Daily Mail

Closing half of our police stations is a shameful betrayal of the public, and a boon for criminals

- By Alan Johnson

When the visionary statesman Sir Robert Peel establishe­d the Metropolit­an Police in 1829, he set out a series of principles to guide the new force.

Among them was the need for the police to deter crime by being conspicuou­sly present in neighbourh­oods, retaining the support of the public.

‘The test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder,’ wrote the future PM. ‘not the visible evidence of police action in dealing with them.’

These concepts of accountabi­lity and reassuranc­e helped to make our constabula­ries among the most respected in the world. The officer on the beat and the station at the heart of the community became potent symbols of the unique British success story in tackling crime.

Eroded

But that sense of security has been badly eroded in recent years, as the police have retreated from the streets. The decline in beat policing is one disturbing indicator of this trend.

Another is the widespread closure of police stations throughout the country.

As this paper’s alarming investigat­ion revealed yesterday, more than half of all Britain’s stations have shut over the past decade, with their disappeara­nce occurring at a rate of one a week.

Incredibly, several cities, including Bath ( home to 180,000), now have no police stations at all.

In the huge conurbatio­n of the West Midlands, with its population of about 3 million, just 11 stations remain open, while in hertfordsh­ire, a county of 1.2 million people, there are now only three remaining.

A grim metaphor for this creeping neglect can be seen in the fate of Paddington Green police station in West London, for half a century an imposing citadel of the fight against terrorism, where IRA suspects, Islamist would- be suicide bombers and prisoners returned from Guantanamo Bay were all held. Last February, it was occupied by squatters. As a former home Secretary, I feel only despair at this pattern of closures, which is threatenin­g our safety and fuelling public anxiety. The losers are the British people, particular­ly those from poorer communitie­s, who are disproport­ionately victims of crime.

The winners are the criminals, who increasing­ly feel they can act with impunity as they see the police withdrawin­g from neighbourh­oods. It is, I am sure, no coincidenc­e that the latest news on station closures comes in the wake of recent reports that just 7 per cent of all crimes end up with the offender in the dock.

Just as telling is the fact — again highlighte­d by this paper — that so many crimes are perpetrate­d where there used to be operationa­l stations, such as the recent fatal beating of a homeless mother outside a closed police station in London.

Society is, of course, changing all the time and that includes policing. I accept that new technology means new approaches to crime-fighting. Reports of incidents, for example, are now overwhelmi­ngly made online or by mobile phone.

But, contrary to what some experts, politician­s and police chiefs seem to feel, that does not make police stations an outmoded, expensive luxury.

They are a vital part of the infrastruc­ture needed to protect the public — and to lose them is a betrayal. Like the officer on the beat, their very existence reassures the law-abiding and deters potential offenders. Indeed, the mere idea that the police might be in the vicinity may be enough to prevent crime.

even subliminal images of the police can theoretica­lly serve this purpose — which explains why some forces, in their desperatio­n to overcome personnel shortages, occasional­ly instal cardboard cut-outs of uniformed officers in places such as shopping malls. But, having accepted the argument for deterrence, how much better would it be to have real officers based in real stations rather than cardboard substitute­s?

Police stations are crucial in other ways. They establish a direct link between officers and citizens, strengthen­ing the bonds of solidarity that are vital to build cohesion.

‘The police are the public and the public are the police,’ wrote Sir Robert Peel.

An accessible police station should be a tangible embodiment of that partnershi­p. Without it, the gap between the police and the public will widen. Moreover, the ability to make a report in person is necessary for some people, who in their distress may seek faceto-face contact.

equally important is how stations used to act as a hub of intelligen­ce on everything from burglars to potential terrorists. Because they were based in their communitie­s and regularly out on patrol, constables and Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) had shared networks of vital informatio­n.

Retreat

Again, I fear that the retreat from the streets means that such intelligen­ce is being lost. not everything can be garnered from online searches and mobile phone records.

I admit that some of the station closures happened during Labour’s last period in government between 1997 and 2010. even so, we had an impressive record in protecting the public.

In line with Tony Blair’s famous mantra to be ‘tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime’, the prison population increased, police numbers rose and rates of offending plummeted.

The overall level of crime halved, while cases of domestic violence fell by 63 per cent.

Despite the Tories’ reputation as the party of law and order, many of the years since the Conservati­ves took office in 2010 have been characteri­sed by severe cutbacks in the criminal justice system.

As well as the closures of police stations, police numbers were slashed by 20,000, the total of PCSOs reduced by half, and support jobs were cut by 17 per cent. Thankfully, the present government has started to recruit again — but the damage has been done.

Blame

It would be unfair, however, to heap all the blame on the politician­s. The reality is that so many of us — and I include Tory home Secretarie­s such as Kenneth Clarke and Michael howard — had to battle against a longstandi­ng orthodoxy which held that bobbies on the beat and neighbourh­ood police stations were a waste of time and money.

According to the theory that prevailed in the civil service and academia, these traditiona­l features of British policing were useless, since there was little likelihood of a patrol officer catching a criminal in the act, just as stations were a pointless extravagan­ce that could be better exploited by property developers.

Such negative thinking — which completely ignored the deterrent effect — reflected a wider spirit of cynicism and despair in official circles, where crime was seen as an irresistib­le force of nature, like the tide.

I remember Tony Blair telling me that when he first sat down with home Office experts to discuss crime, he was told that its rise was just inevitable, no matter how many offenders were jailed, how many police were recruited and how the economy fared.

By their own accounts, Ken Clarke and Michael howard were given the same bleak message by their officials

But the defeatism is misplaced. With political will, the right policies and the necessary resources, crime can be reduced.

Functionin­g police stations are central to protect society. Their continued closure will only alienate the public, deepen distrust — and embolden Britain’s criminals.

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