The Scotsman

Armed police turning out for hundreds of routine calls

- By CHRIS MARSHALL Home Affairs Correspond­ent cmarshall@scotsman.com

Armed police officers have assisted in more than 1,500 missing person inquiries and responded to over 300 road accidents since a relaxation in the rules of their deployment.

Since May, the role of Armed Response Vehicle (ARV) officers has been extended, overturnin­g an earlier commitment only to deploy armed officers to firearms incidents or those where there was a threat to life.

Chief Constable Iain Livingston­e said that since the introducti­on of the new deployment model on 7 May, ARV officers had helped trace more than 80 missing people.

In a written update to the Scottish Police Authority (SPA), he said: “The new Armed Policing Deployment Model was implemente­d on Monday 7 May 2018. Since the introducti­on, ARV officers have, in addition to attending firearms incidents, attended threat-to-life incidents with emphasis on vulnerabil­ity and public protection, critical incidents and those incidents deemed appropriat­e by Initial Tactical Firearms Commanders.

“Amongst other incidents, ARV officers have assisted with over 1,500 reports of missing or ‘concern for’ persons. ARV officers have traced over 80 individual­s including, high risk and vulnerable persons and attended over 300 road traffic incidents, including dangerous driving, vehicle fires and drink-driving incidents.”

The decision to reverse the policy on armed officers followed an earlier pledge that they would only be sent to firearms

incidents or those where there was a threat to life. The policy was introduced in October 2014 amid growing controvers­y over the use of armed officers under then chief constable Sir Stephen House.

Meanwhile, SPA chair Susan Deacon has said her organisati­on needs a “step change” in how it communicat­es with the public and the media.

Under her predecesso­r, Andrew Flanagan, the SPA

– which helps manage the police budget – was criticised for its decision to hold meetings in private, something which was later reversed.

Ms Deacon said: “There remains a pressing need for the spa to deliver a step change in how it communicat­es and engages. We still have a great deal to do to ensure that public and stakeholde­r engagement is designed into our way of working and decision making – not just through the actions and efforts of board members, but in the way the organisati­on works at every level and across all its functions.”

Ms Deacon said the SPA’S meetings needed to be “more pro-actively communicat­ed and publicised” and she said the organisati­on had to engage “more actively” with traditiona­l and social media.

 ?? PICTURE; LISA FERGUSON ?? 0 Armed officers have responded to more than 300 road accidents
PICTURE; LISA FERGUSON 0 Armed officers have responded to more than 300 road accidents

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