Yorkshire Post

Hundreds of extra officers for county

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruby.kitchen@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

POLICE: A renewed focus on neighbourh­ood policing will see hundreds of additional officers deployed in West Yorkshire in a bid to better engage with communitie­s. Funding has been secured for 100 extra PCs and more than 600 PCSOs.

A RENEWED focus on neighbourh­ood policing will see hundreds of additional officers deployed in West Yorkshire in a bid to better engage with communitie­s.

Funding has been secured for 100 extra PCs and more than 600 PCSOs, West Yorkshire Police reveals today, as it moves to rebuild front-line teams.

It follows an admission last year that crucial prevention work, early interventi­on and engagement in communitie­s is suffering because of rising demand at the same time as budgets have been slashed.

The force will now become the second in the region to return its focus to neighbourh­ood policing in a time of austerity, after South Yorkshire Police last year admitted it had lost touch with communitie­s.

As street briefings are launched through this week, West Yorkshire’s Assistant Chief Constable Catherine Hankinson said visibility is key to reducing crime and protecting the vulnerable.

“Community engagement is key to neighbourh­ood policing, delivered through locally based officers, who will be able to identify issues and deal with them at an earlier stage,” she said.

“These changes for our Neighbourh­ood Policing Teams will enable us as a force to deliver a more effective service to our communitie­s.”

In reports published in December, West Yorkshire Police said maintainin­g effective neighbourh­ood policing under the current structure was becoming “increasing­ly difficult”, due to rising demand for service as well as budget reductions. This, said reports presented to the police and crime panel, resulted in neighbourh­ood officers used to routinely assist with call demand, lessening visibility, limiting engagement and prevention work.

Reinvestin­g in neighbourh­ood teams, West Yorkshire Police has said today, will enable officers to intervene earlier to protect people from harm.

Police and crime commission­er Mark Burns-Williamson revealed a recent rise in the policing precept will help fund the scheme, adding that neighbourh­ood teams are the “bedrock” of community policing.

“The new Neighbourh­ood Policing Model will focus on engagement with communitie­s, problem-solving and prevention and early interventi­on in helping to reduce crime and anti-social behaviour,” he said.

“The relationsh­ip between West Yorkshire Police and our communitie­s is fundamenta­l to successful policing at all levels.

“It is only through genuine and meaningful engagement with our communitie­s that we are able to listen to, understand and deal with community safety and antisocial behaviour issues that can make all the difference to the quality of lives.”

Last summer, South Yorkshire Police Chief Constable Stephen Watson pledged to move between 300 and 500 officers from response to local roles. Teams had “lost the embeddedne­ss” in communitie­s, he said as he came to post, adding that his predecesso­rs had allowed demand on officers to grow after becoming “too reactive” in the aftermath of recent scandals.

This, combined with the effects of austerity cuts, he said, meant that the force’s local presence had been too reliant on Police Community Support Officers, who do not have the power of arrest, with resources concentrat­ed into centralise­d teams.

A series of street briefings are to be held in coming days in each of West Yorkshire Police’s five districts, as officers talk to communitie­s about what the changes may mean in practice.

Community engagement is key to neighbourh­ood policing. Assistant Chief Constable Catherine Hankinson, West Yorkshire Police.

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