Birmingham Post

Police boss ‘targeting cuts’ in Tory areas, claims MP Mitchell suggests Commission­er Jamieson is playing party politics

- Jonathan Walker Political Editor

THE West Midlands Police and Crime Commission­er has been accused of deliberate­ly targeting cuts at Solihull and Sutton Coldfield because they have Conservati­ve MPs.

But Labour MPs insisted the Government was to blame for plans to sell off 24 police stations across the region.

They include two stations which are currently open to the public – in Solihull and Sutton Coldfield.

Andrew Mitchell, Conservati­ve MP for Sutton Coldfield, said David Jamieson, the region’s Labour Police and Crime Commssione­r, was responsibl­e. He added: “There is a strong feeling that a party political point is being made here in identifyin­g Solihull and Sutton Coldfield as the two key targets that lose their major police facility.”

Mr Jamieson is a Labour politician and a former MP. He was elected as Police and Crime Commission­er (PCC) for the West Midlands in 2014.

PCCs were created by the Conservati­ve government to make police forces more accountabl­e to the people they serve. Elections are often contested by profession­al politician­s, and Conservati­ve candidates won the votes to become PCCs for Staffordsh­ire, West Mercia and Warwickshi­re forces.

Perhaps as a result, the debate over funding for West Midlands Police has become highly politicise­d, and a Commons debate about the closures was dominated by a row over whether the Government or Mr Jamieson was responsibl­e for the state of West Midlands Police’s finances.

The Government grant for the West Midlands has been frozen at £444.1 million – the same figure it received last year. This is effectivel­y a cut, when inflation is taken into account.

But total funding for West Midlands Police will go up by £9.5 million this year, because the Government allowed Mr Jamieson to impose an inflation-busting £12-a-year increase on the precept added to council tax bills to help fund policing.

At the same time, Mr Jamieson claims the force faces unavoidabl­e cost increases of £22 million. For example, police officers are to get a two per cent rise but forces have to find the money to pay for this.

Some Labour MPs argue that because the force isn’t getting this money, its funding has effectivel­y been cut.

Conservati­ves point out that force has increased its budget non-frontline staff by £10 million.

They also argue that Mr Jamieson should spend more of the force’s reserves, which currently stand at about £106 million. Police Minister Nick Hurd told MPs that West Midlands Police reserves had increased by £26.9 million since 2011.

Solihull MP Julian Knight, a Conservati­ve, also insisted Mr Jamieson must take the blame for station closures. the for

He said: “I strongly believe that for local politician­s to be held accountabl­e, the devolution of power must be accompanie­d by the devolution of responsibi­lity, including financial responsibi­lity.

“The public elect representa­tives to take decisions, not simply to shift blame and demand more money from someone else.”

But Edgbaston MP Preet Kaur Gill, a Labour MP, said: “Despite efforts to blame the chief constable and the police and crime commission­er for making difficult decisions, the cuts have been inflicted on our constituen­ts clearly and unambiguou­sly as a result of the Conservati­ve Government’s ideologica­l austerity programme.”

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