No he does it on a firing range or in a practice environment such as a replica town I expect, but the point is that buildings don't move and firearms are used in extreme circumstances. The likelihood of them being needed is, thankfully, still quite rare in this country. On the other hand, emergency calls are an every day part of police life, and no amount of training will ever completely prepare a response car driver for what he is going to encounter in the real world. Do you really think that a training circuit is the answer? Get real!! After a few times round the driver would be familiar with the place thus his response times would improve. Once out in the real world again, would he be adequately prepared? No. He needs to travel at speed through the environment that he is going to be in. You wouldn't send soldiers to the desert for jungle training would you? I understand all the concerns, but my quetsion would still be ~ if it were you or your family in need would you expect the fastest response time possible? Bring on the argument about police crashes at high speed and the only logical answer is that they were not adequately prepared to cope with the roads they were driving on. So putting them on a racing track won't solve the problem, will it?