Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Met wants £38m for Grenfell probe

GOVERNMENT ASKED TO CONTRIBUTE TO INVESTIGAT­ION

- By GOOLISTAN COOPER goolistan.cooper@trinitymir­ror.com Twitter: @Coop_dog

THE government has been asked to pay £38 million towards the Metropolit­an Police’s Grenfell Tower investigat­ion.

Scotland Yard says the demands of the criminal probe into the fire, which killed 71 people in June last year, could leave them facing unreasonab­le costs.

The force has made a request to the Home Office to fully fund the £27m cost of the inquiry in the coming financial year, its finance chief said on Thursday January 4.

A further £11.1m is also being sought to cover extra hours put in by investigat­ors so far. Around 200 officers from the Met continue to work on the criminal investigat­ion.

Under current rules, a police force can apply for a special grant to help foot the bill of an investigat­ion once it exceeds 1% of its budget, but given how many officers Scotland Yard faces committing to the Grenfell Tower investigat­ion for a second year, it has asked the Home Office to go further.

The London Assembly’s budget and performanc­e committee was told the department had provided assurances their request was being given “serious considerat­ion”.

Lynda McMullan, the Met’s director of finance, told the hearing: “Grenfell has had a very significan­t impact and we’ve put in a special grant claim for the current year for £11.1m, in terms of the additional­ity of cost to do with the incident for the current financial year.

“We have also indicated that we would like, as we estimate that we will be spending, close to £27m on that particular investigat­ion.

“We are asking whether or not we can have dispensati­on, not just simply the 1% referenced, but we also want to claim the full cost of our officer time for that investigat­ion, not just the additional­ity – the overtime, in effect.

“We don’t think it would be reasonable for us to pick up the full costs, as we know that investigat­ion will go on for some time.”

Home Office officials have told the force that the matter will be put on the table to ministers, who will decide whether to put through the additional funding, the committee heard.

The size of the Grenfell Tower probe has previously been described as “unpreceden­ted”, involving many months of evidence removal from the west London block, as well as the seizure of millions of documents.

Offences including misconduct in public office, manslaught­er, corporate manslaught­er and breaches of fire safety regulation­s are being examined by detectives.

Suspects are not expected to be interviewe­d until later this year in relation to the disaster, while Scotland Yard expects to hand the tower – still a crime scene – back to Kensington and Chelsea Council in the spring.

Ms McMullan added: “We would like to have full costs rather than incrementa­l costs for the next year.

“We have got assurances it is being given serious considerat­ion.”

 ??  ?? Police have launched a criminal investigat­ion into the fire, which claimed the lives of 71 people
Police have launched a criminal investigat­ion into the fire, which claimed the lives of 71 people

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