The Mail on Sunday

A tax on bravery as undercover officers billed for chase cars

(But their bosses found a loophole for themselves)

- By Mark Nicol DEFENCE CORRESPOND­ENT

HUNDREDS of undercover police officers have been hit by a ‘shameful’ tax on the unmarked vehicles they use to track and chase terrorists and gangsters.

The elite officers have received bills of up to £5,000 after Her Majesty’ s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) ruled the high-powered cars and motorbikes they drive in their dangerous roles should be taxed as company cars.

Critics have branded the move ‘ridiculous’, while both the Police Federation – representi­ng rank and file officers – and the National Police Chiefs’ Council, say the tax could damage national security.

Undercover operatives often take their vehicles home so they can respond faster to emergency callouts. To date, they have been taxed only on their personal mileage outside working hours, but now HMRC is demanding a levy based on the vehicles’ retail value and CO2 emissions – the same as executives’ company cars.

Officers told The Mail on Sunday that they cannot afford to pay the additional taxes, and that the move will compromise public safety. Their treatment is in contrast to that of police chiefs, who have previously fitted blue lights to their executive cars to reduce their tax bills.

Last night, an officer from the Metropolit­an Police’s Specialist Crime and Operations branch, who used his vehicle to respond to the IS attack on London Bridge in June, said: ‘I’m on a £40,000 salary. So there’s no way I can pay £5,000 in company vehicle tax to HMRC. It’s shameful that it’s being imposed on us because it will seriously impact on policing. I can react faster to an incident, such as London Bridge, because I’ve got an undercover police vehicle on my driveway, rather than having to drive my own car or get public transport to a depot where these vehicles would otherwise be kept.

‘But because I effectivel­y commute in this police vehicle to and from shifts and emergency callouts, I am liable to be taxed on this vehicle by HMRC. The new way it is being calculated has killed me.’

And Christophe­r Chope, a Conservati­ve MP on the Parliament­ary Home Affairs Committee, added: ‘This is a ridiculous situation with the HMRC clearly acting at odds with the Government’s agenda to improve security. It is completely unreasonab­le for individual police officers to be saddled with this additional tax burden on vehicles, which are an essential part of their very dangerous jobs.’

The HMRC told The Mail on Sunday yesterday that the new arrangemen­t will see officers liable to tax bills based on 20 per cent of their vehicle’s market value, the number of days the vehicle is available for their private use and an environmen­tal levy. The police officer’s salary is also a factor. HMRC issued the new directive in April this year but officers have only just been informed of the change.

Police Federation general secretary Andy Fittes said: ‘These tax changes could adversely affect the ability of these officers to carry out their vital role in keeping the public safe. No officer should be penalised for doing his or her job.’

An HMRC spokesman said: ‘No police officer or emergency workers will incur tax when they just use the vehicle for work.

‘Tax can only be payable on the vehicle when it’s made available for private reasons.’

‘It’s shameful this is being imposed on us’

 ??  ?? DANGER ROLE: Elite police have faced ‘company car’ charges up to £5,000
DANGER ROLE: Elite police have faced ‘company car’ charges up to £5,000

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