Hundreds
of UK police stations to close in cutbacks
Thousands
of police jobs to be lost in £2.4bn cuts to service, says watchdog
3
July, 2012
Almost
6,000 frontline police posts will be axed and hundreds of police
stations shut to the public within three years as forces hunt for
ways of cutting spending by £2.4bn, the police inspectorate said
yesterday.
It
also warned that three forces – the Metropolitan Police, Devon and
Cornwall and Lincolnshire – could struggle to provide a
"sufficiently efficient or effective service" because of
having to reduce costs.
Her
Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) calculated that 32,400
officers and civilian staff would be shed by 2015, including 5,800
frontline police and 7,600 non-frontline officers. Frontline numbers
are falling by six per cent, but staffing in back-office posts is
being slashed by a third, leaving forces looking for jobs that can be
passed to private firms. Forces expect to close 264 front counters in
stations – more than one-fifth of the national total – in the
search for savings, and plan to compensate by opening 137 counters in
"shared locations" such as libraries.
Sir
Denis O'Connor, the Chief Inspector of Constabulary, said: "They
are protecting, but they are not preserving, the frontline."
The
43 forces in England and Wales have been told to reduce spending by
£2.4bn by 2015 after cuts of 20 per cent by the Government to police
authorities. Forces have so far identified economies of £2.1bn,
leaving a shortfall of £300m. The Metropolitan Police accounts for
£233m of this.
In
its latest report, the HMIC said forces had managed to achieve the
first round of cuts without appearing to affect their service to the
public so far, but added that it was worried about three forces'
ability to cope with reduced budgets.
"The
Metropolitan Police Service is considered a particular concern
because of its outstanding savings requirement, its performance
issues and not least the fact that it accounts for one-quarter of
police spending."
The
criticism of the Met's forward planning follows the recent arrival of
Bernard Hogan-Howe as Commissioner following the resignation of Sir
Paul Stephenson and the appointment of Stephen Greenhalgh as the
London Mayor's Deputy Mayor for Policing. Sir Denis said: "There
has been a pause because of all the changes at the top of the Met,
executive and politically, and the Olympics. That combination has
paused things, so we've got £233m to find, they make up the bulk of
the outstanding money to be found nationally.
"The
second thing is they've had performance issues. Crime has been
bubbling up and down for them and their satisfaction levels are not
satisfactory, they're low, so they've got limited timescales and a
lot to do."
Sir
Denis said that Lincolnshire had a low cost base and covered a large
geographical area, while Devon and Cornwall had been making savings
for years before the latest spending cuts were ordered.
Paul
McKeever, chairman of the Police Federation, said the report revealed
"the smokescreen that some forces are saying the front line is
not affected by moving officers from important functions elsewhere".
He said: "Whichever way you cut it, the resilience of the police
service to be able to react to whatever is thrown at it is being
threatened."
Chief
Constable Steve Finnigan, of the Association of Chief Police
Officers, said: "In a service where 80 per cent of our budgets
are spent on pay, we will continue to see reductions in police
officer and police staff numbers across the country, and all forces
will work very hard to mitigate the impact of such significant
reductions in the number of our people."
But
Nick Herbert, the Policing minister, said: "This report makes it
clear that the front line is being protected overall and that the
service to the public has largely been maintained. The proportion of
officers on the front line is increasing, the number of neighbourhood
officers has gone up, crime is down … and the response to emergency
calls is being maintained."
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