Police and Crime
Commissioner Review: Part 2
The Secretary of State for the Home Department ()
Today, I am pleased to set out to the House a package of measures
in support of this Government’s manifesto commitment to expand
and strengthen the role of our directly elected police and crime
commissioners (PCCs), and those mayors with PCC functions,
including the findings from the second part of our internal
review into the role of PCCs.
Our two-part review will ensure PCCs can focus more sharply on
local crime fighting, with stronger accountability to those they
serve. As set out in the Government’s beating crime plan, PCCs
allow the public’s voice to be heard on local policing and crime
matters and hold chief constables to account for delivering what
communities need. As such, PCCs continue to play a critical role
in reducing crime and reoffending.
Part 1 of the review focused on making it easier for the public
to hold their PCC to account for their record on delivering the
safer streets that they deserve. In March 2021, I announced a
package of reforms that will ultimately help people judge their
PCC at the ballot box and we are making good progress in bringing
about these important changes.
Today, I want to update the House on two specific measures from
part 1, before I turn to our conclusions from part 2.
The first gets to the heart of equipping our PCCs with the right
tools and powers to work with their partners to tackle crime and
anti-social behaviour. Our targeted consultation last year found
broad support for “levelling up” PCCs by providing them with a
wider functional power of competence so they have parity with the
equivalent powers held by fire and rescue authorities and most
mayoral combined authorities. By equipping PCCs with this new
power, we will make it easier for them to act creatively to
reduce crime and to make better use of police resources.
Secondly, I pledged to consult on changes to the Policing
Protocol Order. This is a document that sets out the roles and
responsibilities of various people involved in policing, such as
PCCs, chief constables and police and crime panels. I am
therefore launching a targeted, stakeholder consultation to seek
views from our policing partners on how we can refresh this
document to provide a “brighter line” on the boundaries of
operational independence and to better reflect my role as Home
Secretary. If we are going to deliver on our shared mission to
cut crime, it is essential that all those involved in policing
understand their respective roles.
Having focused in part 1 on strengthening their role, we wanted
to use the second part of our review to ensure that PCCs have the
information, levers and tools to help cut crime, drugs misuse and
anti-social behaviour. After almost a decade since their
introduction, it is time to focus on the “and crime” part of the
PCC role.
I will now give an overview of our part 2 conclusions. All our
recommendations are set out in full as an annex (Annex A) and the
attachment can be viewed online at:
[http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/written-questions-answers-statements/written-statement/Commons/2022-03-07/HCWS664/.](http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/written-questions-answers-statements/written-statement/Commons/2022-03-07/HCWS664/)
To cement PCCs’ role in offender management: PCCs are held
locally accountable for reducing crime, but to carry out their
duties effectively, we must give them the levers to work across
their local criminal justice system. We will create a new
statutory duty to lock in collaborative working between PCCs and
the Probation Service. This step, in conjunction with the other
measures we will bring forward, will help align the work of PCCs
and local probation services around their shared goal to break
the chain of reoffending.
To improve the way PCCs work in partnership with others to fight
crime and support victims: We need to see all public safety
partners playing their full part in the fight against crime. It
is essential that PCCs can bring local agencies together to
tackle the issues that blight their communities—like drugs
misuse, anti-social behaviour and neighbourhood crime. We will
provide PCCs with the tools to do this by strengthening the
guidance that underpins their role in convening partners to fight
crime and drugs misuse, in line with Dame Carol Black’s
independent review on drugs. We will also give PCCs a central
role on local criminal justice boards, support their work on
violence reduction units and clarify the local crime prevention
landscape through an in-depth review of community safety
partnerships in England and Wales. Of course, PCCs continue to
play a vital role in supporting victims of crime. The Ministry of
Justice Victims’ Bill consultation considered how to expand and
strengthen PCCs’ role in relation to oversight of victims’
experiences in the criminal justice system and commissioning
support services, and so it was not examined within part 2 of the
PCC review, but the work is complementary and aligned. The
consultation closed in February, and the Government will
introduce the Victims’ Bill as soon as possible.
To improve public confidence in policing: PCCs play an important
role as the voice of victims and use their levers to tackle the
issues raised by complainants. To do this well, PCCs must visibly
hold the police to account on behalf of their whole community and
use their role to help uphold police legitimacy. We will support
PCCs by clarifying our expectations in this regard and work with
the Association of Police and
Crime Commissioners and the College of Policing to ensure
PCCs have access to the best possible evidence about what helps
foster local confidence in policing.
To improve PCC’s access to criminal justice data: Without sharing
information on a timely basis, local crime fighting activity
cannot be delivered in a joined-up way. Local partners often deal
with the same cohorts of offenders, but throughout the review, we
heard that sharing data can be difficult and inconsistent. We
therefore propose to take steps to support a more data-confident
culture by issuing new central guidance, supported by examples of
local good practice and bolstering the ability of PCCs to more
confidently use this information. These steps will help PCCs to
better understand how effectively and efficiently their police
force is operating within the wider criminal justice
landscape.
If we are to strengthen and expand the role of PCCs in this way,
this must be balanced by robust accountability to the public. We
are taking further steps to strengthen the checks and balances on
PCCs.
To help ensure there is effective local scrutiny: We want to see
police and crime panels acting as critical friends, helping the
public to understand how their PCC is doing on the issues that
matter to them. The review found that independent members on
panels were important, bringing relevant skills, expertise and
greater diversity; so we will focus on improving their
recruitment and retention. We will also look at whether a
regional model of panel support could improve the
professionalism, quality and consistency of the support provided
to panels.
To help ensure the public can complain about their PCC if needed
and trust that their complaint will be handled fairly and
consistently: Police and Crime Commissioners are elected
representatives, held to account to the public via the ballot
box. The Home Office will further consider the processes for how
complaints of criminal misconduct are handled, and the scope to
align a new code of conduct with the regime for mayors and
councillors in local government. This will also consider how to
address the problems of vexatious and political motivated
complaints, especially those which stem from disagreements with
the political views of the commissioner, or complaints which are
nothing to do with policing.
The public, rightly, expect PCCs to behave appropriately and act
with integrity. That is why there is already a high bar in place
for PCC conduct. Having explored the options for introducing
recall, the review has not recommended doing so, given the
stringent disqualification rules in place for PCCs. I will keep
this matter under review.
Now that this two-part review has concluded, my Department will
work with our partners to deliver the recommendations, including
legislating where necessary, and when parliamentary time
allows.
I would like to put on the record my thanks to the advisory group
which supported this review, comprising senior external
stakeholders with expertise in the policing and criminal justice
sector.
I am confident that, as a package, our recommendations will
better equip PCCs to reduce crime and protect the public,
solidify their position within the criminal justice system and
make it easier for the public to hold PCCs to account.