Andrew Selous (South West Bedfordshire) (Con) I am grateful
to Mr Speaker for granting me this important debate, and I am
honoured to have the chief constable of Bedfordshire present.
Keeping the public safe is the highest duty of any
Government, which is why I take this issue so seriously. Back in
2004, the concept of “damping” was introduced to the
police...Request free trial
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(South West
Bedfordshire) (Con)
I am grateful to Mr Speaker for granting me this important
debate, and I am honoured to have the chief constable of
Bedfordshire present.
Keeping the public safe is the highest duty of any
Government, which is why I take this issue so seriously.
Back in 2004, the concept of “damping” was introduced to
the police national funding formula. As a result,
Bedfordshire police receive between £3 million and £4
million a year less than the Government’s own funding
formula says it should. Bedfordshire police already have
one of the smallest budgets of any force in England and
Wales, at £102 million, and are in the lowest quartile
of all forces for both budget and number of officers per
head of the population.
For many years, Bedfordshire police managed to reduce crime
on a reducing budget, and I understand, of course, that the
Home Office has to play its part in helping the country to
live within its means. Back in 2011-12, however,
Bedfordshire had 1,264 police officers. It now has 140
fewer—only 1,124. In 2011-12 we had 128 police and
community support officers. We now have 53, which is a
reduction of 75. In 2011-12, we had 864 members of police
staff. We now have 758, a reduction of 106.
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(Bedford) (Lab)
John Boutcher, the Bedfordshire chief constable, is here
tonight. About two months ago he said that, because of
funding cuts, he did not have enough officers to respond to
999 calls. The situation is very worrying. Does the hon.
Gentleman agree that it is time the Government listened to
the chief constable?
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I hope that the Government will listen to the chief
constable, because damping—which, as I think the hon.
Gentleman would admit, has been happening under Governments
of both parties for a long time, starting in 2004—has had a
cumulatively serious effect on Bedfordshire police.
Between 1 April 2016 and 31 August 2017, Bedfordshire
experienced a 12.2% increase in crime, a 24% increase in
the number of calls requiring an immediate response and a
48.9% increase in burglary, compared with the same period
in the previous year. In my constituency, in 2013-14
Houghton Regis had an average of 391 crimes per month,
which has risen by 13% to 440. In Dunstable an average of
235 crimes a month has risen by 24% to 292, and Leighton
Buzzard’s average monthly crime has risen by 57%, from 136
to 214. I am acutely aware of the impact of rural crime,
particularly on people in isolated communities. Many years
ago, Bedfordshire police officers lived in the villages for
which they were responsible, but that is no longer the
case. We are also dealing with an unprecedented level of
unauthorised Traveller encampments, which further increase
the demand on already overstretched police resources.
Between 2011-12 and 2017-18, the Bedfordshire police force
has already achieved savings of £34.7 million, but Her
Majesty’s inspectorate of constabulary and fire and rescue
services has spoken of
“an inability to maintain a preventative…presence across
Bedfordshire.”
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(Strangford) (DUP)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
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I will, briefly.
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Given the number of police officers who have lost their
jobs and the number of forces whose size has decreased, I
assume that community policing also faces a downturn. Does
the hon. Gentleman share my concern about that? Does he
recognise the importance of policing that not only
interacts with the community, but serves as the eyes and
ears of the police force?
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The hon. Gentleman is exactly right. Community policing
plays a vital role in prevention.
In Bedfordshire, 40% of the force’s activity takes place in
Luton. While there is insufficient police capacity to deal
with the challenges in that town, it means that the rest of
Bedfordshire has less than its proportionate share of
police cover, for which its residents also pay. A
small police budget that has suffered from 13 years of
damping would be serious enough even without the fact that
Bedfordshire faces unusually high levels of serious threats
and criminality which are not normally dealt with by a
force of that size.
Let me spell this out. Bedfordshire has the third highest
terror risk in the country, and its police force must deal
with the fourth highest level of serious acquisitive crime
in England and Wales. It has a higher proportion of
domestic abuse offences per head of population than the
much larger forces of Greater Manchester, West Midlands,
Thames Valley and Hertfordshire, and 40% of all firearms
discharges in the eastern region take place in
Bedfordshire. The number of reports of missing persons
between April and June this year was 350% higher than the
number during the same period in the previous year. As a
Bedfordshire Member of Parliament, I am not happy that the
people of my county do not enjoy the same levels of police
protection and response in an emergency as are available to
the people of Hertfordshire and Thames Valley. We pay no
less tax than they do, so what is fair or right about that?
In one incident of gang-related violent disorder this year,
no response resources were available and CID detectives
went to the scene with no uniform or protective equipment,
and a number of officers were injured as a result. In one
incident in Luton recently, a single female officer made
three arrests on her own and called for assistance, which
took eight minutes to come while she was in danger. At
present, each Bedfordshire police officer is expected to
investigate 12 to 13 crimes at any one time. The level of
stress affecting Bedfordshire police officers is leading to
burn-out and psychological and physical illness; that is
unacceptable, as we owe them a duty of care.
Bedfordshire police are not able to respond to all the
daily calls seeking a fast response, nor to all the daily
incidents requiring a community response. Recently a
Leighton Buzzard businessman being threatened by a man
wielding a metal bar dialled 999 and officers failed to
attend.
As guardians of taxpayers’ money, the Government are
absolutely right to demand efficiency, effectiveness and
value for money from our police forces. Bedfordshire police
have already achieved £34.7 million of savings between
2011-12 and 2017-18. Bedfordshire also already has one of
the most extensive blue-light collaboration programmes in
the country, and its tri-force collaboration is improving
effectiveness and delivering savings. Some 25% of its
resources are already allocated to tri-force and regional
collaboration.
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Last year, four shootings took place in one night in my
constituency, and the police helicopter took more than an
hour to respond. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that gun
crime is on the rise because of a shortage of police
officers?
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I set out the increases in crime on the record for the
House just now.
Bedfordshire Police’s unearmarked reserves are only £3
million, the absolute minimum they should be allowed to
fall to. Merger with Hertfordshire and Cambridgeshire would
not be agreed by those two counties on the current level of
Bedfordshire police funding. Further savings could only be
made by reducing the already inadequate frontline resource.
Planning is already under way for over 50,000 new homes
across Bedfordshire over the next three years and a large
number of those are likely to be rated at less than band D
council tax, which leads to a much reduced income from the
police precept. Bedfordshire police believe they need a
minimum of 300 more officers and 80 more detectives in
order to provide an acceptable service. An increase of 300
officers would only be a net increase of 160 officers on
the number the county had in 2011-12.
I am indebted to the Leighton Buzzard Observer newspaper
for printing a few years ago an article by former Leighton
Buzzard police officer Neil Cairns, who pointed out that in
1988 Leighton Buzzard and Linslade had 12 civilians, one
inspector, six sergeants and 27 constables; that is a total
of 34 warranted officers in the town’s station. Today, 29
years later, Leighton Buzzard has eight officers and three
PCSOs; that is a reduction of over three-quarters in the
number of warranted officers in the town, which is the
third largest in Bedfordshire. Bedfordshire Police has also
recently stated that Leighton Buzzard has a larger
number of officers than are currently based in Dunstable or
Houghton Regis.
I have run out various statistics this evening, but
statistics are dry. Let me illustrate the impact of
burglary on one of my constituents, a Dunstable resident
who wrote to me last week:
“My young daughter arrived home this week to find we had
been burgled and it took the police more than an hour to
attend. During this hour anything could have happened to my
child and this situation is completely unacceptable. Please
note that we have been burgled four times within the last
five years and I now fear for the safety of my family.”
He goes on to ask whether he should consider leaving the
area, as he does not feel supported as a contributor to the
town. I want to be able to give that constituent, and
indeed all my constituents, the reassurance they need and
deserve.
In 2001, when I was first elected to this House, I stood on
a platform of restoring the 88 police officers that had
been lost to Bedfordshire under the previous Government. In
2005, when elected to the House for the second time, I
stood on a platform that committed the Government to
recruiting an extra 5,000 police officers nationally every
year. By holding this debate tonight, I am holding true to
the pledges I made to my constituents when they first gave
me the honour of serving them in Parliament.
9.35 pm
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The Minister for Policing and the Fire Service (Mr Nick
Hurd)
It is a great pleasure to reply to the debate, particularly
given the way in which it has been framed by my hon. Friend
the Member for South West Bedfordshire (Andrew Selous), who
we know to be highly respected in the House for his
moderation, his reasonableness, his long-standing passion
for fairness and for pressing for reassurance on the
resourcing of the police in Bedfordshire. I know from our
private conversations that he has now reached a point of
extreme frustration. He has had a number of conversations
with various Ministers on this subject over many years, and
he has been tireless in championing this cause, for reasons
that we wholly understand.
Let me make three points in response to my hon. Friend. The
first is that the Government get it: the challenges facing
Bedfordshire police are well understood. I am delighted to
see the chief constable, Jon Boutcher, in the Gallery
tonight listening to the debate. Both he and my hon. Friend
will be aware that these concerns about the funding of
Bedfordshire police have been raised for some time. Indeed,
the Home Office sent in a batch of officials in July 2015
in response to previous concerns that had been expressed
about the stability of the police effort there.
It was largely for that reason that one of my first visits,
having been made Minister for Policing, was to
Bedfordshire, back in July. I met the chief constable and
the police and crime commissioner, . I also patrolled
Bedford with officers. I feel that I left with a good
understanding of the challenges facing the police force,
which is managing a large rural area and two major towns.
It is an area with considerable challenges relating to the
counter-terrorism effort and to serious organised crime. It
has also seen a significant increase in demand on a system
that already feels stretched. The force has felt strongly
for some time that it has a shortage of officers and
detectives. In this debate and on previous occasions, my
hon. Friend has used the good example of Leighton Buzzard
as a place where the profile of policing has changed
considerably over the years. That message is well received.
Secondly, I want to congratulate Bedfordshire police, and I
hope that my hon. Friend will join me in that. I
congratulate not only the current leadership of and Jon Boutcher
but the frontline officers and detectives who are working
under considerable pressure at the moment. It is worth
noting the commitment to frontline policing that has been
demonstrated by that leadership. I note that there are
slightly more police officers in service now than there
were in 2016—there are 36 more—and that the force is
actively recruiting. There is a commitment to maintaining
frontline policing.
I also note that considerable savings have been made since
2011 by Bedfordshire police, as is the case in other forces
as well. I can see what is happening with the force’s
quality improvement programme, the estate rationalisation,
and the extensive collaboration with other forces, notably
Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire, all of which is to be
applauded. I note that reserves are being used and that
when Bedfordshire is asked to lead, whether in the context
of the Eastern Region Special Operations Unit, the
counter-terrorism intelligence unit or the joint protective
services in the tri-force, it does so excellently and is
highly respected for its leadership. All that is important
to recognise, particularly given the context of
considerable stretch and strain on resources.
From my conversations with Commissioner Holloway and the
chief constable, I know that they both work tirelessly to
challenge and improve the independent inspectorate’s
judgments on efficiency and effectiveness. It is a source
of controversy and challenge in Bedfordshire, but the facts
are that the independent inspectorate, which has an
incredibly important function in terms of driving
improvement across the police system, judged Bedfordshire
in its 2016 assessment as requiring improvement for
efficiency and inadequate at effectiveness. Those judgments
have been challenged, and the leadership is working
tirelessly, as I said, to improve those ratings. However,
we must recognise the challenging context and that
comparable forces in what we call the most similar
group—Essex and Kent—are rated good in all those categories
while receiving funding per head that is equal to or lower
than Bedfordshire’s. That is not a criticism; I simply want
to place it on the record that there is continued room for
improvement in efficiency and effectiveness. Everything
that I have heard from the current leadership is that they
are absolutely up for that challenge and working towards
it.
My third point relates to what the Government are doing
about this situation. Although actions will speak louder
than words—I hope actions will soon be forthcoming—let me
try to reassure my hon. Friend that we are determined to
ensure that the police have the resources that they need
while continuing to challenge them to be more efficient and
effective. I am delighted that he recognised that it is the
Government’s role on behalf of the taxpayer to continue to
hold police forces’ feet to the fire and to push them to be
even more efficient and effective. We are determined to
ensure that they have the resources they need, which is why
police funding was protected in the 2015 settlement. As
proof, direct resource funding going into the police stands
at over £11 billion, which is up £100 million on 2015.
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I note the Minister’s typically fair comments about the
comparator forces, but does he agree that what
distinguishes Bedfordshire’s case is the unusual level of
challenge coming from Luton, from the terror issues and
from the particular and serious nature of the crime mix
within the county? When those things are put together,
Bedfordshire’s case is genuine.
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Mr Hurd
I reassure my hon. Friend that I totally understand why he
would say that, and it is an argument that is made by the
leadership of Bedfordshire police. Comparisons are always a
little awkward, but Kent does have additional
counter-terrorism demands due to the presence of major
ports and Essex has responsibility for Stansted, which is
the fourth-busiest airport in the UK—those forces do have
pressures. I do not necessarily want to labour that point;
I am trying to reassure my hon. Friend. After years of
pressing the police to find savings and efficiencies, to
which they responded extremely impressively, the decision
in 2015 was to try to protect police funding. The total
amount of taxpayers’ money going into the police system
money is significantly up on 2015, but—
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rose—
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Mr Hurd
There is a “but” and I will get to it after my hon. Friend’s
intervention.
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I take the point about Essex and its airport, but I am sure
that the Minister is aware that Luton is the country’s
fifth-largest airport and is rapidly expanding.
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Mr Hurd
I totally accept that point, and I think I said in my earlier
remarks that we have to recognise the challenges specific to
Bedfordshire police.
The “but” I was coming to, having said what I said about the
decision to protect police funding, is that we recognise that
the context is changing, although not necessarily
dramatically. Since 2015, the state of the public finances
remains very constrained, as my hon. Friend well knows. There
is evidence that demand on the police is rising and changing.
The police are having to spend more time on safeguarding the
vulnerable and on responding to increased demand in areas of
complexity, such as domestic violence, modern slavery and
counter-terrorism, and as a Government we have to recognise
that.
We also have to recognise that there are very real cost
pressures on the police system, not least in the recent pay
award. That is why, as my hon. Friend knows, since my
appointment in June I have personally led a review of every
single police force in England and Wales. I have spoken to or
visited all 43 of them, including Bedfordshire, to make sure
that, alongside the other work we are doing, the Government
genuinely understand what is happening out there: the
shifting demand on the police; how the police are responding
to manage that demand; what their current plans are for
improving efficiency and effectiveness, because that matters
a great deal; and what their plans are for managing their
reserves, which are considerable.
I recognise that Bedfordshire is using its reserves, and I
recognise that, as a percentage of revenue, Bedfordshire’s
reserves are below the national average, but across the
police system something like £1.6 billion of public money is
tied up in reserves. The public and the taxpayer deserve to
know about those plans in a lot more detail than we have had
in the past. That is part of the review process I am leading.
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Two months ago, the chief constable said that he did not have
enough resources to attend 999 calls and that, as a result,
the people of Bedfordshire were not safe. Is it not now time
for the Government to act urgently on the chief constable’s
call for more funding so that the people of Bedfordshire are
safe?
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Mr Hurd
I am not a tribalist, but every time someone asks for more
money, Labour’s answer is, “Yes. How much?” We will be more
demanding in that respect, because we also act on behalf of
the taxpayer. Public safety is priority No. 1 for any
Government, and particularly for this Government, and
although we are determined to make sure the police have the
resources they need, we will continue to challenge them as to
how they are using existing resources and how they can
improve their efficiency and effectiveness ratings, as in the
case of Bedfordshire, because that is what the public demand
and deserve.
The point I am trying to elaborate is that the Government are
listening. We recognise that the operating context has
changed. There is a consistent message across the police
system about that shift in demand and the strain on the
system, and not just from Bedfordshire. That is why we are
listening very carefully. We want to take decisions based on
evidence not assertion, and those decisions will come before
the House in the Government’s provisional grant settlement
proposal, which I hope will come in early December. That will
be the fruit of this review and the discussions we have had
over many months with police leadership and the independent
inspectorate to update our understanding of what is happening
out there in terms of demand on the police system.
My hon. Friend the Member for South West Bedfordshire has
been very tenacious and persistent on this front, so let me
reassure him that public safety is the Government’s No. 1
priority. We of course have a responsibility to make sure the
police have the resources they need. We have a responsibility
to adapt if we have a clear picture of what is happening out
there in terms of shifts in demand and cost pressures. We are
grateful to the police for their co-operation in that
process. I ask for a little more patience from him on the
long journey he has had since being elected here. I hope that
before the end of the year we will be able to come to this
House with proposals for the 2018-19 police funding
settlement. We are absolutely determined to make sure that
this country has the most effective and trusted police force
in the world. That is what we want for this country and that
is what we want for Bedfordshire.
Question put and agreed to.
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