Sir Edward Davey (Kingston and Surbiton) (LD) I beg to move,
That this House has considered funding for community policing.
Policing in our communities and neighbourhoods is
“the cornerstone of the policing model in England and Wales”—
not my words, but the judgment of Her Majesty’s inspectorate
of...Request free trial
I beg to move,
That this House has considered funding for community
policing.
Policing in our communities and neighbourhoods is
“the cornerstone of the policing model in England and Wales”—
not my words, but the judgment of Her Majesty’s inspectorate
of constabulary in March this year.
Good community policing responds to the needs of local people
with a consistent, visible police presence; it involves
working in partnership to gain trust, gather intelligence and
get to the heart of a community’s concerns, in order to
prevent and fight crime. Yet cuts to community policing
across our country have stretched most local police forces to
their limit at a time when crime is rising significantly. My
constituency has lost more than 40 police officers since May
2015, so it should not surprise us that last year, Her
Majesty’s inspectorate of constabulary found that
“local policing is the area of operational policing that
shows the greatest decline in performance”;
that is linked to the budget cuts. For those reasons, I feel
that Ministers need to be held to account for the growing
crisis in community policing.
I have three arguments to make, which I hope the Minister
will address in turn. First, it is clear that crime is
rising. We need to recognise that fact and act. Secondly, the
falling police budgets were set before the emerging trend of
rising crime took hold; the facts have changed, however, and
so must police budgets. Thirdly, a good part of any
significant increase in police funding must go to community
policing, given its vital role as the cornerstone of
policing.
First, I want to persuade the Minister to accept in this
Chamber that crime is rising, and alarmingly so. There can be
no dispute about recorded crime, which is up 13% in the year
to June. What should worry us in particular, however, are the
categories of crimes with the largest recorded rises: the
rise of 19% in violent crime, of 8% in murder and
manslaughter, of 26% in knife crime, of 27% in gun crime and
of 19% in sexual offences. Recorded crime is what the police
have to deal with, and what they have to investigate and
clear up, and it drives their activity, so when Ministers
counter accusations of rising crime by pointing to the crime
survey, which is the other main way that we assess the level
of crime, they should be careful.
While it is true that the crime survey suggests that crime
last year fell, Britain’s top statisticians at the Office for
National Statistics make interesting comments about how we
should interpret the mixed signals from recorded crime and
the crime survey. John Flatley, who heads on crime statistics
and analysis for the ONS, said on the release of crime stats
last month:
“Today’s figures suggest that the police are dealing with a
growing volume of crime. While improvements made by police
forces in recording crime are still a factor in the increase,
we judge that there have been genuine increases in
crime—particularly in some of the low incidence but more
harmful categories.”
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My right hon. Friend is making some excellent points.
Will he acknowledge that the police themselves are often
victims of crime? Recently I was in my local police
station in Kendal; three officers were on long-term
sickness because they had been sent single-handed to
dangerous incidents, when normally they would have been
sent as a pair. The cuts in police numbers meant that
those officers could be sent only one at a time, and they
are off sick as a consequence. Last year alone, 5,000
hours were lost to police sickness in Cumbria. Does he
agree that that paints a picture of the police bearing
the brunt of the rise in crime and the reduction in
resource?
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My hon. Friend makes an excellent point. As the number of
police officers declines, they have to work overtime and,
as he described, put themselves in greater danger, which
is not acceptable.
When Mr Flatley, the ONS’s leading crime statistician,
says
“low incidence but more harmful categories”,
he means murder. He means rape. He means knife crime. He
means gun crime. Those relatively low-volume
crimes—relative to, say, burglary—are poorly reported in
the crime survey but reasonably well recorded by the
police. In other words, it is a fact that the most
serious crimes have risen steeply in incidence in the
past two or three years; Ministers cannot hide from that.
The ONS makes another key policy and evidence point about
the comparison between the crime survey and recorded
crime: recorded crime is much better at spotting emerging
trends—short-term fluctuations in crime that can easily
become long-term trends if action is not taken.
Police-reported crime rose by 13% in one year alone, and
I hope that Ministers will not dismiss that. They need to
ask themselves and their officials some deep questions
about that trend, because if it continues and they
wrongly dismiss it, people will pay a heavy price.
Another reason why the recent upturn in crime demands
urgent action is the complexity of the rising crime we
are seeing. Complexity can demand significant police
resource for just one difficult crime. Counter-terrorism
is the obvious example. The record spate of terrorist
attacks and plots this year clearly marks a shift in
terrorist activity, and the intensity of the demand that
that makes on the police requires a response from
Government. It is no good Ministers saying that police
reserves can sort that out, as the Home Secretary claimed
recently. First, some police forces have very small
reserves; secondly, those with large reserves have them
because they have so many unfunded and unpredictable cost
pressures, from unfunded pay decisions to terrorist
attacks.
The police also face other examples of similarly
resource-intensive complex crimes: cyber-crime, child
sexual abuse, fraud, modern slavery and human
trafficking. The UK has among the highest proportions of
complex reported crime in the world, demanding ever more
resource, yet police resources have been cut.
I fully admit that those cuts are not new. The Prime
Minister, when she was Home Secretary during the
coalition, presided over cuts, which she continued after
the 2015 general election. As a result, today we have
nearly 17,000 fewer police officers and more than 4,500
fewer police community support officers.
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A recent poll that included my local police force showed
that more than 70% of officers were stressed, many citing
excessive workloads because far fewer officers are on the
street. Does the right hon. Gentleman agree that we
should bear in mind the impact of the cuts on police
officers, as well as on the communities they serve?
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I totally agree. As my hon. Friend the Member for
Westmorland and Lonsdale (Tim Farron) said, police
officers are bearing the brunt, not only because they are
stretched and having to do more, working longer hours and
overtime, but because they and their families are facing
the impact of the cuts. I am grateful to the hon. Member
for Barnsley East (Stephanie Peacock) for making that
point.
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Recently the chief constable of Bedfordshire police said
that the funding cuts had left him without enough
officers even to return 999 calls. Does the right hon.
Gentleman agree that the situation is so serious that the
Government need to look into the funding urgently, so
that the police can at least attend 999 calls?
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I agree strongly with the hon. Gentleman. I had an
example of just such a case in my constituency recently.
The gentleman concerned phoned my office because he was
getting no response from 999. We answered the phone, I am
delighted to say, and got on to the police. The hon.
Gentleman makes a valid point, and those fewer police
officers and PCSOs are what the debate is about.
When we look at the history of the cuts, and the
reduction in police officer numbers—over a long time, as
I said; this happened during the coalition—it is worth
remembering that for the first four or five years of the
cuts, during the coalition, crime was falling. Crime,
whether measured by recorded crime or by the crime
survey, went down during the first few years of the cuts,
but it is not going down now; that is the point that
Ministers have to grasp and act on. Crime up and police
down will not keep people safe.
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I have been doing the tour in my constituency of the
local area commanders, as all new MPs do. They tell me
that burglary is up, especially in the south-east, but
that local people do not feel that the police have the
resources they need. An email I recently received from a
resident in Yarnton says:
“I'm afraid the only beneficiary is the criminal and
their chances of arrest are slim, the insurance companies
who have to increase premiums and the Government who
gains additional tax on the insurance premiums.”
Is not how local people perceive the police just as
important as whether they can respond, and should we not
recognise the intense resource pressures that they are
under?
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My hon. Friend is right in so many ways. She pointed to
the issue of burglary; I have knocked on doors in my
constituency, and it is the rise in burglary that has
most hit people. In many ways, burglary has the largest
impact on ordinary people, and it can be quite dramatic,
so she is right to say that. The example I gave of the
police not responding was to a burglary, and the impact
that has on the fear of crime is amazing. When the police
do not respond, because they are so stretched, that has
an impact on people’s view of the police, and their
concerns that the police are not there for them when they
expect them to be. She is absolutely right to say that
the public want more local police to respond to their
needs and to deal with the fear of crime, but we are
seeing quite the reverse.
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The right hon. Gentleman’s point was about falling crime
when numbers were being reduced, and about that trend
apparently changing. That implies that the two are not
directly linked, but surely we have to try to understand
the factors causing that trend to change. Will he outline
the steps that he thinks should be taken to ensure that,
if we increase numbers, there is still productivity and
crime is reduced?
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Order. Some interventions are a little long; I remind
Members that interventions should be sharp and punchy.
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I agree with the hon. Gentleman’s point. To say that only
police numbers are related to crime is clearly not true,
and the figures that I mentioned suggest that.
It is fair to say, from looking at police budgets and how
the police have reacted to this difficult time, that they
are becoming more effective. In response to the recent
debate on Metropolitan police funding, the Minister
talked about the efficiencies that the police are already
making, including through technology; the use of cameras
on lapels has a good impact on reducing tensions when
making arrests. In my experience, the police are being
more effective and efficient, and are thinking of new
ways of doing things, and of smarter and more
intelligence-led policing, but we still need the
officers; that is my fundamental point.
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The right hon. Gentleman makes an excellent case. The
demand on our police service comes not just from the
increase in crime. The assessment of police resources by
the National Police Chiefs Council and the Association of
Police and Crime Commissioners, which was sent to the
Minister, talks about non-crime demand, including
increasing 999 calls, incidents involving people with
mental health issues, missing persons, suicides,
ambulance-related police demands where problems in the
health service have an impact on them, and police demand
from unexpected death in care homes. Do all those things
not need to be taken into account in looking at the
demands placed on our police forces?
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The hon. Lady makes an excellent point. Budget cuts in
social services, the health service and local authorities
and the impact on youth services are all part of the
picture that right hon. and hon. Members will see in
their constituencies.
The police settlement of 2015 was a real-terms cut—flat
cash. When a budget is frozen, the compound impact of
inflation bites harder and harder over time. In other
words, if the Chancellor does nothing in this Budget, we
ain’t seen nothing yet.
However, the 2015 police settlement was agreed by the
Prime Minister, as Home Secretary, before the emerging
trend in recorded police crime really took hold, before
the rise in serious violent crime, before the step change
in terrorist activity and before the rise in gun and
knife crime. In other words, the assumptions on which the
2015 police settlement was made were wrong. The Liberal
Democrats are offering Ministers a chance to change their
minds, because the facts have changed. I sincerely hope
that the Home Office makes that case to the Chancellor
and sets out what it would do with the extra hundreds of
millions that are urgently need. The Liberal Democrats
are clear that one of our top police funding priorities
is more funding for community police, and we are not
alone. The National Police Chiefs Council set out four
clear priorities for additional funding before the Home
Affairs Committee just two weeks ago, one of which is
neighbourhood policing. That is because chief constables
view community policing as essential to their
counter-terrorist effort, because of the police’s role in
helping to prevent crime and because the public expect
and demand the police to be proactive and
responsive.
When I came back from my enforced sabbatical from this
House, I was struck by how incredibly stretched the
police in my constituency are—far more than they were
even just two years ago—and this picture is widespread.
Liberal Democrats in Kingston upon Hull told me earlier
this week that additional community police was the top
priority for more than 70% of the residents whom they
recently surveyed. My right hon. Friend the Member for
North Norfolk (Norman Lamb) told me of the shock in his
constituency when it was announced that every single
police and community support officer in North Norfolk was
going.
We should always remember that our police do one of the
toughest jobs imaginable, with courage, skill and
dedication. We have seen time and again, especially in
the recent terrorist outrages, that the police do not run
away, but put themselves in harm’s way to defend our way
of life. That imposes a heavy responsibility on all of us
in this place, and especially on Ministers, to make the
right calls for the police and for the public. When
crimes rises, especially violent and complex crime,
police budgets need to rise, too, starting with those of
our local community police. To do anything else in the
face of that evidence is just wrong.
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship for
the first time, Ms Dorries. I congratulate the right
hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton (Sir Edward
Davey) on his timely and important debate. I do not
think that anyone would dispute its importance, given
how the election and terrorist attack in Manchester
focused the nation’s attention on policing, police
numbers and the key priorities that we face for
policing.
I want to primarily give the Suffolk perspective. When
we talk about funding in Suffolk, we always talk about
the way the pie is divided more than the overall pie.
Whether it is school funding, early years or other
areas, we seem to be a long way down the league table,
and that is certainly true in police funding. The
Minister will know that, because he has received a
letter from the chief constable and the police and
crime commissioner setting out the fact that we are one
of the lowest funded police forces in England. It is
not a coincidence that we inevitably compare ourselves
with Norfolk, a county in many ways very similar to us.
If we received the same spending as Norfolk, our budget
would be up by £3.5 million per year, which is a
significant sum. We receive 44p funding per day for
policing compared to a national average of 50p.
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The hon. Gentleman mentions Norfolk, but I wonder if he
is aware of the comments from Her Majesty’s
inspectorate of constabulary about the role of PCSOs in
the area. It says:
“Where dedicated local policing teams exist, too often
the warranted police officers on them are routinely
taken away from their local policing duties to handle
immediate tasks elsewhere. That leaves police community
support officers…as the mainstays of these teams.”
Is it not extraordinary, therefore, that the chief
constable of Norfolk has chosen to completely disband
the PCSO workforce?
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I was referring to the broader pay settlement, and how
the chief constable spends that is obviously his
decision. I will come on specifically to PCSOs very
shortly, but I think that the message from the Suffolk
police and crime commissioner in particular, who came
to Parliament recently to meet Suffolk
MPs—unfortunately I was not able to attend—is that we
want to see a fair share of funding or some very
difficult decisions will have to be made.
We have to be even-handed in this. We all know the
financial pressure that the country is under—there is
no point pretending that we are not. The national debt
is still extremely high, and despite the declining
deficit, all the Office for Budget Responsibility’s
public spending predictions for many years hence show
that it will go only one way, partly because of
changing demographics. A responsible approach would
balance those things.
I am interested in parish policing—I do not call it
neighbourhood policing—which is the idea that rural
communities might fund their own PCSOs. I accept the
point that the hon. Member for Cambridge (Daniel
Zeichner) made about the importance of PCSOs. I would
not rationally expect the chief constable of Suffolk to
take on lots of fully warranted officers to prioritise
shed theft. Shed theft sounds fairly unglamorous, and
it is; it is certainly not as important as terrorism or
cyber-crime. However, in rural communities that suffer
from it—sometimes many sheds are targeted at once—it is
a cause of great concern, particularly to farmers. A
farmer near my village recently had a brand new vehicle
stolen from a shed. That does not sound like a headline
crime, but it is distressing for the communities
concerned. Realistically, the chief constable of
Suffolk is not about to get his officers to prioritise
that sort of crime, so we need to look at the idea of
communities being able to fund their own PCSOs.
I have liaised with Suffolk constabulary about that
idea. We could do it on a ward basis; parishes could
come together along ward lines. It would cost £10 per
voter per year—in other words less than £1 a month—for
Brook ward, which is one of my largest wards, to have a
dedicated PCSO. That would provide very visible
policing. Parish councils commonly complain that the
police no longer go along to parish meetings. When I
was a district councillor in a rural ward in my
constituency, the police tried to come along. They do
their best, but that is obviously a big burden on their
time—as it is, by the way, for district and county
councillors. The point is that if we pursued a parish
policing model, we would empower communities at least
to have the choice to think about how they could sort
this issue out themselves and have a greater police
presence, in the form of someone who could prioritise
matters such as shed theft and reassure rural
communities.
When I was first elected, we had a spate of lead theft
from churches in Suffolk. South Suffolk has some of the
most beautiful churches in the country, a prime example
of which is Lavenham church, where I walked on the roof
to see for myself the way the lead had been stripped
from it. I am pleased that there was recently a
significant arrest—of a Romanian gentleman, I
believe—in connection with lead theft in East Anglia,
but the point is that these are specific crimes in
rural communities.
My concern—I add this caveat—is that I have not
detected a great deal of enthusiasm from Suffolk
constabulary about communities recruiting PCSOs. One of
the reasons they give for that is that they struggle
themselves to recruit. We can talk about how wonderful
it would be to get those extra police and so on, but as
far as I can see, Suffolk police are struggling to
recruit. My point is that if we had a more local focus,
we could attract people to apply—people who live in and
know the community—who would not apply for a more
regional post.
I really have two points. I emphasise again to the
Minister—I know that he has heard about it many
times—the dire funding position in Suffolk relative to
other counties. This is not about the overall
allocation; it is about the way that allocated funds
are divided. I would also be interested in his thoughts
about what more can be done to allow communities to
fund their own officers, who would provide reassurance
and deal with lower priority crimes that the warranted
force will never be able to prioritise. There are those
of us who recognise the funding pressures and
acknowledge that there is no magic answer, but there
are reforms that can make a real difference in rural
communities.
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It is a pleasure to speak in this debate. I
congratulate the right hon. Member for Kingston and
Surbiton (Sir Edward Davey) on bringing it forward and
setting the scene.
I want to bring a Northern Ireland perspective to this
issue to give a flavour of what is happening elsewhere,
although I know that Northern Ireland policing is not
the Minister’s responsibility. I also want to back up
what the right hon. Gentleman said, which I believe is
correct. I will give some examples of what we are doing
in Northern Ireland—or perhaps of what we are not doing
in Northern Ireland; that is a better way of putting
it—and thereby underline the importance of community
policing.
I have always been a strong advocate of community
policing. Seeing police on the beat helps people to
feel safe. When a police officer is able to come to a
school, youth group or event, that helps young people
to create bonds of respect and appreciation, and to
build up a rapport with officers. On many occasions in
the past, people came to be on first name terms with
officers, as I found before I came here during my time
in local politics as a councillor and a Member of the
Northern Ireland Assembly. It is also useful for people
who are intent on doing wrong to be aware that there
are police officers on the streets who are able to
respond in short order. There is a twofold purpose to
community policing: building up relationships and
reminding people of police officers’ role.
Our local Police Service of Northern Ireland officers
used to be able to attend youth groups, church groups
and mums and toddlers groups, they used to be
well-known figures in local residents’ associations,
and they were accessible, but funding cuts have left us
with a community policing team that simply does not
possess the time to be part of the community. That is a
central theme, which almost everyone who speaks in the
debate will mention. Relationships with the local PSNI
meant that more people felt able to give anonymous
information. That was one of the great things about
such relationships in Northern Ireland; on many
occasions, young people and adults were able
anonymously and confidentially to pass on information
to the police that was important to catching people who
were involved in criminal activity, because they knew
the officers and were happy to trust them. That is one
of those things that takes a bit of time to build up;
it is hard to do when contact is by phone and someone
is unsure about their anonymity.
There really can be no reasoned argument against
community policing. The issue is not the need for
community policing but how to fund it. If we revert to
direct rule—there is the spectre of that happening, if
I may use that terminology—the general issue of police
funding in Northern Ireland may well be before us all
soon. Back in May, the news was full of reports that
the PSNI was to lose 238 officers over the next two
years due to severe budget cuts of £20 million. We
cannot ignore the financial reality.
To give an example of how that issue was portrayed, one
news article stated that those cuts are the equivalent
of the annual cost of all the region’s neighbourhood
policing teams. Why did the newspaper mention the issue
in that way? It was because people needed to understand
the impact. Every one of us in Northern Ireland and, I
suspect, across the whole of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland understands what a
neighbourhood or community policing team is and the
presence and availability that it provides on the
ground. Community policing is vital to most people.
Funding cuts that mean less community policing get a
reaction in the media and across the board. It was
therefore important for the media back home to give
that explanation.
The number of officers in Northern Ireland will drop by
138 in the next year to 6,700, and the resilience level
will fall to 6,600 the following year. That is in
direct opposition to the review of police strength in
2014 that concluded that a minimum of 7,000 officers
were needed for a resilient and effective PSNI. The
community policing team will be the first thing to go;
community police will feel the brunt early on. It is
easy to say that we should do away with them or cut
their numbers without knowing the full implications of
doing so.
The hon. Member for South Suffolk (James Cartlidge)
referred to the need for officers who are able to
respond to rural theft. My community has a mixture of
urban and rural areas, but I live in a rural area, so I
understand the issues of agricultural and rural crime.
The crime prevention officers in my constituency have a
good scheme for marking vehicles such as tractors. He
might suggest that traceability method to his police,
if he has not done so already. That has been effective
in my constituency, and other Members might consider it
if they do not already have it.
I am blessed in my constituency with a fantastic police
team who seek to attend the meetings they are called to
and who seek to build rapport, but all too often I am
told, “Jim, I simply don’t have the manpower to attend,
but please let me know how the meeting goes and what
the outcome is, and then I can respond to that.” I do
not believe for a second that officers cannot be
bothered to attend an annual general meeting of a
community group; they just are not able to. That does
not foster good relations. Too many communities feel
ignored and unable to access police help and guidance.
That alienation means that there is less possibility of
compromise in scenarios where there is tension, and
more communities feel that they have to take things
into their own hands. I am not sure whether that
scenario occurs on the mainland, but in some of my
communities in Northern Ireland it sometimes falls to
others to take action. I do not condone or support that
in any way, but people are frustrated whenever things
are not seen to happen.
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The hon. Gentleman makes an important point that in
many ways goes to the heart of the debate. Of course we
do not want people to start resorting to vigilante
action, but that is what can happen when we face the
loss of legitimacy of community policing. It is deeply
worrying, and he is right to raise it.
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I thank the hon. Lady for that intervention. She
understands the point clearly and what can happen
whenever police are not available to respond in the way
that perhaps they should.
The people who are losing out are the police officers,
who want to do what they are capable of doing in the
communities but are prevented from doing so, to the
detriment of all. While this debate is specific to
England and Wales, it is clear that community policing
does work if it is funded and allowed to work. The
situation in Northern Ireland shows that.
Ms Dorries, I am conscious that you are looking at me
in relation to time, so I will try to come to a
conclusion as quickly as I can. To bring us back to
England and Wales, I read a report that highlighted
that the police workforce has reduced by some 36,800,
with workforce reductions ranging from 23% in Cleveland
to 1% in Surrey. It is clear that, no matter what the
postcode, the sweeping cuts must be reconsidered. The
cuts are not sustainable and cannot continue.
While we must cut our cloth to suit our needs, and I am
all for trimming the fat, the cuts are not trimming the
fat or the excess of the cloth; they are comparable to
making a hat with no head covering. For me, as someone
who is follicly challenged, it would be a great
disappointment to have a hat with nothing on the top. A
police force that has no community links does not
possess the ability to police properly.
Quite simply, with respect, I ask the Minister that the
matter be looked at. I will continue to address the
issue with the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland,
as I have in the past. It is a matter of ring-fencing
additional funding both on the mainland and in Northern
Ireland. For the safety and security not only of the
community but of the police officers themselves, I urge
the Minister to pledge to undertake a real and serious
review of community policing funding as a matter of
urgency.
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I congratulate the right hon. Member for Kingston and
Surbiton (Sir Edward Davey) on arranging the debate. I
want to make a couple of points because the debate is
timely, given the approach of the autumn Budget in a
couple of weeks’ time.
In the west midlands, our police force has lost £145
million in real terms from its budget since 2010. That
has resulted in a loss of 2,000 police officers and a
further loss of a considerable number of civilian
non-uniformed policing staff. Crime in the region is up
14% in the latest figures, and some crimes are up by
more than that. Burglary is up 31% and car crime by a
similar amount, all at a time when the country is
having to cope with a significant terrorism threat,
which requires significant police resources.
The effect of all that is obvious, deep and profound.
If people do not feel safe in their community, on their
streets or in their homes, they are not free to go
about their lives. Fear of crime destroys liberty. Nor
does it apply equally: lower-income communities and
people on lower incomes suffer the most, because they
do not have the options available to some wealthier
citizens. They cannot live in a gated community. They
do not have the option sometimes of moving to a more
expensive property, perhaps in an area with lower crime
levels. Crime is therefore an issue not just of safety
but of liberty and of equality, too. That is why we
should be deeply concerned at the juxtaposition of
falling police numbers and rising crime, which is what
the country now faces.
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I want to stress my support for what the right hon.
Gentleman has just said. It is an argument that is not
heard enough that policing and police resourcing is an
issue about social justice and freedom. We have to make
that argument, because whether it is the newspapers,
the House or the establishment, there is not an
understanding of the significance of extra police in
our communities for the poorest and most vulnerable in
our communities.
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I wholeheartedly agree with the right hon. Gentleman.
As I said, this is an issue of liberty and it is an
issue of equality, too. I want to make an obvious
political point. Let us imagine the roles were reversed
here and we had a Labour Government presiding over a
huge cut in police numbers and a significant rise in
crime. Do we honestly think that Conservative Members
would be saying, “It’s got nothing to do with police
numbers”? I do not think so. I know that opposition can
do strange things to a political party and the
conclusions it sometimes reaches, but so too can
government make Government Members—particularly
Back-Bench Members—end up defending the
indefensible.
It is simply indefensible to continue with police cuts
after what we have had in the past seven years, in the
light of both the terrorism threat and now the recorded
crime figures showing the rises that I have set out in
the west midlands. I want to use today to make my
appeal to the Minister to consult with the Chancellor,
to say, “Enough is enough.” Cuts in policing have gone
too far. They are affecting people’s liberties, and it
is an issue of equality, too. We want to see fair
funding for police forces right around the country so
that we can give the community both the visible
presence and the real protection against crime that
they deserve.
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It is a pleasure to speak under your chairmanship, Ms
Dorries. I congratulate the right hon. Member for
Kingston and Surbiton (Sir Edward Davey) on bringing
this important debate forward. I will try to keep my
comments concise. I want to look specifically at
community policing in Scotland and draw a few
comparisons with the rest of the UK. As many Members
will know, policing is a devolved issue in Scotland,
but that does not mean that we should not consider how
policing is handled in Scotland, draw conclusions and
perhaps pull out a few lessons from Scotland for other
parts of the United Kingdom.
As many Members have already said, community policing
is an effective way of tackling antisocial behaviour.
It helps to build community relationships through
officers’ visits to schools, local businesses and local
community groups, and it means that police officers are
not a faceless voice of authority when dealing with
troubled people in our communities. They are known,
they know the individuals and their backgrounds, and
they can often recommend a more informed course of
action than many centralised or unknown police forces.
Crucially, as has been stated, we can steer away from
having a police force controlled by politicians many
miles away.
In Scotland, we used to have eight regional police
forces, which were centralised into one: Police
Scotland. Sometimes, centralisation does make sense.
When we are looking at issues of national security—we
have touched on terrorism—we need to co-operate across
the entire country, so a centralised force makes sense.
That is also right in transport, with the British
Transport police—it is important that we do not change
forces at certain parts of the country when trying
pursue a criminal from one area to the next. However,
it is far less effective when we are talking about
policing in our towns and villages, especially in rural
constituencies such as mine. In Ochil and South
Perthshire, I have a number of small towns and
villages, which require a car and a fair bit of journey
time between each. Therefore, having local officers who
know the towns and streets is very important.
A lot of the people and officers who work in Police
Scotland are very hard-working, as I am sure they are
in other parts of the United Kingdom. They give their
best, working under stressed conditions, and they have
to deal with many difficult situations on a regular
basis. However, since the centralisation of Police
Scotland, it has unfortunately faced a number of
high-level blunders. There have been address mix-ups,
especially when it came to the closure of the Aberdeen
control centre. There was also a horrific incident near
my constituency where a call handling error left a
couple in a car wreck on the side of the M9 for three
days. That is not acceptable.
When Police Scotland started out, it had the
Strathclyde model—it was very centralised—and I am
pleased that gradually we are moving back towards more
of a community-based model. However, it has not been
embraced quite as fully as some community policing
measures have been down in England and Wales. We have
heard examples of where that is effective.
A couple of weeks ago I had the great fortune of
accompanying two officers in Clackmannanshire, which is
part of my community. I shadowed them on a Friday
evening, and we walked through the high-street in Alloa
and the estates in the Hillfoots, and I was able to see
at first hand some of the challenges that they face,
and some of the issues that blight our communities.
Some of those issues are more extreme, such as the
increase in knife crime, but others include lighting
and the use of CCTV, where through underfunding—that is
not necessarily all the Scottish Government; it is
local government as well—some of our CCTV cameras are
not working in the town centres, and police officers do
not have the support and coverage that they require
when dealing with situations, especially on a Friday
night.
One major cause of crime, certainly in my constituency,
is mental ill health. Again, community policing can
help with that—this does not need to be a devolved or
centralised matter, and it is probably something that
colleagues across the United Kingdom will experience.
In almost every situation that we encountered on that
Friday night, whether talking to young people or
attending incidents in residential flats, it came back
to issues of mental ill health. When I asked the
officers whom I was lucky enough to be accompanying,
they told me time and again that the biggest cause of
crime was mental ill health.
Mental ill health was not just the cause of crime; it
also had a knock-on effect on community policing
because of resource restrictions in the area. If a
person who has committed a crime has mental health
issues, they might require some form of medical
treatment, and the officer will have to accompany them
to the local hospital, taking the officer off the beat
for two to four hours that evening. Mental ill health
is an enormous issue, and I encourage the Minister—I
would be more than happy to engage with colleagues in
the Scottish Government and in Westminster—to consider
what we can do for community policing across the whole
United Kingdom to try to improve mental health services
and prevent crime, and to consider how we can help the
treatment of mental ill health once a crime has been
committed so that we do not put a further drain on
frontline police forces in our communities.
One of the downsides of centralisation as part of
Police Scotland is that there are now no local cells in
Clackmannanshire or Stirling. Police officers in my
patch have to go to Falkirk to take someone to a cell,
and if they have to queue that takes them off the beat
for a considerable time. On a busy night—we were out on
Halloween weekend, although I was not dressed up—with
eight to 10 officers out for the evening, if one or two
had to take someone to the cells or deal with a mental
health issue, the rest of the team was put under
significant pressure.
Community policing is incredibly important. It is not
just about money—I know a lot of colleagues in England
and Wales are facing money constraints, but in Scotland
the block grant has gone up by £612 million in real
terms—it is about choices. The SNP Administration in
Edinburgh chose to centralise all police forces into
one. They were warned about the impact that would have,
and the fact that a centralised police force would
incur VAT payments, but they still went ahead and did
it. That took upwards of £25 million from Police
Scotland. Instead of focusing on community policing as
we should, they are fast-tracking the scrapping of the
British Transport Police which, as I said at the
beginning of my speech, is one area where
centralisation and co-operation across our country is
incredibly important.
As I have said, I have seen community policing first
hand with officers in my constituency, and as
colleagues have said, it is incredibly important and
must be correctly resourced. However, this is not just
about money; it is about where the police forces put
the resources. I hope that we can work together as MPs,
MSPs and councillors to find solutions that ensure not
only the right frontline resources, but the right
policies to look at the causes of crime, especially
those involving mental ill health.
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Since 2010, Avon and Somerset police has had to make
drastic savings in services, including £65 million of
cuts and the resulting loss of more than 600 officers.
The way it has dealt with that challenge has been
exceptional and is to be commended. Her Majesty’s
inspectorate of constabulary has judged Avon and
Somerset to be “outstanding” at understanding demand
and delivering efficiencies, and it has done all it can
to try to cope with the level of cuts that has been
imposed. It has tried to innovate where asked, and to
make all the back-office savings required. Despite a
strict curb on pay increases, police officers and staff
have shown tremendous resilience, professionalism and
commitment in carrying out a really tough job in
increasingly difficult circumstances.
In a major conurbation such as the Bristol area,
sometimes even the strictest financial planning can be
disrupted. All too often we have major traffic
incidents on motorways around Bristol, which require a
substantial clean-up and a huge amount of police time.
Tragic cases, such as the murder of my constituent,
Becky Watts, involve a long police investigation, and
obviously a lot of police time. The volatile nature of
police work sometimes makes it difficult for the police
to plan financially, but nevertheless they have managed
to cope with that.
Avon and Somerset police has been impressive in the way
it has dealt with these challenges, and that adds a lot
of credibility and weight to the concerns raised by
, the police and
crime commissioner, and Andy Marsh, the chief
constable, in their recently published report, “The
Tipping Point”. The force is now being asked to make
another £17 million of cuts by 2022, which is the
equivalent of another 300 officers. The report states
that that is simply unsustainable without extremely
serious consequences. They are stating clearly to the
Government that their ability to prevent harm, keep the
public safe, protect the vulnerable, and respond to
escalating threat levels depends on having enough
resources to do so. Having done all they can to try to
manage within tight budgets, they cannot go on like
this.
We have heard from other speakers about the more
complex problems facing police services across the
country, with new priorities such as tackling child
sexual exploitation, modern slavery, and technological
advances that provide new challenges. I recently spoke
to the chief constable and the police and crime
commissioner about the huge rise in online fraud. That
is not easy to police and often requires a great deal
of expertise. We also have the ever-present threat of
terror and the need to keep us safe. The way that
police work is conducted has changed.
I pay tribute to the police’s recent efforts to
highlight modern slavery in the Bristol area. Police
officers were ridiculed on the front page of The Sun
for wearing bright blue nail polish in an effort to
draw attention to the fact that many young people in
nail bars are being exploited, but that was important
and a good example of community policing, and as a
result, people have been arrested. Serious work is also
being done on female genital mutilation. We have not
yet seen a prosecution, which is sad, but it involves a
lot of outreach work and knowing communities, and
communities being able to trust the police enough to go
to them and say what is going on.
The problem is that most people’s experience of
policing now is a less visible police presence, an
inadequate response to less serious crimes, and in many
cases, the closure of their local police station. I am
concerned that we are seeing a real erosion of
community policing as we understand it, but it is a
core part of how policing works. As my right hon.
Friend the Member for Wolverhampton South East (Mr
McFadden) said, this is about people trusting and
feeling safe in their communities, feeling valued and
protected, and knowing where they can go to voice their
concerns.
In the past, some communities have had strained
relationships with the police, and we cannot
underestimate the value of community policing. I do not
represent the area of St Pauls, which saw riots in
Bristol many years ago in the early 1980s. However, I
know how important it is for community policing to be
visible and proactive in that area, and police and
community support officers have played a crucial role
in that.
In conclusion, in “The Tipping Point”, the police and
crime commissioner and the chief constable stated that
the situation is simply unsustainable and will have
extremely serious consequences. They have written to
the Home Office, but they were not happy with the
response, which pretty much just outlined the current
financial situation. I urge the Minister to listen to
them.
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It is good to see a Bedfordshire Member of Parliament
in the Chair, Ms Dorries. Bedfordshire Members from all
parties have always worked together, under Labour,
coalition and Conservative Governments, to stick up for
Bedfordshire police; and I hope that we shall carry on
doing that.
For many years, Bedfordshire police were adversely
affected by what the Home Office called damping. That
meant that they got between £3 million and £4 million a
year less than the Government’s funding formula said
they should receive. Bedfordshire is in the lowest
quartile, for both budget and officers per head of
population, of all police forces in England and Wales.
It also has one of the smallest budgets in England and
Wales, at £102 million. As a Bedfordshire Member of
Parliament, I am not happy that residents of
Hertfordshire and the Thames valley area receive higher
levels of protection and response from their police
forces than the people of Bedfordshire get from
theirs.
In meetings over the years, we have met five, six or
perhaps seven different police officers, and you have
commented in the past that I make the same speech every
time, Ms Dorries. I am frankly getting tired of wasting
my breath. Enough is enough as far as the people of
Bedfordshire are concerned; things are getting serious.
Comparing the period from 1 April 2016 to 31 August
2017 with the same period for the previous year, there
was a 48.9% increase in the number of burglaries of
residential homes and dwellings in Bedfordshire. That
is a massive increase. There has been a 24% increase in
the number of calls to the police requiring immediate
response by officers, and a 12.2% increase in crime. On
the increase in calls requiring immediate response, a
businessman in Leighton Buzzard was recently threatened
with a metal bar, but when he called 999 no officers
were able to attend. As the Member of Parliament I am
not happy for that situation to continue in my area.
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As I mentioned in an earlier intervention, the
Bedfordshire police chief has said that he does not
have enough officers to attend 999 calls. In his
interview with The Daily Telegraph he also mentioned
that he does not have enough officers to protect
children and vulnerable adults. Does the hon. Gentleman
agree that Ministers need urgently to look into the
funding of Bedfordshire police? If we do not do
something about it, the people of Bedfordshire will
really suffer.
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I am grateful to my county colleague for his points,
and would simply return to my point that the effect of
damping on Bedfordshire police—the £3 million to £4
million every year that the Government’s formula said
we should get, but which we have never received—has
come home to roost in an ugly and unacceptable way.
Something I want to say to the people of Bedfordshire
is that a couple of years ago we all had the
opportunity to do something about the situation,
because we had a vote to increase the police precept. I
voted for it, because I want more officers on the
streets, and I know that it must be paid for. I do not
want to go over ancient history, but unfortunately the
vote was probably not put to the people in the best
way, as they were charged and then asked for
permission. I do not think that people liked that; we
were not able to get things the right way round.
However, I voted for it, and if the vote had gone
through there would be more funding for Bedfordshire
police, and more officers. To be fair, I think that the
people of Bedfordshire need to think about that, should
the opportunity come around again. In Leighton Buzzard,
at the police station that we used to have, many more
sergeants and officers than now used to be based there
on a regular basis; yet we are all paying more tax as a
nation.
In 2011-12 there were 1,264 police officers in
Bedfordshire. There are now 1,124. That is a decrease
of 140. We used to have 128 police community support
officers; we now have 53. That is a decrease of 75.
There used to be 864 police staff; there are now 758.
That is a decrease of 106. We need to remember the
stresses on police officers. There is burn-out and real
strain; and people leave the force as a result. I give
credit to our current police and crime commissioner,
; in her project
of boosting the frontline, she managed to get an extra
96 officers on to the streets last year, and another
100 this year. That is the right thing to do.
I want to tell the Government, however, that things are
serious. A few days ago, I saw that they had allocated
£5 million for a 100th anniversary celebration. The
event in question is worthy, and I am not quibbling as
to its worth. However, I should like the Minister to
take the message to the Treasury that we are now in an
era of hard choices. I am sure that the anniversary is
worth while; but the £5 million is half of the £10
million that Bedfordshire police need. Other colleagues
present would fight me for it, and of course there must
be a rational and fair way of allocating sums; but in
an era of hard choices, when we need money for
frontline police forces, can we really afford £5
million to celebrate a centenary, however worthy it may
be? I should say that we cannot; we need to put the
money where it is really needed.
We have wonderful officers. I want in particular to
give credit to Inspector Craig Gurr. He is a terrier on
behalf of my constituents, and I rate him highly. I
take the point made by my hon. Friend the Member for
South Suffolk (James Cartlidge) about the efficiency of
officers. A few years ago Bedfordshire police were one
of the first forces to issue officers with BlackBerrys.
I remember hearing from the chief constable and the
Police Minister at the time that issuing those
BlackBerrys led to a 12.5% increase in the time that
each officer could spend on the streets. Of course
efficiency and productivity are important. However, the
figures show that recorded crime is rising in Leighton
Buzzard, Dunstable and Houghton Regis. I am also well
aware of the crime that isolated rural communities
face; so I welcome the new rural crime force that our
current commissioner has brought in.
I shall return to this issue, because I have a
half-hour Adjournment debate on the funding of
Bedfordshire police on Monday evening, when I shall
expand at further length on their needs. However, I am
grateful for today’s opportunity to stand up for my
constituents.
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I thank the right hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton
(Sir Edward Davey) for bringing the debate to the
Chamber this morning. I pay tribute to my local
community police in Partick and Drumchapel police
stations, who work together with police across Glasgow
to get to know the communities, and attend community
council meetings and local events. That is all about
building relationships, which is important in dealing
with local issues.
The right hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton painted
a picture of rising crime and budget cuts, and some
Conservative Members seemed to suggest that possibly
those two things are not linked. I think there is
probably a delay: when budgets are cut it takes time
for crime to build up, and when they are reinstated it
will take time for it to disappear. I suggest that
something must happen now if we want a reduction in
crime over the next 10 years. The right hon. Gentleman
also mentioned violent crimes and high levels of
complex crime, and the fact that many police forces in
England and Wales are stretched operationally.
The hon. Member for South Suffolk (James Cartlidge)
talked about parish policing, which is an important
point. Across the UK there are many diverse communities
and one size certainly does not fit all. An urban
police force will not have the same expertise in
particular areas as a police force in his constituency,
or indeed in many areas of rural Scotland. It is
important that communities are not defined necessarily
by geographical boundaries but by the demographic
issues particular to them.
The hon. Member for Strangford (Jim Shannon) mentioned
that budget cuts have meant that the Police Service of
Northern Ireland is less able to attend the community
events that I have already spoken about. He also talked
about the importance, especially in Northern Ireland,
of members of the public being able to pass on
information confidentially and the fact that
relationships had to exist for that to take place: we
all understand the seriousness of that. He mentioned
that dropping police numbers were affecting police
resilience and wanted to see some ring-fencing of
police budgets to ensure there was no further erosion
in that area.
The right hon. Member for Wolverhampton South East (Mr
McFadden) talked about the massive budget cuts in the
West Midlands, coupled with massive cuts to the number
of officers on the beat. I think he mentioned a figure
of 2,000 officers being cut. He made an important point
about the fear of crime that some people experience and
how that affects their liberty, especially in less
affluent areas. That is something we can all
understand. In possibly one of the best points of the
debate so far, he also asked what would happen if the
tables were turned, his party were in Government and
the Government were in opposition. That certainly made
a number of hon. Members sit up and think, so I thank
the right hon. Gentleman for that.
I was surprised to hear the hon. Member for Ochil and
South Perthshire (Luke Graham) start with some positive
comments about Police Scotland; that was good. I am
also glad that the police have now shown him around his
constituency. However, he struggled to stay positive,
and started to get caught up in minutiae. I will talk a
little more about the picture in Scotland—
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The hon. Lady said I was getting caught in minutiae. I
was talking about two specific incidents, one of which
left a couple in a car wreck on the side of the M9.
That is not minutiae, but an abject failure and a very
serious point.
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I was not referring to that particular incident. We can
all agree that that was a failure, and obviously
bereaved families were left extremely upset and angry
about that particular incident.
The hon. Gentleman made some good points about local
and community police dealing with the challenges of
mental health, and how that took them out of action for
a period of time. That is very important work that they
do. He also mentioned that he did not see
centralisation as a success in Scotland. I argue that
the centralisation in Scotland has brought the crime
rate down to its lowest level in 43 years, and I would
say that is a massive success.
The hon. Member for Bristol East (Kerry McCarthy)
talked about how Avon and Somerset police have made all
possible efficiency savings and are now finding that
their ability to keep the public safe is in jeopardy.
That is a serious claim, but from listening to other
hon. Members I think it is one we can all accept and
understand. The hon. Lady also mentioned the great work
that Avon and Somerset police were doing on dealing
with modern slavery and raising issues on female
genital mutilation.
The hon. Member for South West Bedfordshire (Andrew
Selous) talked about damping and how Bedfordshire is
now in the lowest quartile for budget and officer
numbers. I think he quoted a figure of a 48.9% increase
in burglaries, which is deeply concerning. He also made
an important point about the operational stress on the
remaining officers, and the increased pressure that
that puts on them.
In Scotland, we are committed to supporting our police
service and have protected the police budget in real
terms. We have also committed £61 million to support
the transformation of the service. The Scottish
Government have set out strategic policing priorities,
which seek to strengthen the focus on community
policing. I have said that we are reaping the benefits
of that in Scotland. We have 1,000 additional officers
in Scotland since 2007, and recorded crime is the
lowest that it has been in 43 years—a great success
story. Of course, there is always more we can do but,
crucially, people in Scotland feel safer and police
officers are visible out and about in the local
community.
I was pleased that the hon. Member for Ochil and South
Perthshire raised the fact that Police Scotland is the
only authority in the UK that is unable to recover VAT
on its expenses. That is something that we have been
pushing for, and I hope we will see some shift from the
Government on that.
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms
Dorries. I too congratulate the right hon. Member for
Kingston and Surbiton (Sir Edward Davey) on securing
the debate. I concur with him and with my right hon.
Friend the Member for Wolverhampton South East (Mr
McFadden) that policing and tackling crime are
fundamental issues of social justice and equality.
People are far more likely to be victims of crime if
they are poor, an ethnic minority or living in a
vulnerable community.
Crime and antisocial behaviour can make people feel
under siege in their community. We cannot tackle,
prevent, investigate or bring to justice offenders
without a robust, well-resourced neighbourhood policing
presence, as we have heard clearly today. If we speak
to chief constables and policing leaders across the
country, as I have done, they tell us exactly that. The
model for policing in this country was developed on
that basis, and it makes us the envy of the world.
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Is that not precisely why the very people my hon.
Friend talks about—police chiefs and police and crime
commissioners—write:
“The legitimacy of policing is at risk as the
relationship with communities that underpins all
activity is fading to a point where prevention, early
intervention and core engagement that fosters feelings
of safety are at risk of becoming ineffective”?
Is that not precisely why we need today’s debate, and
why we need the Minister to respond to their calls for
extra funding?
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right. The neighbourhood
policing model, which I will come on to, is not just a
“nice to have”. It is a fundamental component of our
policing model in this country. It is therefore
completely disingenuous for the previous Home
Secretary, now the Prime Minister, to tell the police
that their only job is going out there and reducing and
attacking crime. The police do much more than that, as
I will come on to shortly. Our police, and our police
staff, who are often excluded from the debate around
police officers, are the eyes and ears of the fight
against crime and terrorism. Neighbourhood policing is
an irreplaceable component in the battle to keep our
communities safe and prevent crime.
Norfolk has been mentioned a couple of times. Other
police forces across the country looked on in horror as
Norfolk announced that it would be abolishing every
single one of its police community support officers in
the new year. I hope that Norfolk will look to examples
such as my force in South Yorkshire, which merged
neighbourhood policing with response two years ago,
effectively abolishing it. It now has to divert
resources away from response and restore neighbourhood
policing because of the disastrous effect of abolishing
it. The police chief and police and crime commissioner
did that without consultation. Does the Minister think
it is appropriate for such a major change to a police
force, and such a divergence from a police and crime
plan, to happen without consultation? It sets a
dangerous precedent for changes to other forces.
As we have heard, crime is up. The crimes that most
concern the public are once again on the rise: knife
crime, gun crime and all violent crime are up, as is
acquisitive crime. What angers us is that all of that
was foreseeable and foreseen. If we look across Europe,
only three other countries chose to cut their police
force by proportionately more than we did. Two of
those—Lithuania and Iceland—were reeling from chaotic
and deep depressions. It was a political choice to
preside over the erosion of neighbourhood policing, and
when the police raised the alarm, it was a political
choice to attack them for crying wolf, rather than
listening to their legitimate concerns.
Only last week, we saw the Home Secretary castigating
policing leaders for problems she had created, accusing
them of not grounding requests for additional resources
in evidence. As we have heard, there is a wealth of
evidence. The country’s top counter-terror officer,
Mark Rowley, told the Home Affairs Committee that there
had been a 30% uplift in counter-terror work. He said
that with the huge growth in the number of
investigations,
“frankly…we have a bigger proportion of our
investigations that are at the bottom of the pile and
getting little or no work at the moment.”
It is not enough to say that funding has gone into
counter-terrorism, because as we know, for every £1
spent on the Met’s counter-terror budget, £2 has to be
spent by that police force on mobilising officers. On
top of that, there is an £85 million funding shortfall
in the armed officer uplift that the Prime Minister
promised the Government would cover, which means that
forces are picking up 50% of that cost. Is that the
kind of evidence that the Home Secretary was looking
for?
How about the document written by the Association of
Police and Crime Commissioners and the National Police
Chiefs Council, which my hon. Friend the Member for
Nottingham South (Lilian Greenwood) mentioned, and
which laid bare the perilous state of neighbourhood
policing in this country? Does the Minister accept that
the funding settlement means accepting “higher risk for
communities” and
“a reduction in the services resilience to cope with
major emergencies”?
Will the Minister confirm, as the document laid out,
that proactive crime prevention policing is down 25% on
the last year alone; that local policing is fading to
the point where it is ineffective, due to degradation
in local intelligence collection; and that emergency
999 systems are failing too often? When exactly were
Ministers planning to tell the public that the funding
settlement risks a further 6,000 police officers being
cut over the next three years?
The Minister knows the pressures the police are under;
he has exactly the same conversations as I do. We have
heard this morning about a wide range of forces—from
large forces to smaller, rural ones—having record 999
and 101 calls, record levels of unsolved crimes and
record mental health and missing persons call-outs. I
was a special constable in the London Borough of
Lambeth just five years ago, and policing has already
changed drastically from what I experienced on the
frontline.
As hon. Members have said, the facts have changed since
the last budget settlement was agreed. It is time for
the budget to change as well. Before the Minister
responds and tells us that the police are sitting on
reserves of £1.6 billion, £1.7 billion or £1.8
billion—it depends on which side of the bed he gets out
of in the morning—will he take this opportunity to
correct the record and confirm that, for all 43 forces
across the country, just £363 million is genuinely
usable and is not earmarked for capital spending? Will
he also take the opportunity to tell us what models of
local policing he has seen work across the country, and
how important he sees neighbourhood policing as being
to the fundamental British model of policing?
As I have said, neighbourhood policing is not just nice
to have; it is vital to our policing system. It
underpins the police’s ability to police by consent. It
is almost wholly responsible for building and
maintaining relationships with communities, and if we
reduce our police to nothing more than a blue light
that arrives only when the absolute worst has happened,
we risk rolling back all the progress that has been
made in police accountability and trust over the last
generation. We have heard about the erosion of trust in
officers and the police if they do not turn up when
something as serious as a residential burglary—one of
the most invasive and intrusive crimes someone can fall
victim to—happens.
Finally, I refer to comments made to the House less
than two weeks ago by the Policing Minister:
“we will…ensure that the police have the resources they
need to do the job”.—[Official
Report, 25 October 2017; Vol. 630, c. 132WH.]
We have heard categorically that the police do not have
the resources they need to do their job. Will the
Minister finally take this opportunity to announce that
we will see an end to real-terms funding cuts, which
have left our communities exposed?
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship for
the first time, Ms Dorries. I join others in
congratulating the right hon. Member for Kingston and
Surbiton (Sir Edward Davey), not only on securing the
debate but for framing it in a typically thoughtful
way.
I start by completely agreeing with the right hon.
Gentleman about the importance of community policing.
As constituency MPs, we all know what matters to our
constituents. He quoted Her Majesty’s inspectorate of
constabulary. I thought , the police and
crime commissioner for Kent, put it very well:
“Neighbourhood policing is fundamental to delivering
policing in the county. By focusing on local problem
solving, together with partners and local communities,
it improves the quality of life within those
communities, helps keep people safe, and importantly
builds public confidence and trust.”
The right hon. Member for Wolverhampton South East (Mr
McFadden) also made the connection between local
policing and the counter-terrorism effort, and he was
right to do so.
Neighbourhood policing matters enormously, and I agree
with the right hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton
that it is obviously under a great deal of pressure at
the moment. My hon. Friend the Member for South West
Bedfordshire (Andrew Selous) made a powerful case on
behalf of Bedfordshire, which I know you will have
listened to carefully, Ms Dorries. His example of
Leighton Buzzard was powerful. The system is under a
great deal of pressure. As the shadow Minister pointed
out, we have a devolved system, so these are local
decisions about how to allocate inevitably finite
resources in very difficult circumstances.
However, I have to say to colleagues that, having just
completed an exercise of speaking to or visiting every
single one of the 43 forces in England and Wales, I am
struck by the degree to which police and crime
commissioners and police chiefs are absolutely
determined to keep the community policing model as core
business, as it were, and I join my hon. Friend the
Member for South West Bedfordshire in saluting
’s work in
Bedfordshire. However, as a London MP, I am also
pleased to note that the Met, in its business plan for
2017-18, states it will ring-fence 1,700 officers to
neighbourhood policing, providing two officers and one
police community support officer to all 629
wards.
It is also striking how much creativity police chiefs
and PCCs are showing to challenge and redefine the
local policing community model under very difficult
circumstances. My hon. Friend the Member for South
Suffolk (James Cartlidge) had some interesting ideas
about parish policing, and across the system forces are
looking again at the model. For example, Durham has had
success in blending safeguarding teams with
neighbourhood teams. The inspector rated Durham
“outstanding” for effectiveness and efficiency, and
noted that
“Neighbourhood policing remains the hub of the
constabulary's problem-solving activity”.
There is a huge amount of effort across the system to
maintain and improve the community policing
model.
I agree with the right hon. Member for Kingston and
Surbiton that the system is very stretched, but I do
not think it is broken. The local police chiefs, in my
conversations with them, have made that point: they are
very concerned about sustainability and stretch—that is
very clear—but no one is saying this model is broken at
this point.
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I believe that the Bedfordshire police chief has
written to the Minister and other Ministers, and has
also met them. He is really concerned that the system
in Bedfordshire is not working, and he is worried about
the safety of people in Bedfordshire. Will the Minister
urgently look into the funding of Bedfordshire police
and meet the chief constable again?
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I have been to Bedford, been on patrol in Bedford, sat
down with the police chief and have had numerous
conversations with the police and crime commissioner. I
assure the people of Bedfordshire that the case for its
policing is well understood, as it has been for years;
my hon. Friend the Member for South West Bedfordshire
has been a tireless champion of this cause.
The context has changed. My hon. Friend the Member for
South Suffolk reminded the House that we are still in
an environment in which public finances remain
constrained; we know the reality of that and so do the
police chiefs. This is what we have to manage our way
through. However, we are also in a situation in which
the operating context has changed in a striking way in
recent years. The right hon. Member for Kingston and
Surbiton is right that demand on the police has risen,
but it has also shifted. As the right hon. Member for
Wolverhampton South East mentioned, we have seen the
escalation of the terrorist threat.
We have also seen a big increase in digitally enabled
crime and increases in areas of high complexity, where
frankly, as a society, we are now at long last turning
over the stones. On modern slavery, sexual abuse and
domestic violence, people are at long last coming
forward, which we should welcome, but it means
increased demands on police time in areas of greater
complexity and required resource. As my hon. Friend the
Member for Ochil and South Perthshire (Luke Graham)
said, an increasing amount of police time is being
spent safeguarding the vulnerable, particularly those
on the mental health spectrum.
That is the reality of modern policing that we must be
sensitive and tuned to in this House, and it raises
some powerful questions. First, are the Government on
top of emerging crime? I could take the House in
painstaking detail through all the new laws on knife
crime, domestic violence and modern slavery. I am proud
of what we are doing to try to stay on top of emerging
crime, particularly in some of the murky areas where
what we find when the stone is turned is very alarming
in terms of the reality of life, particularly in some
of our great cities. For example, I saw yesterday the
statistics on modern slavery in Manchester, and they
were very powerful.
In terms of what Government can do through regulation
and law, I think we are on top of emerging crime. We
have to ask ourselves whether the police have the
resources they need, which I will turn to, but we also
have, on behalf of the taxpayer, to continue to be
rigorous in pushing the police and asking, “Are you
making the best use of the resources you’ve got?” That
is not just about efficiency. Police have done an
incredibly impressive job over years on taking out
unnecessary cost, but HMRC is very clear that there is
more to go for, through procurement and collaboration.
There is still opportunity.
There are questions about demand management and
workforce planning, but there are also tough questions
about whether we are really embracing the full power of
technology, which can be transformational. I have seen
in Lincolnshire and Surrey, and I saw yesterday in
Manchester, the power of mobile working, game-changing
technology such as body-worn video and changes to
operating systems that give police much better
information and therefore the scope to make better
decisions. Those are areas where we will continue to
probe and push the police and support them in their
capability-building, to stay on top of this change.
In relation to resources, which is the focus of the
debate, the reality is that this year, the taxpayer
will be investing just over £11 billion in our police
system, through direct force funding. That is an
increase of just over £100 million on 2015. The way
that that money shakes down is that some of it is held
at the centre for strategic investment through vehicles
such as the police transformation fund, where the
taxpayer invests to upgrade the capability of the
police and to fund innovation. Avon and Somerset police
were a recent beneficiary of that funding, I am
delighted to say.
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I am listening carefully to what the Minister is
saying. Would the Home Office consider having a look at
what the Department for Education did in managing to
take quite a lot of money from the central functions of
the Department and get it out on to the frontline? I do
not know if there is scope to do that in the Home
Office, but it would be hugely welcome.
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I will return to that.
We invest strategically from the centre. We have a
system of 43 individual police forces. It makes sense
to have a strategic investment capability to invest in
things that can have an impact across the system, and
we must continue to invest in innovation, not least
given the context we are dealing with. The settlement
at the moment is flat cash for all police forces. We
recognise, as I have said publicly, that demand has
grown and is changing. We are also extremely sensitive
to the strain that the police are under. This is a
can-do organisation that is saying, “We are very
concerned about stretch and sustainability.” I have
heard that directly from police commissioners and cops.
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Will the Minister confirm that in this Budget, as in
any other, flat cash is a cut in real terms?
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Flat cash is flat cash, which means there are cost
pressures that police forces have to absorb, and I will
come back to that. However, there is no getting away
from the fact that the overall amount of money that
taxpayers are investing in the police system has grown,
not shrunk.
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May I push the Minister on the difference between what
the crime survey and police recorded crime are telling
us and the lessons that he, as a Minister, is drawing
from that? I sought to argue in my contribution that
there is a real concern that the previous trend of
declining crime that we saw for quite a number of years
has changed. If it has, that demands that this House
and this Government change policy.
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I could not have been clearer in my remarks; demand on
the police has grown. We have two sets of data, which
is sometimes confusing. We track people’s experience of
crime through the crime survey. That shows a long-term
decline in people’s experience of crime, which I hope
every Member will welcome. In terms of police recorded
crime, which is trying to capture something different,
we are seeing an increase. Part of that is a genuine
increase in crime, which I totally accept, as the
Office for National Statistics does. Part of it—I know
the right hon. Gentleman will welcome this—is people
feeling more comfortable to come forward about crime,
particularly in some of the murky, difficult, complex
and often tragic areas, and police getting more
effective at recording crime. It is confusing. People’s
experience of crime is down, according to the official
survey that has run for many years, but recorded crime
is up. There are two sets of data trying to do
different things.
I want to address the point about stretch. Whenever I
visit a police force, I have a meeting with frontline
officers, and the message from those officers could not
be clearer: they feel extremely stretched. They are
working very hard under very difficult circumstances
indeed. As I say, the fact that that message is coming
out of a can-do organisation means we have to listen to
it.
That is why we are conducting a demand and resilience
review, led by myself. I will be visiting or speaking
to every single force in England and Wales. The review
will update our understanding of demand and how it is
being managed, the implications of flat cash force by
force and the strategy for reserves, which are public
money. The last audited numbers in 2016 showed reserves
of £1.8 billion. That figure is now down a bit, to
perhaps around £1.6 billion, but it is still public
money, and we need to know the plans for it.
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Will the Minister give way?
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If the hon. Lady will forgive me, I will not, because I
want to finish my remarks.
That review will be assessed in parallel with the fair
funding review that colleagues will have tracked and
that is of particular interest to Suffolk, Bedfordshire
and other counties that feel they have been on the
wrong end of the allocation in recent years. It will
come together as a piece of analysis and work with the
provisional grant report and provisional settlement for
2018-19, which I expect to come to the House before the
year end.
I would like to assure colleagues who are concerned
about whether the Government are listening to the
messages from their local police chiefs and police and
crime commissioners that we feel strongly that we have
to take decisions based on evidence, not assertion, and
that is feeding into the review. We owe that to the
taxpayer. We are determined to ensure that the police
have the resources and the support they need, without
giving up on the challenge we have to give them to
ensure they are using that money in the most effective
way.
For this Government, as for any Government, public
safety is the No. 1 priority. I assure the House that
in the work we are doing, we are determined to ensure
that hard-working police forces up and down the country
doing incredibly difficult work under very difficult
and often dangerous circumstances have the support they
need. With that, I close, in order that the right hon.
Member for Kingston and Surbiton can conclude.
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I thank all Members who have contributed to the debate.
The Minister will have heard concern from Members on both
sides and from the grassroots and our constituencies that
this is having a real impact on people’s lives and our
communities. He will also have heard that there is huge
support for the model of community policing; and, to be
fair to the Minister, he acknowledged that.
Many of us have listened to the Minister over many years
in different guises, and we know his support for strong,
healthy communities. I end the debate by saying that
community policing is fundamental to that strength. I saw
in my constituency the impact that more investment in
community policing had on tackling low-level crime and
antisocial behaviour, helping on the estates, driving out
serious crime and being really strong against the drug
pushers and so on who make the lives of some of our
constituents a misery. Community policing is a
fundamental part of what this House, this Government and
this country should be about, and I hope that in the
forthcoming Budget later this month we will see extra
support for our community police services up and down the
country.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered funding for community
policing.
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