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Police to get up to £450m extra funding in Government U-turn | Police to get up to £450m extra funding in Government U-turn |
(35 minutes later) | |
The Government is increasing police funding by up to £450m in a U-turn coming after ministers repeatedly refused requests for extra money to combat rising terror and violence. | |
Nick Hurd, the policing minister, said the money must be used alongside continued “efficiencies” and reserves to ensure forces have the resources they need. | Nick Hurd, the policing minister, said the money must be used alongside continued “efficiencies” and reserves to ensure forces have the resources they need. |
“I have listened to Police and Crime Commissioners, chief constables and frontline officers,” he told the House of Commons. “It is clear that there is a shifting pattern of demand on police.” | |
Crimes recorded by police have risen by 13 per cent in a year, including a surge in acid attacks, stabbings, sexual offences and cyber crime. | |
Mr Hurd said there was also a rising number of victims coming forward to report “hidden crimes” such as domestic abuse, modern slavery and child sexual exploitation. | |
“Public safety is our number one priority and we have responded swiftly to evidence of a shift in demand on forces,” he added. | |
“This new comprehensive settlement will mean local forces can be more effective in their critical work to fight crime and protect the public.” | |
But Diane Abbott, the Shadow Home Secretary, claimed Mr Hurd had not been “listening hard enough” to police. | |
“We’ve seen the highest annual rise in police recorded crime in over a decade,” she told MPs. | |
“The public is increasingly conscious that austerity is as damaging to policing as other public services, because you cannot keep people safe on the cheap.” | |
The Home Office said the budget for counter-terror policing will go up by 7 per cent in the 2018/19 financial year, seeing a £50m increase to at least £757m. | |
There will also be £130m extra for Government priorities such as digital technology and special grants to help forces with exceptional costs. | There will also be £130m extra for Government priorities such as digital technology and special grants to help forces with exceptional costs. |
Police forces will have access to £175m Police Transformation Fund to drive new technology and reform. | Police forces will have access to £175m Police Transformation Fund to drive new technology and reform. |
The increase calculated by the Government includes the use of “precept” – the amount of money taken out of council tax for policing. | |
Locally elected Police and Crime Commissioners have been urged to raise precept contributions by up to £1 a month for a typical household, potentially driving an increase of £270m in England and Wales. | Locally elected Police and Crime Commissioners have been urged to raise precept contributions by up to £1 a month for a typical household, potentially driving an increase of £270m in England and Wales. |
Amber Rudd, the Home Secretary, said the settlement would “ensure forces have the resources they need to keep us safe”. | Amber Rudd, the Home Secretary, said the settlement would “ensure forces have the resources they need to keep us safe”. |
“Taxpayers will invest more money in forces because the work our officers do to protect us is absolutely vital, and we recognise demand is changing,” she added. | “Taxpayers will invest more money in forces because the work our officers do to protect us is absolutely vital, and we recognise demand is changing,” she added. |
“However, my message to police forces is that this increased investment must mean we raise the pace of reform. | “However, my message to police forces is that this increased investment must mean we raise the pace of reform. |
“For too long embracing digital and increasing productivity have been tomorrow’s policing problems – now they are today’s necessities. The Government is committed to meeting this challenge and we want policing to do the same.” | “For too long embracing digital and increasing productivity have been tomorrow’s policing problems – now they are today’s necessities. The Government is committed to meeting this challenge and we want policing to do the same.” |
Last month, Ms Rudd told senior police officers to stop asking for more money to combat a rise in recorded crime, violence, 999 calls and terrorism. | |
“When crime stats go up, I don’t just want to see you reaching for a pen to write a press release asking for more money from the Government,” she told a conference in London at the time. | |
Despite the apparent U-turn, Yvette Cooper, the Labour chair of the Home Affairs Committee, said the money from central Government to local police forces was still being cut in real terms. | |
“This is really not enough funding for police forces across the country given the immense pressures they face,” she added. | |
The Government announce its intention to repeat the same settlement in 2019/20 on the condition that “substantial progress” was made in productivity and efficiency improvements. | |
The Home Office said it had identified around £100m of “potential savings to be made through smarter procurement of everything from cars to uniforms” and called on police to save money by increasing productivity and mobile working. | |
It also announced that it would be publishing details of the reserves held by police forces, which currently amount to more than £1.6bn, although the ways in which they can be used are limited. | |
Last month, HM Inspectorate of Constabulary said forces were failing to respond to low-priority crimes because of “significant stress” caused by budget cuts and rising demand. | |
Inspector Mike Cunningham warned that some offences were waiting a long time to be solved or even seeing “nothing done at all”, adding: “Under austerity and under cut-backs, the requirement to prioritise has become more acute in recent years.” | |
The Metropolitan Police has already released guidelines instructing officers to stop investigating some “low-level crimes” with no prospect of conviction as it works to save £400m by 2020. | |
According to financial plans drawn up by police forces before Tuesday’s announcement, revenue expenditure would fall by 6 per cent from £12.3bn this year to £11.6bn in 2020/21. | |
The number of police officers – already at the lowest level since 1985 – was predicted to drop further to 120,217 in the same period. |