The Post

Labour sets ‘ambitious’ police plan

- JO MOIR

The quality and number of police recruits will increase, the number of female police officers will rise and how much they all get paid is up for review.

These are the initial promises from Labour’s Police Minister Stuart Nash, who says the coalition deal signed with NZ First sets out a vision for increased police numbers that they plan to meet.

‘‘The money is there, it’s part of the coalition agreement that was signed between NZ First and Labour. It is an aspiration­al target - I don’t doubt that,’’ he said.

‘‘But we need to do this, we have a police force that has been underfunde­d now for nine years and it shows.’’

Under a National-led government, the plan was to increase the number of frontline police officers by 880 over four years. The Labour-NZ First coalition commitment is for an increase of 1800 over three years.

‘‘So they had a moderate plan, we have a really ambitious plan,’’ he said.

Nash said policing had changed

"We need to do this, we have a police force that has been underfunde­d now for nine years and it shows."

Police Minister Stuart Nash

greatly in the past 20 years, but he promised standards would not drop in future recruitmen­t.

‘‘The police do have a goal of increasing gender equity in the police force,’’ he said. ‘‘Policing today is different to how it was 20 years ago, which is different from what it was 40 years ago.

‘‘The latest graduates from police college, something like 40 per cent of them had university degrees.

‘‘The nature of people entering police is changing, which is fantastic, but we’re absolutely going to say that we’re not going to drop the quality of recruits. In fact, they’re probably going to increase.’’

Asked whether police should be paid more as an incentive to join the police force, Nash said ‘‘we need to have a look at that’’.

He refused to answer further questions about what that meant or what a pay review would look like, saying he couldn’t be late for his first caucus meeting.

Nash said both NZ First and Labour campaigned strongly on community policing and curbing organised crime and both those areas would be the focus under the coalition.

‘‘If you look at the latest workplace survey, you’ve got a highly committed group of men and women who do a great job of keeping our communitie­s safe. Yet 60 per cent of them say they’re not delivering on the promises they make to their communitie­s,’’ he said.

‘‘They’re really good people who know they’re not doing the job of meeting the expectatio­ns of their communitie­s,’’ he said.

The Police Commission­er and Nash will set out a plan in the new year around how they will shift their focus to different areas under a new government.

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