West Sussex Gazette

Police share of council tax up by £61 in four years

- By local democracy reporter Karen Dunn

The Sussex Police portion of household council tax bills will increase by £15 a year in April. The rise – the maximum allowed – was approved during a meeting of the Sussex Police and Crime Panel on Friday (January 29). A report presented to the meeting showed that, since 2018/19, the bill has risen by £61 but is still one of the lowest in England and Wales.

Police and Crime Commission­er Katy Bourne said she would ensure savings were found ‘wherever they can be’ and added: “This isn’t just about saying ‘pay more and we’ll just put our feet up’, this is absolutely about continuing the focus to get the most we can for the money that is paid.”

Mrs Bourne laid out some of the work the increase would help to fund.

It included opening more Sergeant and Inspector posts in the Response and CID teams, investing more in the rural crime team, taking on more investigat­ors and expanding work to give a better service to victims.

There will also be more officers dealing with the violent crime and sexual offences register and more focus on public confidence and dealing with Freedom of Informatio­n requests on time. Not everyone on the panel agreed with the rise, pointing out that times were hard and many people were already having trouble paying bills.

There was also some concern that the public consultati­on into the precept rise had not reached everyone who needed to get involved.

Sussex Police – like all other organisati­ons across the country – has been hit hard by the pandemic.

A report to the panel said Covid had cost the force £2.5m and there was still a £1.4m shortfall to cover.

So would the force be able to carry out all the work listed by Mrs Bourne if the rise was not put in place?

Her simple answer was ‘no’.

She said: “This is about growth. What would happen is we would continue with what we do but, baring in mind the cost pressures with the pandemic, the ongoing difficulti­es that Local Authoritie­s are going to have – all those pressures on top will have an effect on policing in the long term.

“This is about trying to not just sustain but actually maintain where we’re going and keep that momentum going.”

After the meeting, Chief Constable Jo Shiner said: “I welcome theadditio­nallocalin­vestment that will be used to further strengthen our service, which to date has seen more enforcemen­t teams, more investigat­ors and greater community engagement.”

 ?? ?? Chief Constable Jo Shiner and Sussex Police and Crime Commission­er Katy Bourne
Chief Constable Jo Shiner and Sussex Police and Crime Commission­er Katy Bourne

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