Do you allow the public to record their calls with you ?
Dear Association of Police and Crime Commissioners,
1) Are Service Users or the general public allowed to audio-visually record meeting and calls with your staff? If so, do they require permission or are they permitted to do so covertly?
2) Do you have any guidance or policy for the public or service users to record calls when they speak to your staff
3) What is your organisations protocol on service users recording calls when they speak to your staff or call centres? Please provide a copy of your policy, procedure and guideline notes on this issue.
4) Do you Inform Users they can record. If the answer is no what is the reason for this please if so do send me a copy.
5) Are service users made aware of their right to record the encounter, if they choose to do so? Is this reflected in you policy document on the matter?
6) Does your organisation have an “Unacceptable Behaviour” policy? If so, please can you provide me with a copy? Regarding court staff the public or the court itself.
7) If such a policy contains points of objectionable behaviour such as telephones calls being recorded by the caller due to them being not necessary or unwanted or needed, and furthermore the staff members may feel threatened or apprehensive, are you aware that denying users the right to record calls goes against the current UK laws.
8) Are your policies and procedures compliant with the public right to audio-visually record encounters with your staff, without their consent? If not, will you provide appropriate training for your staff so they are fully informed of the Public right to record?
9) What is our organisations current charging policy for Freedom of Information requests (FOI) or Subject Access Requests (SAR)? If charges are applied are concessions available for those on low income or students?
10) What is your organisations complaints policy? Please can you forward me a copy? Does your complaints procedure permit service users evidence such as covert call recordings to form part of the investigation?
Yours faithfully,
John Jones Researcher
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Commissioners. Please accept this email as an acknowledgement of receipt.
The Association of Police and Crime Commissioners is the national
membership body for Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs), and other local
policing bodies across England and Wales. We help PCCs to provide national
leadership and influence change in the policing and criminal justice
landscape. As such, it is not part of our role to respond to complaints
regarding Police Forces, or Police and Crime Commissioners.
If you would like to make a suggestion or a complaint about how your local
area is policed, you should contact your local PCC. You can find your
local PCC [1]here.
If you would like to make a complaint about either police officers or
staff working for a police force, then please visit the Independent Police
Complaints Commission [2]website.
If you would like to make a complaint about your local Police & Crime
Commissioner, you will need to contact the Police & Crime Panel for your
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If we are otherwise able to respond to your enquiry, we will endeavour to
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References
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1. http://www.apccs.police.uk/find-your-pcc/
2. https://www.ipcc.gov.uk/
3. http://www.apccs.police.uk/wp-content/up...
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