Statutory Instruments
1969 No. 1787
POLICE
The Police Federation Regulations 1969
Laid before Parliament
23rd December 1969
Coming into Operation
1st January 1970
In exercise of the powers conferred on me by section 44 of the Police Act 1964, and after consultation with the three Central Committees of the Police Federation for England and Wales sitting together as a Joint Committee, I hereby make the following Regulations:—
PART IGENERAL
Citation, commencement and extent
1.—(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Police Federation Regulations 1969 and shall come into operation on 1st January 1970.
(2) These Regulations shall not extend to Scotland.
Interpretation
2.—(1) In these Regulations the expression “division”,in relation to a police force, has the same meaning as in the regulations for the time being in force under section 33 of the Police Act 1964 but, for the purposes of these Regulations, a member of a specialist branch of a police force shall be deemed not to belong to a division of that force.
(2) In these Regulations the expression “specialist branch”, in relation to a police force, means—
(a)the criminal investigation department thereof,
(b)the traffic branch thereof, or
(c)the branch attached to the headquarters thereof,
however styled, except that, in relation to the metropolitan police force, the said expression means the criminal investigation department thereof or the A, B and D departments, attached to the office of the commissioner of police of the metropolis, taken together.
(3) In these Regulations, unless the context otherwise requires, a reference to a Regulation shall be construed as a reference to a Regulation contained in these Regulations, a reference to a Schedule shall be construed as a reference to a Schedule to these Regulations and a reference to a paragraph shall be construed as a reference to a paragraph in the same Regulation, the same Schedule or the same Part of a Schedule, as the case may be.
(4) In these Regulations any reference to any enactment is a reference to that enactment as amended or extended by or under any subsequent enactment.
(5) The Interpretation Act 1889 shall apply for the interpretation of these Regulations as it applies for the interpretation of an Act of Parliament.
Revocations and transitional provisions
3.—(1) The Regulations set out in Schedule 1, that is to say the Police Federation Regulations 1965() and the Regulations amending those Regulations, are hereby revoked.
(2) Anything done under, or for the purposes of, any provision of the Regulations revoked by this Regulation shall have effect as if done under, or for the purposes of, the corresponding provision of these Regulations.
PART IIORGANISATION
Membership of Police Federation and branches thereof
4.—(1) The Police Federation for England and Wales (hereinafter referred to as “the Federation” ) shall be known as the Police Federation.
(2) There shall be a branch of the Federation for each police force, consisting of the following persons—
(a)every member of that force below the rank of superintendent, and
(b)every police cadet undergoing training with a view to becoming a member of that force,
and every such person shall be a member of the Federation.
Proceedings of branches
5.—(1) General meetings of the members of a branch of the Federation, or of such members belonging to a particular division or specialist branch of a police force, may be held in accordance with arrangements made by—
(a)a board or joint board of that branch, or
(b)a central committee or the joint central committee of the Federation.
(2) The chief officer of police of the force in whose area such a meeting is to be held shall be given at least fourteen days' notice of the date of the meeting.
(3) The arrangements referred to in paragraph (1) may provide for the attendance at a meeting of members of the police authority and of other members of the Federation but shall not permit the attendance of other persons except to such extent, and subject to such conditions, as may be determined—
(a)by the chief officer of police, where the arrangements are made under paragraph (1)(a);
(b)by the Secretary of State, where the arrangements are made under paragraph (1)(b).
(4) The arrangements referred to in paragraph (1) shall not permit the passing of a resolution at a meeting for submission to a chief officer of police, a police authority or the Secretary of State.
(5) Subject to the provisions of the arrangements referred to in paragraph (1), Schedule 2 shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of a meeting held under this Regulation.
Branch boards
6.—(1) In each branch of the Federation there shall be constituted, in accordance with this Regulation, an inspectors', a sergeants' and a constables' branch board.
(2) Where a police force consists of fewer than five divisions, the men belonging to those divisions holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable in that force shall elect, from among their number, five members of the appropriate branch board.
(3) Where a police force consists of five or more divisions, the men belonging to each division and holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable therein shall elect from among their number one member of the appropriate branch board.
(4) The men belonging to each specialist branch of a police force and holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable therein shall elect from among their number one member of the appropriate branch board except that in the case of the two specialist branches of the metropolitan police force—
(a)five members shall be elected by the criminal investigation department, and
(b)three members shall be elected by the A, B and D departments.
(5) The women holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable in a police force shall elect one member of the appropriate branch board from among their own number or, in the case of the metropolitan police force, from among the members thereof elected as delegates to the appropriate central conference in accordance with Regulation 9(4).
(6) The police cadets undergoing training with a view to becoming members of a police force may elect, from among their number, one member of the constables' branch board; but, where they do not so elect a member, they shall designate to represent their interests a member of the constables' branch board elected in accordance with the preceding provisions of this Regulation.
(7) Schedule 3 shall have effect in relation to a branch board, so however that in any election thereto—
(a)if only one person is qualified to take part therein, that person shall be deemed to be elected;
(b)if only two persons are qualified to take part therein, subject to any agreement to the contrary between them, the senior of those two shall be deemed to be elected.
(8) Annual elections shall be held for the purposes of this Regulation in such month in each year as the Secretary of State may determine at the request of the joint central committee of the Federation.
(9) A person becoming a member of a branch board shall, subject to any rules made under paragraph 5(1)(b) of Schedule 3, become such on the first day of the month following that in which annual elections are held and, subject to paragraph (10), shall remain a member until the end of the month in which annual elections are held in the next following year.
(10) A person shall cease to be a member of an inspectors', sergeants' or constables' branch board if—
(a)he ceases to hold the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable;
(b)he ceases to be a member of the police force or, in the case of a police cadet, ceases to undergo training with a view to becoming such a member, or
(c)in the case of a person elected in accordance with paragraph (3) or (4), he ceases to belong to the division or specialist branch by which he was elected;
but, where a person who is the secretary of a joint branch board ceases to be a member of a branch board in accordance with sub-paragraph (c) of this paragraph, he shall, by virtue of this paragraph and without prejudice to the filling of the casual vacancy, become an additional member of that board and shall remain such for the period for which he would have remained a member but for the said sub-paragraph (c).
(11) Where a member of a branch board has been chosen as such a central officer of the Federation as is hereinafter mentioned he shall, by virtue of this paragraph and without prejudice to the filling of the casual vacancy, become an additional member of that board and, subject to paragraph (10), shall remain such until some other person is chosen for the office in question.
In this paragraph the reference to a central officer of the Federation is a reference to—
(a)a person chosen by the joint central committee as the chairman, secretary or treasurer thereof, or
(b)a person chosen by a central committee as the secretary thereof.
(12) A reference in any provision of this Regulation to a person holding a rank in a police force shall be construed as excluding a reference to such a person who is a member of the first class of the police reserve.
Proceedings of branch boards
7.—(1) Each branch board may hold quarterly meetings, each lasting one day and, with the consent of the chief officer of police, additional meetings of the branch board and meetings of committees thereof.
(2) Each branch board shall hold a quarterly meeting in the month following that in which annual elections are held, which meeting is in these Regulations referred to as the annual meeting, and where more than one meeting is held in that month the first meeting so held shall be the annual meeting.
(3) In any branch of the Federation the three or any two of the branch boards may, by agreement, sit together as a joint branch board, either generally or for a special purpose.
(4) Without prejudice to any arrangements for informal consultation, a branch board or joint branch board may make written representations to the chief officer of police or the police authority and, if it thinks fit, submit a copy thereof to the Secretary of State; and in matters of importance a deputation may be appointed to make oral representations to the chief officer of police or the police authority.
(5) Schedule 2 shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of any branch board or joint branch board.
Liaison committees
8.—(1) In each branch of the Federation there shall be constituted, by the constables' branch board and in accordance with this Regulation, a liaison committee to represent the women members of the branch holding the rank of constable and consisting of a representative from each division of the force to which such members belong elected by the members in question belonging to that division.
(2) In each branch of the Federation there may, with the consent of the chief officer of police, be constituted by the sergeants' or constables' branch board, and in accordance with this Regulation, such other liaison committees as appear to them expedient having regard to the size and organisation of the police force.
(3) Members of a branch who hold the rank of constable or are police cadets may be represented by the same or separate liaison committees constituted under paragraph (2) but members who hold the rank of sergeant may only be represented by a sergeants' liaison committee.
(4) Subject to the preceding provisions of this Regulation, a liaison committee constituted under paragraph (1) or (2) shall be constituted in accordance with arrangements made by the appropriate branch board with the approval of the chief officer of police and any such arrangements—
(a)shall provide that the committee shall consist of members of the branch who are not members of the appropriate branch board, and
(b)without prejudice to the generality of this paragraph, may apply, subject to appropriate modifications, the provisions of Schedule 2 to the proceedings of the committee and the provisions of Schedule 3 to the committee.
(5) In each year, a liaison committee constituted under paragraph (1) may hold two ordinary meetings and a liaison committee constituted under paragraph (2) may hold four ordinary meetings, each lasting half a day.
(6) A liaison committee constituted under paragraph (1) or (2) may, with the consent of the chief officer of police, hold additional meetings.
Central conferences
9.—(1) There shall be constituted, in accordance with this Regulation, an inspectors', a sergeants' and a constables' central conference.
(2) Each branch board, at their annual meeting, shall elect from among the men holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable in the police force, such number of delegates to the appropriate central conference as is provided in Part I of Schedule 4:
Provided that a woman member of a branch board shall not vote in an election held for the purposes of this paragraph.
(3) The women members of the inspectors', sergeants' and constables' branch boards for the branches of the Federation in each of the regions mentioned in Schedule 5 shall elect, from among the women holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable in a police force in the region in question, such number of delegates to the appropriate central conference as is provided in Part II of Schedule 4.
(4) The women holding the rank of inspector, segeant or, as the case may be, constable in the metropolitan police force or the City of London police force shall elect, from among their number, four delegates to the appropriate central conference.
(5) A person shall cease to be a delegate to a central conference if he ceases to hold the rank of inspector, sergeant or, as the case may be, constable or ceases to be a member of the branch from which he is a delegate or, in the case of a woman, of a branch in the region from which she is a delegate or, as the case may be, of the metropolitan police force or the City of London police force.
(6) Where a member of a branch board has been chosen as such a central officer of the Federation as is mentioned in Regulation 6(11), he shall, by virtue of this paragraph and without prejudice to the filling of any casual vacancy among the delegates elected by that board to the appropriate central conference, become an additional delegate from that board to that conference and, subject to paragraph (5), shall remain such until some other person is chosen for the office in question.
(7) Schedule 3 shall have effect in relation to each of the central conferences.
Proceedings of central conferences
10.—(1) Each central conference shall meet each year at such times as the Secretary of State shall determine after consultation with the joint central committee of the Federation and shall hold an annual meeting lasting not more than three days or, with the consent of the Secretary of State, four days.
(2) The three, or any two, of the central conferences may, by agreement, sit together for the purpose of discussing matters of common interest.
(3) The three central conferences sitting together shall be known as the joint central conference.
(4) Schedule 2 shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of each of the central conferences.
Conferences arrangements committee
11.—(1) There shall be constituted, in accordance with this Regulation, a conferences arrangements committee charged with the making of arrangements for such meetings as are referred to in Regulation 10.
(2) The conferences arrangements committee shall consist of—
(a)three men holding the rank of inspector,
(b)three men holding the rank of sergeant,
(c)three men holding the rank of constable, and
(d)one woman holding the rank of inspector, sergeant or constable,
not being members of a central committee; and of the three men holding each rank, one shall be a London member, that is to say, a member of the City of London or the metropolitan police force, and the other two shall be provincial members, that is to say, members of other police forces.
(3) The men who are members of the conferences arrangements committee shall be elected by the men who are delegates to the appropriate central conference from the City of London and metropolitan police forces, in the case of the London members, or by the men who are such delegates from other forces, in the case of the provincial members; and the woman member of the said committee shall be elected by the delegates to the joint central conference who are women.
(4) A person shall cease to be a member of the conferences arrangements committee on ceasing to be qualified for membership by reason of his ceasing to hold a particular rank or to be a member of a particular police force or by reason of his becoming a member of a central committee.
(5) The conferences arrangements committee may, each year, hold four ordinary meetings each lasting one day, and such additional meetings as appear to them necessary.
(6) Any expenses incurred by the conferences arrangements committee with the approval of the joint central committee shall be defrayed by the joint central committee.
(7) Notwithstanding anything in Regulation 9, each member of the conferences arrangements committee shall, by virtue of this paragraph, be an additional delegate to the appropriate central conference and on a person becoming a member of the committee and such an additional delegate he shall, if he has been elected a delegate to the conference under Regulation 9, cease to be a delegate so elected.
(8) Schedule 2 shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of the conferences arrangements committee and Schedule 3 shall have effect in relation to that committee.
Central committees
12.—(1) There shall be constituted, in accordance with this Regulation, an inspectors', a sergeants' and a constables' central committee of the Federation.
(2) Each central committee shall be elected by the delegates to the inspectors', sergeants' or, as the case may be, constables' central conference in the manner following:—
(a)two members shall be elected by the men who are delegates from the metropolitan police force or the City of London police force;
(b)one member shall be elected in respect of each region mentioned in Schedule 5 by the men who are delegates from police forces in the region in question, and
(c)one member shall be elected by the delegates who are women, in each case, from among their number.
(3) Schedule 3 shall have effect in relation to each of the central committees.
Proceedings of central committees
13.—(1) Each central committee may hold—
(a)an ordinary meeting once in two months, each meeting lasting not more than three days;
(b)an ordinary meeting once a year with the corresponding central committee of the Scottish Police Federation, lasting not more than two days, and
(c)additional meetings called with the consent of the Secretary of State.
(2) The three or any two of the central committees may, by agreement, sit together as a joint committee either for all purposes of common interest or for any special purpose.
(3) The three central committees shall, at the request of the Secretary of State, sit together as a joint committee for the purpose of considering any question referred to them by him.
(4) The three central committees sitting together shall be known as the joint central committee of the Federation.
(5) A central committee, the joint central committee or a joint committee of any two central committees may make written representations to the Secretary of State and, in matters of importance, a deputation may be appointed to make oral representations to him.
(6) Schedule 2 shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of each central committee, the joint central committee and a joint committee of any two central committees.
Women's regional conferences
14.—(1) In each of the regions mentioned in Schedule 5 two women's conferences, each lasting not more than one day, may be held each year in accordance with arrangements made by the joint central committee of the Federation.
(2) The women members of all the branch boards of the Federation in the region in question shall be delegates to a conference held under this Regulation.
(3) Schedule 2 shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of a women's regional conference.
PART IIIFINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS
Emoluments etc. of secretary of Federation
15.—(1) The Federation shall make such contribution to the police authority maintaining the police force of which the secretary of the joint central committee is a member, in respect of the pay, pension or allowances payable to or in respect of him, as may be agreed between the joint central committee and the police authority or, in default of agreement, as may be determined by the Secretary of State.
(2) The Regulations for the time being in force under—
(a)section 33 of the Police Act 1964., in so far as they relate to leave, pay and allowances, and
(b)the Police Pensions Act 1948, except in so far as they relate to compulsory retirement on account of age,
shall have effect in relation to the secretary of the joint central committee as if he held the rank of chief inspector in the City of London police force so, however, that nothing in this paragraph shall be construed as transferring any rights or liabilities to the police authority maintaining that force.
Subscriptions etc
16.—(1) The Federation may raise funds by—
(a)the collection of voluntary subscription from the members thereof;
(b)the acceptance of donations from such members, from central police officers, reversionary members of home police forces or servicemen within the meaning of the regulations from time to time in force under the Police Pensions Act 1948 or from persons with a contingent right of reversion to a home police force under section 2 of the Police Act 1969, or
(c)the sale of periodicals and other articles,
but not otherwise.
(2) Voluntary subscriptions shall be collected by the appropriate branch boards and the normal amount of such subscriptions (including additional subscriptions) shall be determined by the joint central committee, subject to the approval of the joint central conference.
(3) Out of the sum collected by way of subscriptions in each year a branch board shall pay to the appropriate central committee such sum in respect of each subscribing member as the joint central committee shall have determined should be paid by branch boards in that year but, subject to the next following paragraph, the balance of the sum so collected shall be retained by the branch board.
(4) If at the end of any year the funds held by a branch board exceed—
(a)£200, where the number of subscribing members is less than a hundred;
(b)£2 for each subscribing member, where the number of such members is a hundred or more but less than five hundred or, in the case of the metropolitan police force, a hundred or more but less than four thousand;
(c)£1,000 or, in the metropolitan police force £4,000, where the number of subscribing members is five hundred or more or, as the case may be, four thousand or more,
the board shall pay the excess to the appropriate central committee and, after making such payment, may pay such sum as they think fit to the joint branch board.
Expenses of joint central committee
17.—(1) There shall be paid to the joint central committee, out of Federation funds held by the central committees, such sums as the joint central committee determine.
(2) Subject to Regulation 19 any expenses incurred by or for the purposes of the joint central committee shall be defrayed out of Federation funds held by that committee except that, to the extent that the Secretary of State has agreed with the joint central committee that such expenses should be defrayed by him, they shall be so defrayed.
Accounts
18.—(1) This Regulation shall have effect in relation to every branch board or joint branch board, each central committee and the joint central committee.
(2) Every such board and committee shall, in relation to Federation funds held by the board or committee in question, keep accounts showing all monies received or paid out and shall cause the accounts for each year to be audited by an independent auditor.
(3) The independent auditor shall be a person who is a member, or a firm all of the partners wherein are members, of one or more of the following bodies, that is to say:—
(a)the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales;
(b)the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Scotland;
(c)the Association of Certified and Corporate Accountants;
(d)the Institute of Chartered Accounts in Ireland;
(e) any other body of accountants established in the United Kingdom and for the time being recognised for the purposes of section 161(1)(b) of the Companies Act 1948. by the Board of Trade.
(4) After the end of each year a summary of the accounts for that year, together with a copy of the independent auditor's report thereon, shall—
(a)in the case of the accounts of a branch board or joint branch board, be made available to the subscribing members and sent to the chief officer of police and the appropriate central committee or, as the case may be, the joint central committee which shall, if so requested in a particular case by the Secretary of State, transmit copies to him;
(b)in the case of the accounts of a central committee or the joint central committee, be made available to the appropriate central conference or, as the case may be, the joint central conference, sent to the Secretary of State and published, in a manner approved by the committee in question, to members of the Federation.
Use of Federation funds
19.—(1) Federation funds shall not without the consent of the Secretary of State be used otherwise than for the purposes mentioned in paragraphs (3) and (4) and, notwithstanding anything in those paragraphs, shall not be used—
(a)to promote directly or indirectly a person's candidature in a parliamentary or local government election;
(b)to contribute to the funds of a trade union, political party or other body or organisation not connected with the police service or its welfare, or
(c)in connection with the defence of a member or former member of the Federation against whom civil, criminal or disciplinary proceedings are brought, except as authorised by paragraph (4)(h).
(2) Subject as aforesaid the joint central committee shall, subject to the approval of the joint central conference, determine the purposes for which Federation funds held by the branch boards or joint branch boards and by the central committees, respectively, may be used.
(3) Federation funds may be used to defray expenses lawfully incurred for the purpose specified in section 44(1) of the Police Act 1964, namely for the purpose of representing members of the police forces and police cadets in England and Wales in all matters affecting their welfare and efficiency, other than questions of discipline and promotion affecting individuals.
(4) Without prejudice to the generality of the preceding paragraph, Federation funds may be used to defray—
(a)expenses arising under these Regulations or arising out of anything done in accordance therewith;
(b)the administrative expenses of the Federation, including expenses in connection with the provision of office accommodation and the remuneration of persons outside the police service employed or consulted in an administrative, professional or advisory capacity;
(c)the payment of honoraria to members of the central committees and of branch boards;
(d)the payment of subsistence and similar allowances to such members as aforesaid and to delegates to conferences held in accordance with these Regulations in respect of expenses incurred by them as such members and delegates;
(e)expenses in connection with the publication and distribution of reports and other documents, including a journal (whether or not a charge is made therefor) and the purchase of publications for use by branch boards and the central committees;
(f)expenses incurred for benevolent or charitable purposes connected with the police service or its welfare;
(g)expenses lawfully incurred in connection with a claim made by a member or former member of the Federation, his widow or child (including legal proceedings arising therefrom) where the claim relates to—
(i)a question of general principle or importance which is of special concern to the members of the Federation or a substantial class thereof,
(ii)the emoluments of a member of the Federation or the pension or other award payable to or in respect of a former member of the Federation,
(iii)an injury or disease alleged to have been received or contracted by a member of the Federation, or
(iv)the compulsory retirement of a member of a police force or of a police cadet, otherwise than as an alternative to dismissal, and
(h)legal charges incurred by a member or former member of the Federation or by a central police officer, within the meaning of the regulations from time to time in force under the Police Pensions Act 1948, entitled at the end of his period of central service to revert to his police force in a rank below that of superintendent, in connection with criminal proceedings brought against him for an offence under the Road Traffic Act 1960 or any other enactment relating to road traffic, other than an offence under section 6 or 11 of the Road Traffic Act 1960 or section 12 of the Licensing Act 1872 (driving or being in charge when impaired by drink or drugs), section 1, 2 or 3 of the Road Safety Act 1967 (driving etc. with an undue proportion of alcohol in the blood) or section 12 of the Theft Act 1968 (taking a motor vehicle or other conveyance without authority) committed in, or founded upon something done in, the performance or purported performance of his duties as a member of a police force (including an offence committed on any occasion in respect of which an allowance is payable under regulations made under section 33 of the Police Act 1964 for the use of a motor vehicle or bicycle owned by the member) or as a police cadet, or as such a central police officer, as the case may be.
Trustees of Federation property and funds
20.—(1) Federation property and funds held by a branch board or joint branch board shall be vested in not more than three trustees appointed in such manner as may be determined by the board in question.
(2) Federation property and funds held by a central committee or the joint central committee shall be vested in three trustees appointed by the committee in question.
(3) Where any Federation funds are vested in trustees in accordance with this Regulation those trustees shall not invest the funds or vary any investment except in pursuance of the powers of investment conferred on trustees generally by the Trustee Investment Act 1961 and in accordance with the directions of the appropriate board or committee.
(4) Where any Federation property or funds are vested in three trustees in accordance with this Regulation, any two of those trustees shall have the like powers to deal with that property or those funds as they would have had if they had been the sole trustees thereof.
James Callaghan
One of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State
Home Office, Whitehall
11th December 1969
SCHEDULE 1REGULATIONS REVOKED
Regulations | References |
---|
The Police Federation Regulations 1965 | S.I. 1965/619 (1965 I, p. 1928). |
The Police Federation (Amendment) Regulations 1966 | S.I. 1966/542 (1966 II, p. 1119). |
The Police Federation (Amendment) Regulations 1967 | S.I. 1967/94 (1967 I, p. 199). |
The Police Federation (Amendment) Regulations 1968 | S.I. 1968/24 (1968 I, p. 29). |
The Police Federation (Amendment) (No. 2) Regulations 1968 | S.I. 1968/2044 (1968 III, p. 5513). |
SCHEDULE 2PROCEEDINGS
1. This Schedule shall have effect in relation to the proceedings of the following bodies (hereafter in this Schedule referred to as “specified bodies”)—
any branch meeting, including a meeting of members belonging to a particular division or specialist branch of a police force;
any branch board or joint branch board;
each central conference;
the conferences arrangements committee;
each central committee, the joint central committee and a joint committee of any two central committees;
any women's regional conference.
2. Each specified body shall choose its chairman and secretary from among its members.
3. The chairman at any meeting of a specified body shall have a second or casting vote.
4. Subject as aforesaid, each specified body shall regulate its own procedure and may provide for the appointment of committees and sub-committees and for their procedure.
5. Where a police authority can make available to a specified body accommodation in premises provided for police purposes, the specified body shall be under no obligation to make payment for the use of such accommodation.
SCHEDULE 3ELECTIONS, ETC
1. This Schedule shall apply in relation to the following bodies (hereafter in this Schedule referred to as “specified bodies”):—
2. An election to a specified body shall be by secret ballot.
3. At any such election each person qualified to take part therein shall be entitled to give the like number of votes as there are vacancies to be filled but shall not give more than one vote for any one candidate.
4. Where at any such election an equality of votes is found to exist between any candidates and the addition of a vote would entitle any of those candidates to be declared elected, the decision between those candidates shall be reached by lot and the candidate on whom the lot falls shall be declared elected.
5.—(1) Subject to the provisions of these Regulations, rules may be made by the appropriate rule-making body mentioned in sub-paragraph (2) as respects—
(a)the conduct of elections to a specified body, and
(b)the circumstances and manner in which casual vacancies thereon are to be filled, whether the vacancy occurs as a result of the death or resignation of a person or in consequence of any provision of these Regulations.
(2) The appropriate rule-making body shall be—
(a)in relation to a branch board, that board;
(b)in relation to the election of male delegates to a central conference by a particular branch board and to casual vacancies among those delegates, that board;
(c)in relation to the election of female delegates to a central conference and casual vacancies among those delegates, the joint central committee;
(d)in relation to the conferences arrangements committee, the joint central conference;
(e)in relation to the election of members of a central committee by a central conference and casual vacancies among those members, that central conference.
SCHEDULE 4DELEGATES TO CENTRAL CONFERENCES
PART IMEN
1.—(1) Except in the metropolitan police force, there shall be elected to the appropriate central conference under Regulation 9(2), by each inspectors', sergeants' and constables' branch board, two delegates together with a further delegate for each five hundred men included in the authorised establishment.
(2) In this paragraph the reference to the authorised establishment for a police force is a reference to the number of men of all ranks included in the authorised establishment.
2. In the metropolitan police force the inspectors', sergeants' and constables' branch boards shall, under Regulation 9(2), each elect to the appropriate central conference—
(a)two delegates from each division;
(b)five delegates from the criminal investigation department, and
(c)six delegates from A, B and D departments.
PART IIWOMEN
1. The number of delegates to be elected, under Regulation 9(3), by women members of inspectors', sergeants' or constables' branch boards in a region to the appropriate central conference shall be determined by reference to the aggregate authorised establishment for the police forces in the region, as hereafter in this Part of this Schedule provided.
2. Where the aggregate authorised establishment is less than two hundred women, there shall be one delegate.
3. Where the aggregate authorised establishment is two hundred women or more, there shall be two delegates with a further delegate for each five hundred women included in the aggregate authorised establishment.
4. In this Part of this Schedule a reference to the authorised establishment for a police force is a reference to the number of women of all ranks included in the authorised establishment.
SCHEDULE 5REGIONS
For the purposes of these Regulations there shall be the following seven regions:—
(a)
No. 1 (North-West) Region, comprising the combined police areas known as the Cheshire, Cumbria, Lancashire, Liverpool and Bootle and Manchester and Salford police areas;
(b)
No. 2 (North-East) Region, comprising the county boroughs of Bradford, Kingston-upon-Hull, Leeds and Teesside and the combined police areas known as the Durham, Northumberland, Sheffield and Rotherham, York and North-East Yorkshire and West Yorkshire police areas;
(c)
No. 3 (Midlands) Region, comprising the county borough of Birmingham and the combined police areas known as the Staffordshire County and Stoke-on-Trent, Warwickshire and Coventry, West Mercia and West Midlands police areas;
(d)
No. 4 (Eastern) Region, comprising the combined police areas known as the Derby county and borough, Leicester and Rutland, Lincolnshire, Northampton and County, Mid-Anglia and Suffolk police areas, the Norfolk joint police area and the Nottinghamshire combined police area;
(e)
No. 5 (South-East) Region, comprising the counties of Hertfordshire and Surrey and the combined police areas known as the Bedfordshire and Luton, Hampshire, Kent, Sussex and Thames Valley police areas and the Essex and Southend-on-Sea joint police area;
(f)
No. 6 (South-West) Region, comprising the counties of Gloucestershire and Wiltshire, the county borough of Bristol and the combined police areas known as the Devon and Cornwall, Dorset and Bournemouth and Somerset and Bath police areas.
(g)
No. 7 (Wales) Region, comprising the combined police areas known as the Dyfed-Powys, Gwent, Gwynedd and South Wales police areas.
These Regulations consolidate, with amendments, the Regulations set out in Schedule 1, that is to say the Police Federation Regulations 1965 and the Regulations amending those Regulations.
The principal changes are described below.
Regulation 5 permits the holding of branch meetings on a divisional basis.
Regulation 8 provides for liaison committees.
Regulation 11 provides for a conferences arrangements committee.
Regulations 16(4) and 17(1) provide for the holding of Federation funds by joint branch boards and by the joint central committee and Regulations 18 and 20 apply to funds so held.
For the purposes of the Regulations Schedule 5 establishes seven regions; these replace the eight districts provided for in the Regulations revoked.