Meet the community cops.

Mayor de Blasio and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton on Thursday unveiled a sweeping plan to heal fractured relations with the community and “deepen trust” — by freeing up officers from crime-fighting to spend time forging relationships.

Under the plan — dubbed “One City: Safe and Fair — Everywhere” — patrol cops will spend “33 percent of their respective tours . . . in proactive and problem-solving activities.”

The initiative, detailed at the YM & YWHA of Washington Heights and Inwood, will change the way manpower is distributed in a precinct in several key ways.

Under the current system, a precinct has one patrol supervisor and cops are often called away and have to travel outside their assigned zone within the precinct.

Under the new system, newly redrawn sectors will reflect neighborhood boundaries — and the number of patrol cops will be increased to make sure officers can exclusively police within the boundaries.

The sector cops will have patrol cars but are also expected to walk the streets to meet with residents, shop owners and community leaders to listen to their beefs and gain their trust.

The precincts will have two “neighborhood coordinating officers,” or NCOs, per sector who will oversee the relations effort.

“We are going to be connecting with a neighborhood’s problems, its people and its potential. How are we going to do that? The same two officers in the same sector every day. The community is going to see the same two cops every day,” said Chief of Department James O’Neill. “The key component to this program is giving our cops uncommitted time. Not being on the radio, not running from job to job to job.”

NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton and Mayor Bill DeBlasioJames MesserschmidtNYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton and Mayor Bill DeBlasioJames Messerschmidt

Bratton said the NCOs were also key, calling them “the heart and soul” of the initiative.

The plan has been tested for the past month in four precincts in Washington Heights and the Rockaways in Queens.

The NYPD said that over the past 28 days in the 34th Precinct, crime was down 18.9 percent in the seven major categories.

Asked whether the initiative simply turns cops into glorified social workers, de Blasio bristled and said a cop in the 34th made an arrest after someone in the neighborhood whom he had gotten to know pointed out the suspect.

“Learning what a community is going through, learning who are the right informants, getting people to give you leads on where criminals may be, where weapons may be. Doesn’t sound like social work to me. That sounds like policing,” de Blasio said.

While the “proactive” community cops are interacting with people in their sectors, other officers will be assigned to respond to 911 calls throughout each precinct, according to the plan.

The plan was the main argument Bratton used to persuade de Blasio to add funding for nearly 1,300 new cops to the city budget — something the mayor had insisted for months was not going to happen.

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