The Scotsman

Police officers forced to deal with ‘mental health crisis’

● Yousaf says ‘not acceptable’ that time is taken up with health issues

- By CHRIS MARSHALL Home Affairs Correspond­ent cmarshall@scotsman.com

Police officers are increasing­ly “doing other people’s jobs” in dealing with a crisis of mental ill health in Scotland’s communitie­s, it has been claimed.

Calum Steele, general secretary of the Scottish Police Federation (SPF), said it was a “fundamenta­l failure” of the system that the ambulance service could “step back, knowing the police service will be there”.

But he rejected an oft-repeated claim that only 20 per cent of police work related to crime, saying society had simply got “better at not prosecutin­g people” with mental health issues.

Senior officers have repeatedly said that only a fifth of incidents responded to by officers result in a crime being recorded. But Mr Steele told the SPF’S biennial conference that the figure reflected the fact people are no longer being criminalis­ed in the same way.

He said: “Doing other people’s jobs is what the police are increasing­ly doing – that’s the reality. The issue of whether police are dealing with crime or whether they are dealing with the mentally ill is often misreprese­nted.

“Criminal behaviour is a matter for the police, the treatment of the mentally ill is a matter for the health service. People are still committing crime in the same way as they did in the past, we’re just better at not prosecutin­g them.

“If someone is shouting and screaming in the streets,

0 The SPF conference was told officers are ‘doing other people’s jobs’

20 years ago we would have locked that person up and taken them to a court. Now we may lay hands on them, but the chances of them seeing the inside of a cell are pretty slim. That doesn’t mean the crime hasn’t been committed, just that we are dealing with it in a totally different way.”

Mr Steele, whose organisati­on represents 98 per cent of the country’s rank and file officers, said Scotland was in

the midst of an “acute mental health crisis”.

He added: “To say 80 per cent of police time isn’t spent dealing with crime is just balderdash. We’re still dealing with the same crimes, we’re just not criminalis­ing people in the same way.”

Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf said: “When it comes to mental health, it’s better for the individual concerned to have someone who can deal with their health issues, as opposed to a police officer.

“It’s better if we can intervene as early as we can from a health perspectiv­e to deal with mental health issues so a person doesn’t come into the criminal justice system.

“We have to tackle this because it’s not acceptable that it’s taking up so much police time and effort.”

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ??
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN

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