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Thousands spent on bicycle training guide

Police - Training guide for bicycles
Police - Training guide for bicycles

Reports in Britain claim police have spent thousands of pounds producing a 93-page document on how to ride a bicycle.

The 93-page full-colour guide, which comes in two volumes, gives advice on how to balance so officers do not fall off.

The book, titled the Police Cycle Training Doctrine, also covers key skills such as how to brake, turn and avoid the kerb.

Officers were told to eat and drink because they will get hungry and to wear padded shorts.

Undercover officers were told they may have to go without a helmet to avoid arousing suspicion, but they should make a 'risk assessment'.

The guidance was drawn up by a group of cycling enthusiasts working for police forces around England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

They submitted it to the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), which co-ordinates police strategy.

London Mayor Boris Johnson, a keen cyclist, suggested too much public money had been spent on the guide.

He said: 'I am sure it is of great value, I haven't seen it, but I think you can do this kind of thing much, much more cheaply.'

The Tory politician added he is sure it is 'very, very sound advice' that officers should dismount before tackling suspects.

An ACPO spokeswoman declined to provide a copy of the guide and said she was not aware who wrote it.

She said: 'This work was neither requested nor drawn up by ACPO and we do not endorse it. It was put forward by a group of well-meaning police officers with an interest in this area. ACPO will not be taking it forward."

Sergeant Rob Thorpe, of North Yorkshire Police, is a member of the police national working group for cycling training and contributed to the book.

The officer, who has provided specialist training to help police on mountain bikes navigate the countryside, declined to comment.