The Scotsman

Police £300m IT project not for ‘space age’ technology

● Focus will be on getting officers to move on from using pen and paper

- By CHRIS MARSHALL Home Affairs Correspond­ent

A police IT project expected to cost almost £300 million is not about “space-age” technology such as drones and retina scanners but about getting officers away from using pens and paper, MSPS have heard.

Police Scotland said its data, digital and IT strategy, one of the largest ever attempted in the UK public service, is about improving basic operationa­l policing, such as allowing officers to use mobile technology.

Last week the Scottish Police Authority (SPA) approved the strategy which is expected to cost £298m over a nine-year period.

Appearing before the Scottish Parliament’s justice subcommitt­ee on policing yesterday, senior police figures deniedclai­msfromtheu­nison trade union that the strategy would “fetishise” cutting-edge technology at the expense of basic everyday systems.

Martin Low, acting director of IT at Police Scotland, told MSPS: “This is not about technology that’s not proven and space-age solutions.

“It’s about fundamenta­l, basic IT for frontline operationa­l policing.”

The Scotsman revealed earlier this year that Police Scotland was considerin­g the use

0 The IT strategy is expected to cost a total of £298m over nine years

of iris recognitio­n technology to help quickly identify when “repeat visitors” are brought into custody.

Mr Low said there were no

current plans to include that technology in the strategy, nor drones, which are currently being tested by the force.

Kenneth Hogg, the SPA’S interim chief officer, said: “In plain English, what this has to mean is that officers are not still using pens and paper and taking notes and then going back to an office and typing something up and then typing it up on several different systems, therefore not spending more time in communitie­s.

“That’s one of the benefits were are really keen to see delivered by this.”

Mr Hogg said there had been early discussion­s with justice secretary Humza Yousaf, who had indicated he would have to consider the proposals as part of the Scottish Government’s spending review.

But even if the force was to do nothing, the cost of maintainin­g the existing system would be around £95m, Mr Hogg said.

“There are some very basic things which both trade unions and staff associatio­ns are very clear need to be fixed just to get to a basic level of functional­ity,” he said.

“We really don’t have an option to do nothing about this.”

Mr Hogg said the project was “more complex and broaderran­ging” than the failed i6 scheme, which was cancelled in 2016 after a series of glitches were discovered.

Following the terminatio­n of the contract, the SPA was able to recover the roughly £11m it had spent on the project, as well as a further £13.6m from the contractor, Accenture.

Asked yesterday about money spent on consultant­s, Police Scotland’s chief financial officer, James Gray, said a total of £11.3m had been paid between 2013-14 and 2017-18.

However, he said there had been a “significan­t uplift” of late, with nearly £8m spent during the current financial year.

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PICTURE: TOBY WILLIAMS

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