Sunday Territorian

Police must have support

- PAUL MCCUE PAUL MCCUE IS THE NT POLICE ASSOCIATIO­N PRESIDENT

THE men and women of the NT Police have been Chief Minister Michael Gunner’s first port of call to enforce Covid-19 and vaccine mandate restrictio­ns over a gruelling two years. There are no signs of it slowing down. The Territory’s police have manned checkpoint­s on the South Australian, West Australian and Queensland borders, issued fines to those who refuse to comply with public health orders and taken the brunt of the anger of protesters, been spat on and abused in the name of keeping Territoria­ns safe.

Our frontline police have been exposed to the pandemic’s harshest realities so the public are not.

Their tireless work has come at a cost, to them and their families, and continues to do so today.

At the peak of the lockdowns, 150 police were assigned to Covid-19 duties. That figure remains high, but eventually, something must give.

The NT Police attrition rate has almost doubled from 4.53 per cent in 2019-20 to 8.51 per cent in 2020-21 during the pandemic.

Hundreds of years of policing experience has left the force under the pressure of the never-ending and everexpand­ing duties placed on them.

Our 2021 member survey tells us more than 80 per cent of police have experience­d an increase in duties since the pandemic started.

The toll is rising on the mental health and wellbeing of our members.

Those additional duties are taking frontline police away from their core dayto-day policing requiremen­ts 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

To add even more pressure, the latest crime statistics show assaults, domestic violence, alcohol-related assault, commercial and house break-ins, car thefts and property damage have all increased Territory-wide.

The numbers of police resources on the ground are finite and with deployment to Covid-19 tasks it leaves a shortfall in other areas.

The pressure is so great on police management to simply find a police uniform they have resorted to deploying police auxiliarie­s into constable roles as part of Covid-19 response.

One has to ponder, what is next?

This is a clear admission we simply do not have enough constables to do what is being asked and is a legacy of the failure of government to recruit constables for an entire year before the last election.

So, who suffers?

The Northern Territory Police Associatio­n receives increasing complaints from members about only one patrol car being available on shift, or a huge reduction in detectives available to be deployed.

This is not the supervisor­s’ fault; their numbers are simply being stripped and sent to all parts of the Territory.

It is not uncommon for one patrol car to be on a shift for an entire sector, such as Darwin CBD.

This is not acceptable for the public, who should rightly expect police to come when they are called. Importantl­y, it is not acceptable for the safety of our members. Their safety is being compromise­d.

Who will come if a member calls for back up or when they come under attack?

When members are called to Covid-19 duties resourcing in your suburbs and towns is severely impacted.

Our officers are doing all they can, going above and beyond, there simply is not enough of them.

Mr Gunner has pledged throughout the pandemic he will keep Territoria­ns safe. Is having one general duties car on

It is not uncommon for one patrol car to be on a shift for an entire sector, such as Darwin CBD

the road for 45,000 northern suburbs residents keeping them safe at night?

The 2003 and 2012 O’Sullivan reviews into police resourcing recommende­d a significan­t boost to minimum staffing levels for general duties. The recommenda­tions continue to be ignored ten years later.

What will it take?

The imbalance in priorities needs to be addressed urgently as our police are still being asked to perform the same duties required prior to the introducti­on of the vaccine.

Do we need police on borders when Covid-positive but asymptomat­ic workers are allowed to return to the workplace?

The reality is the enormity of the Covid-19 tasks has proved why the Gunner government and the public need our police more than ever, and need to do anything they can to keep them.

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