The Scotsman

Police officer numbers drop to lowest level since 2008

- Paul Cargill and Dale Miller

Scotland has been stretched to “breaking point”, critics have warned, as it was revealed the number of officers north of the Border has dropped again to its lowest level in more than 15 years.

Almost 260 officers have left the force in the past year alone, figures have shown.

Police Scotland had 16,356 full-time equivalent (FTE) officers at the end of March – the lowest since the end of September 2008, according to figures published by the Scottish Government.

The latest statistics showed the number of FTE officers had fallen by 259 from the same time the previous year – the equivalent of at least one officer leaving the force every working day for the past 12 months.

Earlier this year, David Kennedy, the general secretary of the Scottish Police Federation, warned any further drops in officer numbers could see an increase in organised crime activity. “The bottom line is the intelligen­ce on organised crime groups and terrorism comes from the communitie­s,” he told 1919 Magazine. “If you don’t have community police officers out there pat rolling and picking up on that intelligen­ce, then they’re missing out on so much.”

Concerns have also been raised over the practicali­ties of police officers investigat­ing incidents recorded under the newly introduced Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act. It emerged earlier this year 7,152 complaints were made online in the week of its introducti­on on April 1, although only 240 were escalated and recorded as hate crimes.

Scottish Conservati­ve justice spokesman Russell Findlay described the latest officer number figures as “alarming” and said his party was committed to boosting staff levels.

He said: “This latest alarming drop highlights how Police Scotland’ s ability to tackle crime is being undermined by th es np Government. Police Scotland had been forced to stop investigat­ing certain crimes, while dealing with a deluge of complaints caused by the SNP’S hate crime law. Yet ministers expect falling numbers of officers to do more with less which is unfair and unsustaina­ble. Our party is committed to putting 1,000 more officers on Scotland’s streets.”

Scottish Liberal Democrat justice spokespers­on Liam Mcarthur said: “On the SNP’S watch, the thin blue line of Scottish policing has been stretchedt­obreakingp­oint.for years, SNP mismanagem­ent has undermined community policing and laid the foundation­s for future crises. The officers themselves feel unsupporte­d, overwhelme­d and stretched dangerousl­y thin.”

A Police Scotland spokespers­on said: “Officer recruitmen­t was delayed in 2023 to ensure policing was delivered on budgetduri­ng 2023-24. were started officer recruitmen­t in March.”

Justice secretary Angela Constance said: “Despite deeply challengin­g financial circumstan­ces, our budget for 2024/25 includes record police funding of £1.55 billion – an increase of £92.7 million. This will enable Police Scotland to bring officer numbers up to around 16,50016,600,starting with the recruitmen­t of almost 200 new officers in March with further recruitmen­t this year.”

 ?? PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY ?? The number of full-time equivalent officers has fallen by 259 from the same time the previous year
PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY The number of full-time equivalent officers has fallen by 259 from the same time the previous year

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