Chief Constable confirmed in his new appointment
DEVON and Cornwall Police’s new chief constable has been asked about how he plans to tackle hate crime, community policing and violence against women and girls before being formally approved for the role.
At a confirmation hearing of the Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime panel in Plymouth on Wednesday, Will Kerr OBE, a deputy chief constable in Scotland, was endorsed as the region’s new chief constable. His appointment follows the retirement last month of Shaun Sawyer, who had been in the role for more than a decade.
Police and Crime commissioner Alison Hernandez announced at the beginning of the month that DCC Kerr was her preferred candidate for the job, describing him as “an exceptional strategic leader” – but the police and crime panel is required to approve her decision.
Panel member and Conservative South Hams councillor for Woolwell, Nicky Hopwood, urged the new chief constable not to ignore smaller communities
“Although you’ve invited people from the cities, we are covered in towns and parishes through Devon and Cornwall,” she said. “So, can I have assurance that the towns and parishes will be equally as well looked after as the cities?”
DCC Kerr pointed to his experience of working with rural communities in Scotland. He said: “I am responsible for local policing across the whole of Scotland at the moment and, as I’m sure most of you are aware, outside the central belt between Glasgow and Edinburgh, most of Scotland is rural and isolated.
“It’s a third of the landmass of the United Kingdom and 60% of the coastline. It’s got 90 inhabited islands and quite a few of those have very specific needs, which means they need a very specific and a very sensitive policing response, which is locally based, locally respected and recognised and locally present.”
Panel member and Labour Plymouth city councillor for St Peter and the Waterfront, Chris Penberthy, asked about the rise in hate crime in Devon and Cornwall, in the forms of racism, homophobia and misogyny.
“Hate crime continues to rise, especially hate crime that is sex or genderrelated, and that is worrying,” said Cllr Penberthy. “I just wondered whether you had any thoughts specifically about policing within those protected characteristic communities and your approaches there.”
DCC Kerr insisted he would address the concerns of all communities and explained: “The job of policing is to continue to build trust and confidence in those communities and lifestyle communities who perhaps haven’t had as much trust in the police service in the past to make sure that we continue to get a more realistic reflection of where [hate crime] is happening, both physically within communities and on the streets and increasingly online, which is where the biggest growth of hate crime tends to be.”
Labour Exeter city councillor for St Thomas, Laura Wright, spoke about initiatives with the University of Exeter to help young women feel secure, and suggested many women do not feel confident approaching police. She
‘The job of policing is to continue to build trust and confidence in communities’ NEW CHIEF CONSTABLE WILL KERR OBE
hinted at the Metropolitan Police’s handling of the case of Sarah Everard, who was killed by serving officer Wayne Couzens, and later the conviction of two of his colleagues over racist, misogynist, sexist, homophobic and Islamophobic messages shared in a WhatsApp group with Couzens.
Cllr Wright asked: “What’s your take on making sure that the public have every confidence in our police force here?”
DCC Kerr said it was crucially important to restore trust. He said: “If women and girls didn’t feel confident in the presence of, or in engaging with, police officers on the street, then our responsibility was to do something about that, not to tell people to wave a bus down, not to tell people to do something that was impractical or give a sense that the victim or somebody who is scared and on the street might be in some way responsible for what has happened.”
DCC Kerr was awarded an OBE in 2015 and joined Police Scotland in 2018.