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JCF — Jamaica Constabulary Force (Video)

JCF Force for Good segment focuses on urban traffic flow and public-space policing

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An upcoming episode of the Jamaica Constabulary Force's Force for Good podcast will look at how urban centres across the island are judged by the quality of their management and policing, and by whether people can move freely through public spaces.

The segment reflects on work officers carry out daily to keep roadways open and sidewalks clear of vending activity, treating both as part of maintaining order in busy town centres.

From a public-safety operations standpoint, a central aim is ensuring the smooth movement of people and traffic. The discussion points to a recurring breakdown in road-user discipline: when signals turn red, many motorists still enter or occupy intersections, blocking cross-traffic and slowing entire corridors. That pattern leaves the force relying heavily on traffic officers to prevent junctions from seizing up.

Stakeholders beyond the police also have a role to play, the conversation suggests. Properly painted lines, clear markings, and well-maintained surfaces help motorists recognise where they should stop, particularly at intersections where blocking the box creates knock-on delays.

Rainy weather adds further complications. When showers fall, drivers often change how they travel because potholes and missing grills over manholes are harder to spot on wet asphalt. Those shifts in behaviour can ripple through peak-period traffic.

Officers indicated that prosecution is generally avoided during the busiest travel windows, when the immediate priority is keeping movement flowing. Enforcement action is more likely outside peak hours, when roads are less pressured and violations can be addressed without adding to congestion.

Syndicated from JCF — Jamaica Constabulary Force (Video) · originally published .

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