Like doctors and lawyers, all police officers will have to have a licence to practise under new Home Office reforms.
I wonder what effect that might have on recruitment. Might it reduce policing as a career choice for some potential officers?
The licence would be renewable, probably every five years, and would mean officers must demonstrate they've absorbed their training and guidance and have updated their skills to cope in an evolving crime world.
If they flunk the licence test, they can try again, but continued failure would mean the sack.
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, believes the licence would show the public that officers had reached a certain professional standard and were worthy of their uniform.
But this new regular assessment on top of a stringent vetting process, low public confidence in policing and the daily possibility of personal danger, might dissuade young men and women from wanting to be police officers.
? Listen to Sky News Daily on your podcast app ?
A friend at the Metropolitan Police told me there were new recruits signing up for five years' service, not interested in a lifelong career that used to be the norm, when many young men and women followed their parents into policing.
A new generation may believe it would be an interesting, exciting job for a while, but not something they want to do for ever.
And it would look good on their CV, enhancing their career prospects once they've decided what they really want to do with their lives.
Read more from Sky News:
Facial recognition technology to be rolled out nationally
Will public feel better protected by police reforms?
I understand the Home Office isn't worried about such a prospect and believes there's no evidence that budding doctors and lawyers are put off by renewable licences to practise.
Let's see what happens.
(c) Sky News 2026: Will renewable licences put off budding police officers?
Local news content from CItiblog - read more at
Storm Chandra forecast to bring snow, strong winds and heavy rain to UK
More than 500 report sexual abuse during military medical examinations
Is the Right really uniting? Hardly, it is more divided than ever
Jordan Gray: Reward of up £20,000 to find killer of young father shot dead in 'cold blood' in Motherwell
UK loses measles elimination status, warns WHO
Police appeal for 'heroic' witness who stepped in to help three women in Camden
Claire's collapse into administration renews high street fears
Heading football 'likely' to have contributed to death of former Man Utd star, coroner finds