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JCF strengthens quality policing under Commissioner Blake

  • Apr 15, 2025 11:04 AM | News

For the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF), quality is more than just a buzzword — it’s a measurable standard embedded in every operation. Under the leadership of Commissioner of Police Dr. Kevin Blake, the JCF is reinforcing its commitment to excellence as it approaches the end of its three-year ISO 9001 certification cycle.

This past week, in his weekly column in the Force Orders, Commissioner Blake reminded the organisation that quality management is not a side project—it is a strategic imperative. With the JCF approaching the end of its current three-year ISO 9001 certification cycle, the Commissioner used the opportunity to underscore just how much hinges on maintaining and expanding that certification. “We are now almost at the end of the 3 years life of our current certification… while simultaneously expanding the scope by onboarding CISOCA,” he noted, referring to the Centre for the Investigation of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse, which is now being brought into the quality framework.

This is not just bureaucratic box-checking. ISO 9001 is one of the most internationally recognised standards for quality management. It demands rigorous attention to processes, documentation, and most importantly, customer satisfaction. And in a police organisation, the customer is the public. The people. All of us. So when Dr Blake says, “Our quality objective is 75% customer satisfaction. It means therefore the system must deliver services to the satisfaction of the people we serve, at least 75% of the time,” he is articulating a vision of policing that is grounded in measurable performance, not wishful thinking.

This is a critical shift in public sector leadership. For decades, conversations about policing have often centred on resources: more vehicles, more personnel, more firepower. But what Commissioner Blake is putting forward is something more foundational: systems thinking. The recognition that the real key to consistent, high-quality service is not merely the strength of individual officers, but the integrity and coherence of the systems they operate within. “In this context, a system is a structured set of interrelated and interacting elements that work together to establish policies, processes, procedures and resources needed to achieve quality objectives,” he explained.

That may sound technical, but its implications are deeply human. It means no unit operates in isolation. Every arrest, every report, every response time is a thread in a larger fabric of professionalism. And when the system works, it elevates the confidence of both the public and the officers themselves. Perhaps what’s most compelling about the Commissioner’s message is how it blends aspiration with accountability. He doesn’t pretend the JCF is perfect. Far from it. “While not perfect and have room for significant improvement, our service delivery is at an internationally accepted standard – so says the internationally recognized ISO 9001 standard.”

That’s not boastful—that’s transparent. It’s a rare thing in public leadership to admit where we are, while making it clear where we intend to go. One of the most striking moments in his column is his recounting of the auditor’s feedback during the current recertification audit. “I was heartened to hear the Auditor describing us as having one of the most committed Management Team to the Quality Management System that she has experienced,” Dr Blake shared.

That kind of praise doesn’t come easily. It is earned through consistency, leadership, and collective buy-in. And that’s perhaps the most powerful takeaway from the Commissioner’s address: that quality is not the responsibility of a department—it is a culture that everyone must own. “Whether or not you interface directly with the auditors during this audit, your role in ensuring that we retain our certification is significant,” he reminded the Force.

It’s easy to think of ISO certification as the domain of middle managers and policy wonks. But in the JCF’s case, it is a symbol of something far more meaningful: a national police service that takes itself—and the public it serves—seriously.

Dr Blake’s vision of quality policing is not about perfection. It’s about alignment. About making sure that what is promised in policy is delivered in practice. About ensuring that systems support officers, that officers support each other, and that the public sees the result in every interaction. “Let us all remain committed to the system that supports our goals, empowers our people, and delivers the outcomes our nation deserves,” he concluded. “Let us continue this exciting journey of the pursuance of excellence — together.”

In a world that often demands quick fixes and dramatic gestures; the Commissioner’s focus on quiet, methodical excellence may not grab headlines. But it builds something better: trust. And in policing, trust is the ultimate metric of success.


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