Scotland The equivalent of the Police Cadets in Scotland is the Police Scotland Youth Volunteers (PSYV). The PSYV is not part of the Volunteer Police Cadets framework, but is listed as a partner agency and carries out similar work. Established in 2013 with five groups in Aberdeen, Cumnock, Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow, PSYV members volunteered at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow and other public events. The program has quickly expanded and today there are now twenty groups across Scotland from
Stranraer to
Shetland, with plans to expand further.
London The founder and the largest cadet scheme are operated by the
Metropolitan Police Service, with over 5,000 cadets as of March 2016. It was founded in 1988 by Commissioner
Peter Imbert. By 2010, every London borough had a VPC unit, along with a central support team within the Territorial Policing Command Unit. Metropolitan Police Cadets are involved in continuing further education, DofE, learning about the police service, carrying out attachments to divisions and specialist departments, learning
first aid, and engaging in community work projects with the disabled and disadvantaged. London Police cadets annually compete in a police scenario completion, which was traditionally held in Hendon, in North London, for the annual Police Cadet Competition. This involved cadets competing in a range of police activities and scenarios, in which they were competitively assessed. In 2015 the Metropolitan Police announced that the Cadet Competition was no longer to be held at Hendon due to the resizing of Hendon; some of the land was sold off for development. However, the Annual Cadet Competition continues a long tradition at the Gravesend public order site. 2013 also saw the launch of Junior Police Cadets, which accepts young people from school Year 6 to Year 9, at which point they become eligible to join the senior VPC. On Sunday 14 June 2009, the Metropolitan Police Volunteer Police Cadets took part in what is believed to have been the largest ever formal parade of young people, to celebrate the 22nd anniversary of the establishment of the Volunteer Police Cadet force in what was named as the "colour parade" and was carried out on Horse Guard's Parade. Each cadet troop was formally passed a Standard (flag) under the review of the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, and other senior officers of the Metropolitan Police. The parade also included the showing of vintage police vehicles, police dogs, and a static display of the
Boys' Brigade's London Massed Bugle Band. Bands that lead the four columns of a total of 1,400 cadets (and various police cadet staff, most of whom also hold different roles within the Metropolitan Police) were Metropolitan Police Pipe Band, the Nottingham-shire Police Pipe Band, the British Airways Brass Band, and the Enfield District Scout Band. In 2011, Mayor
Boris Johnson supported expanding the Metropolitan Police VPC by calling for numbers to be doubled by 2015. The Metropolitan Police VPC changed the age range from 14–19 to 10–24, introducing the UK's first Junior Volunteer Police Cadets scheme. The expansion target was achieved in March 2016.
Schemes in operation •
Avon and Somerset Police •
Bedfordshire Police •
British Transport Police London, Birmingham and York •
Cambridgeshire Constabulary - Six Cadet Units: Peterborough, Fenland, East Cambs, Cambridge City, Huntingdon, St. Neots. •
Cheshire Police •
City of London Police •
Cumbria Police •
Derbyshire Constabulary •
Devon and Cornwall Police •
Dyfed-Powys Police •
Essex Police •
Gloucestershire Police •
Greater Manchester Police •
Hampshire Constabulary •
Hertfordshire Constabulary •
Humberside Police •
Isle of Man Police •
Kent PoliceSeven Cadet Units: Canterbury, Dover, Maidstone, Tonbridge and Medway, Gravesend, Swanley •
Lancashire Police •
Leicestershire Police •
Lincolnshire Police •
Merseyside PoliceForce-wide in April 2006. Operates seven scheme across Merseyside •
Metropolitan PoliceOperates thirty-two schemes across the Greater London area
and Junior Cadets (yr6-yr8). •
Norfolk Police - Operates 7 teams in Aylsham, Swaffham, Great Yarmouth, Kings Lynn, North Walsham, Norwich and Wymondham •
Northamptonshire Police •
Northumbria Police •
North Wales PoliceForce-wide in June 2007 • North Yorkshire PoliceStarting in March 2015 as a two-year trial •
Nottinghamshire PoliceTrial scheme of 70 cadets in 2013, plans for expansion 2014 •
Police Scotland •
South Yorkshire PoliceOperates four schemes in
Barnsley,
Doncaster,
Rotherham and
Sheffield. •
Suffolk Police - Operates 8 units in Martlesham, Ipswich, Bury St Edmunds, Lowestoft, Sudbury, Haverhill, Mildenhall and Stowmarket •
Surrey Police •
Sussex Police •
Staffordshire Police •
Thames Valley Police •
Warwickshire Police •
West Mercia Police •
West Midlands Police •
Wiltshire Police •
Gwent Police ==Investigations into abuse==