Western Mail

Traffic police numbers fall by 30% in a decade

- James Baggott newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

The number of dedicated traffic police officers has fallen by nearly a third in 10 years, an investigat­ion has revealed.

Experts have questioned how new laws, such as the ban on using mobiles while driving, can be enforced with 30% fewer officers dedicated to policing roads.

The Press Associatio­n submitted a Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) request to all 45 territoria­l forces asking how many dedicated traffic officers they have compared with five and 10 years ago.

The results reveal cuts have accelerate­d in the past five years with numbers falling 24% since 2012, while overall the number is down 30% since 2007.

In 2007 there were 3,766 traffic officers in the forces which responded. In 2012 that figure stood at 3,472. By 2017 it had dropped to 2,643.

A number of forces increased the number of traffic officers between 2007 and 2012, but as budget cuts bit these numbers were reduced between 2012 and 2017.

The AA said the decline could see more drivers getting away with crimes.

A spokesman said: “We need more cops in cars, not fewer.

“The UK has among the safest roads in Europe, although the number of people killed and seriously injured on our roads has started to rise after many years of steady decline. Maybe there is a link?”

He added: “Even senior officers have publicly expressed concern at the falling number of their colleagues.”

Responding to the figures, the Home Office said effective road policing is not just dependent on dedicated traffic officers, while the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) pointed out that all officers were able to help traffic specialist­s. In total, 30 forces released figures. Of the rest, 11 did not hold data for the full 10 years and three had merged traffic into tri-force operations.

Merseyside was the only force which failed to send the figures to PA.

Gwent saw the biggest drop, from 94 traffic officers in 2007 to none now. Northampto­nshire dropped 83% with nine dedicated officers currently compared with 52 in 2007.

Gwent said it had amalgamate­d traffic officers into “multi-skilled roles” while Northampto­nshire said it had “regionalis­ed” its road traffic officers.

Greater Manchester Police traffic officer numbers dropped 69% in the past 10 years (241 to 75), Nottingham­shire’s fell 56% (138 to 61), while the West Midlands cut numbers by 52% from 384 in 2007 (the most outside London) to 186 officers today.

Hertfordsh­ire (up 44%), Northumbri­a (up 32%), West Mercia (up 26%), Surrey (up 14%) and Sussex (up 11%) were the only forces to increase numbers.

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