Tuesday, February 28, 2023
Superintendent Martin Walker and Athy Garda Siochana of Old
On Friday I travelled to Newbridge to join the retirement get together for Superintendent Martin Walker who is stepping down after 40 years’ service in the Garda Siochana. On my journey I was prompted to remember the Gardai who served in Athy during my teenage years. Some of my older readers will remember Johnny McMahon, Mick Tuohy, Jim Kelly, Michael O’Connell, all men who in the 1950s were on the brink of retirement. From various parts of the country, including Mayo, Kerry and Clare they lived amongst the community they served as ‘Guardians of the Peace’.
In those days Gardai were required to live in the area in which they were stationed and they were effectively on duty 24 hours a day. They and the young Gardai who were transferred for a few years to Athy were required to perform barrack orderly duties in their turn. This meant being on duty in the Garda Station for 24 continuous hours as the Barrack Orderly slept in the barracks overnight. As a result, the Garda Station was manned 24 hours a day and this, together with the daily patrolling of the streets by the Gardai, helped create an excellent relationship between the Garda Siochana and the community they served.
I can remember my father who was senior sergeant in the Barracks going on patrol almost every night of the week. The Garda presence on the streets, whether day or night, was seen as an important way of fulfilling one of the Garda roles in Irish society, that of crime prevention. That with crime detection and the maintenance of public order were the core principals of police work.
Today crime prevention and crime detection remain the central objectives of Irish policing but unfortunately the old established role of the patrolling Garda is no longer observed. Irish society has changed, and crime has become more widespread and complex than ever before in the last 50 years or so. To meet the new demands posed by the criminal world the Garda Siochana’s role has had to adapt and change. The man on the beat was replaced by the patrol car, now covering a wider area than the foot patrols of a previous time. Many Garda barracks are no longer manned 24 hours a day and the relationship between the policemen and the community at large has deteriorated dramatically.
It was Conor Brady, later editor of the Irish Times, who in his early history of the Garda Siochana wrote that the community/Garda relationship ‘has been deteriorating steadily’. This was written a few years after the Conroy report on policing was published in 1970. The implementation of that report and the subsequent adoption of many new measures improved in many ways the working of the police and certainly benefitted its members in terms of working conditions. The 8-hour day for Gardai was introduced and the requirement for Gardai to live in the areas where stationed was abolished. Unfortunately Garda numbers were not increased sufficiently to provide 24 hour cover and many Garda stations throughout the country were closed. Street patrols became a feature of the past, adding further to the deterioration of the Garda/community relationship.
That relationship was very important in terms of crime prevention and just as important was the requirement that Gardai live in their station district. With the abolition of the residential requirement, many Gardai understandably opted to live outside their district and not be part of the community where they worked. This was a loss to Garda intelligence which is so important for both crime prevention and crime detention.
The net result was the fracturing of the good relationship which had been built up during the early years of the Garda Siochana between local communities and the Gardai. Public goodwill is an essential requirement if the Garda Siochana are to operate at their most effective. To gain and retain the full support of the community Gardai must be involved on a daily basis with the members of the community. By and large our only contact now with the Gardai is when we are approached by officers involved in crime detection or some other element of law enforcement. These are not relationship building contacts and may explain why many would regard their relationship with the Gardai as strained.
Today in Athy which has a population of about 10,000 we have four sergeants and a number of Gardai who are grouped between detectives and road traffic corps, with one community Garda. The latter as the name implies is the Garda liaison officer with the Athy people. The detective gardai and the road traffic corps Gardai are part of the police crime detection service. What is lacking is adequate numbers to back up the community Gardai who by virtue of his working relationship with the community is the only Garda whom we can say is part of the crime prevention team. More community Gardai are required.
With the retirement of Superintendent Martin Walker who was the superintendent in charge of this area, the Garda Siochana has lost one of the finest police officers it was my privilege to have known for several years. Many a time we were on opposite sides in District Court hearings, but I always found him to be an officer who presented evidence with impartiality and fairness. I wish him many happy years of retirement.
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