The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Officer numbers to fall – police chief CRIME: SNP policy ditched as the force says it must adapt to modern world

- gareth mcpherson political reporter gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

The number of police officers in Scotland is to be cut by about 400 as the death knell was sounded for a flagship SNP policy.

Force chiefs said yesterday they will reduce Police Scotland’s wider workforce when they laid out their 10-year plan.

That includes abandoning the previous Scottish Government policy of having no fewer than 17,234 officers, as well as cuts to backroom staff no longer needed following the creation of the single police force.

But there will be about 170 new specialist roles in the civilian workforce to meet demands in areas such as cyber terrorism and crime analytics.

The workforce proposals led to a warning from a Tory MSP against the depletion of frontline policing amid a predicted £188 million funding gap for the service by 2021.

The report, which was unveiled in Edinburgh, says there will be a £60m black hole in the force’s finances by the end of 2018, which can only be addressed by bringing in “an effective transforma­tion plan”.

Chief Constable Phil Gormley said they will always need officers, but the service needs to react to modern challenges.

“You’ve only got to look at the way the world is changing about the complex needs of vulnerable people, around drug and alcohol abuse, mental health, cyber, crime analytics,” he said.

“Those are skills that we need and are unlikely to be drawn simply from police officers.”

The reduction in officer numbers will be made by slowing recruitmen­t between 2018 and 2020, Mr Gormley said, assuming the service is able to improve officer productivi­ty beforehand, by “working smarter” rather than “working harder”.

Scottish Police Authority chairman Andrew Flanagan said: “We are anticipati­ng a small reduction in police officer numbers through to 2020. It will be around 400, but that will come towards the end of the period. We expect police officer numbers to remain at their current level through the coming year and only gradually reduce thereafter.

“We will not reduce police officer numbers until we see these productivi­ty gains coming through.”

Mr Flanagan said he expects operationa­l policing to increase because, while there will be fewer officers in total, they will return those currently performing back office roles to the frontline.

Mr Gormley earlier admitted that officers had been filling corporate roles, known as back-filling. SNP ministers and police chiefs have consistent­ly sought to play down the extent of back-filling despite it being regularly highlighte­d, particular­ly around the M9 tragedy where untrained police officers were answering phones in the Bilston Glen control room.

Asked about the total workforce number, Mr Flanagan said they expect it to be “less than it is today”.

A decade ago, the SNP committed the country to having 1,000 extra police officers than the 2007 level. However, the target was left out of its 2016 manifesto amid calls from senior police figures for more workforce flexibilit­y.

In a press briefing, Mr Gormley said reducing officer numbers allows them to “make different choices”, such as equipping them with body cameras as standard.

He also said the force had been “telephony dependent” and must react to how the public want to communicat­e with them, such as via social media.

Scottish Tory justice spokesman Douglas Ross warned: “It’s absolutely imperative these planned changes do not deplete the frontline of policing in Scotland.”

James Kelly, for Scottish Labour, said thousands of vital support staff have been cut as Police Scotland “tries to meet the SNP’s underfunde­d election promise of 1,000 extra officers”.

Justice secretary Michael Matheson welcomed the strategy, which will go out to public consultati­on.

“Scotland’s police service is working well, with recorded crime at its lowest level since 1974, clear-up rates at a 40-year high, while public confidence remains strong,” he said.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Mr Gormley said the reduction in officers will be made by slowing recruitmen­t from 2018 to 2020.
Picture: PA. Mr Gormley said the reduction in officers will be made by slowing recruitmen­t from 2018 to 2020.

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