022,” Assistant Commissioner Tusha Penny said this afternoon.

Staff feedback indicated the existing forage caps could be cumbersome and prone to being knocked off in dynamic situations, Penny added.

“These caps are a practical, comfortable alternative to the forage cap, which look completely in keeping with the operational uniform,” Commissioner Andy Coster said.

“We have listened to our frontline staff who have been calling for an alternative for
some time.”

Police scuffle with protesters in 1991 in Auckland's Queen Street at a protest outside social welfare offices. Hard hats were phased out four years later. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Police scuffle with protesters in 1991 in Auckland’s Queen Street at a protest outside social welfare offices. Hard hats were phased out four years later. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Some specialist cops, including the Commercial Vehicle Safety Team, already wear caps, as do police in Australia and some other Commonwealth jurisdictions.

The new cap will replace caps some specialist Kiwi police in maritime and canine units used.

The cap’s final design was based on staff feedback.

“Rollout of one cap to each constabulary member is expected to start in September and run through to March 2022,” Penny added.

Police said the caps were being produced in New Zealand, with components sought from overseas.

Police said Covid-19’s impact on global supply chains might cause delays.

Other factors that might impact delivery time would be embroidery work required and the manufacturer’s production capacity.

The forage cap took over in 1995 from old hard helmets as the main item of police headgear.

Police Association magazine Police News said the caps were the brainchild of Senior Constable Mark “Chook” Taylor from Northland.

Subscribe to Premium

Post a Comment

0 Comments