The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Perthshire’s frontline officers suffer due to national shortage

BLAIRGOWRI­E: Police left with only two officers to cover town of 8,000 people but force insists the area is ‘well-supported’

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

Just two police officers were on duty to cover Perthshire’s largest town one night last week, it has emerged.

The shortage at Blairgowri­e was revealed during a meeting of community councillor­s despite a Police Scotland policy never to publicly discuss numbers.

Two officers were at the talks on Thursday evening to discuss local issues. Councillor Bob Brawn, who also attended, said they were at that point the only two officers on duty for the local area which covers the 8,000 population town and surroundin­g villages and countrysid­e as far north as Pitlochry.

The Courier understand­s there are usually six officers in the area, but that evening other members of the team were off sick, while at least one was drafted to cover the visit of US President Donald Trump.

Mr Brawn said when he moved to the area 15 years ago, there were 46 officers covering the patch.

The Conservati­ve councillor has now written to Scottish Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf asking for assistance.

“As a community – indeed, the largest town in Perth and Kinross and growing with a potential of over 1,000 new homes in the next 10 years – we may see less serious offences, but it is petty crime which is the concern of us all,” he said.

“Furthermor­e, there is concern for the officers themselves. If an officer goes down, the necessary back-up is in Perth, at least some 20 minutes away. These men and women who put themselves at risk deserve better than this.”

Last winter, police increased patrols in Blairgowri­e after a spate of vandalism.

But concerns have been raised nationally about the number of frontline officers in local communitie­s.

Official figures released in May showed the number of officers in Scotland is at its lowest in nine years.

Local chief inspector Ian Scott responded to Mr Brawn’s letter, saying officers in the Blairgowri­e area were well supported.

“While we do not discuss the number of officers deployed at any one time for operationa­l reasons, the letter only makes reference to locality officers who were able to attend a local community council meeting as part of their duties,” he said.

“Police Scotland is a multi-faceted organisati­on that pre-plans and dynamicall­y risk assesses its deployment strategy to maximise resources at key times and locations.”

He added: “Local policing remains at the heart of what we do every day, supported by a range of specialist resources.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “We are committed to protecting the police resource budget in real terms across every year of this parliament – resulting in a £100 million increase by 2020-21 – with police officer numbers remaining significan­tly higher than those of a decade ago.

“In addition, we are providing a further £31 million of dedicated reform funding this year and have ensured that the service can retain the £25 million previously paid to the UK Treasury in VAT each year.”

Necessary back up is 20 minutes away... the men and women who put themselves at risk deserve better than this.

 ?? Main Picture: Dougie Nicoloson. ?? Clockwise from main picture: Chief Inspector Ian Scott, Councillor Bob Brawn and Humza Yousaf.
Main Picture: Dougie Nicoloson. Clockwise from main picture: Chief Inspector Ian Scott, Councillor Bob Brawn and Humza Yousaf.
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