The Daily Telegraph

Police chief: We can’t keep people safe

- By Luke Heighton

A POLICE chief has admitted “we cannot keep people safe anymore”, and attacked spending cuts he claims have left him with too few officers to respond to 999 calls.

John Boucher, chief constable for Bedfordshi­re, said: “We do not have the resources to keep residents safe. My officers can’t cope with the demand and no one seems to be listening.”

He told a local newspaper: “The position is a scandal. At some point officials have got to sit up and take notice before something happens.” The number of 999 calls in the county has risen 18 per cent over the last two years, while calls to the less urgent 101 line were up 15 per cent, he said.

The Bedfordshi­re force is one of the smallest in Britain, but covers busy Luton airport as well as the town.

Mr Boucher added: “Officers are now attending 500 extra urgent calls a month compared to 12 months ago – 20 of which are to trace children who are at risk of exploitati­on by gangs or paedophile­s. I do not have enough officers to keep those children safe or protect vulnerable people.

“Something is going to give. Things cannot go on as they are. My officers are exhausted.”

He claimed the Government was refusing to fund the police properly.

In March this year he criticised a report by Her Majesty’s Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry, which rated his force as the worst in the country for keeping people safe and reducing crime.

It identified “systemic failings” and questioned Bedfordshi­re Police’s ability “to protect some of the most vulnerable children and young people”.

The force’s overall level of service provision was rated “inadequate”. The previous year’s assessment was “good”. In her report, Inspector Zoe Billingham criticised what she called an “inability to maintain a preventive policing presence across Bedfordshi­re”, a claim Mr Boucher said at the time “made little sense”.

Ms Billingham reported that the force’s overall response to missing children and young people caused her “serious concern”, and added: “The process of assessing calls about missing children is poor, and the review of the initial risk assessment determinin­g whether the case requires a ‘missing’ or ‘absent’ police response is inconsiste­nt. In addition, the force has poor intelligen­ce on those children who repeatedly go missing from care homes. “Some of the most vulnerable children and young people are being left at risk of severe harm as a result of systemic failings in this important area of policing.”

Mr Boucher responded: “Every force is struggling but out of the 43 forces, Bedfordshi­re Police is getting the worst end of the stick. I have written to three police ministers now and evidenced the lack of funding for Bedfordshi­re and met with each one. We do not have the resources to keep out residents safe. I have the greatest concerns.”

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