The Herald on Sunday

Senior BTP officer criticised over trip to family home

-

A SENIOR British Transport Police (BTP) officer has come under fire after he travelled from Glasgow to his family home in Yorkshire during lockdown.

Chief Superinten­dent Eddie Wylie returned to Yorkshire from his rented flat in Glasgow on two occasions between March 21 and May 13, but said he did not breach Covid-19 regulation­s.

BTP said that on both occasions he travelled home alone and by car to minimise any possible exposure to others.

But Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard said the journeys suggest Mr Wylie “believes there is one rule for him, and one rule for the rest of us”, and the officers has “serious questions to answer”.

In a statement, BTP said: “British Transport Police is a national police force with its headquarte­rs in London, and as such our officers are required to regularly travel across England, Scotland and Wales for essential meetings or as operationa­lly required. In these instances, Chief Superinten­dent Wylie will stay at whichever address is the most convenient.

“Our officers can be posted anywhere in the UK, at any time. This means it is not unusual for them to have their family home in one part of the country and rent other accommodat­ion nearer to where they are currently stationed. Crucially, the restrictio­ns state that people should only leave the place they are living if they have a reasonable excuse. This includes travelling for the purposes of work where it is not reasonably possible for that person to work from the place they are living.

“It would not be reasonably possible for Chief Superinten­dent Wylie to perform his role solely from either the Glasgow address, or his home in Yorkshire.”

BTP said Wylie personally rents a single occupancy flat in Glasgow for the purposes of essential overnight stays.

Deputy Chief Constable Adrian Hanstock said: “We are satisfied that there has been no breach of the Covid-19 regulation­s in this case, and there will be no misconduct investigat­ion into Chief Superinten­dent Wylie’s travel or his leadership.”

It comes after Scotland’s former chief medical officer Dr Catherine Calderwood resigned after it emerged she had twice visited her second home in Fife contrary to her own warnings to avoid unnecessar­y travel. Leonard said: “It seems as if the BTP’s top officer in Scotland has failed to learn the lessons of the Catherine Calderwood debacle, and believes there is one rule for him, and one rule for the rest of us.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom