The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)
City police officers ‘spat at’ and made to isolate
Chief highlights obstacles and added dangers brought by Covid-19
Dundee police officers have been forced to socially isolate from their families after being spat at by assailants trying to infect them with Covid-19.
Tayside’s most senior police officer, Chief Superintendent Andrew Todd, updated Dundee councillors on the way the pandemic has affected police work in the city during April, May and June this year.
He also expanded on earlier comments that some detection rates were being “directly impacted by some Covid-19 restrictions and social distancing measures”.
He said the number of officers who have been assaulted during lockdown was an “absolute disgrace”, revealing the amount of officer safety training has been doubled from one to two days in response to the problem.
He said: “We were in the middle of the pandemic with hundreds and hundreds of people positive. Some of those individuals are spitting on police officers, trying to deliberately infect police officers.
“The result being that they have to socially isolate from their families and be supported through the tension of what that actually might mean for them.
“I am grateful for councillors’ support around this one. Our staff are as vulnerable and as anxious as anyone else in society.
“As I have often said, they run towards danger when we expect everyone else to run away. The last thing we can ever accept is that it is part of the job to be assaulted.”
Chief Superintendent Todd also addressed the effect of social distancing and Covid-19 restrictions on police work in the city.
He had previously said, in his quarterly report published ahead of the meeting, that plunging detection rates linked to a spike in the number of break-ins in the city “were being directly impacted by some Covid-19 restrictions and social distancing measures”.
West End councillor Fraser Macpherson, Liberal Democrats, said the 62% rise in the offence, coupled with the fall in detection rates to 18.3%, was “undoubtedly a worry”.
He said social distancing restrictions would “continue to present a challenge to Police Scotland for some time to come”.
Chief Superintendent Todd said the numbers and “direction of travel” was a “concern” but were “consistent with our five-year average.
“Our good performance from last year we have been unable to repeat this year and undoubtedly Covid-19 plays into that to an extent,” he said.