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December 14, 2004: Morris Inquiry on Met Police Reports The Morris Inquiry, an independent inquiry considering
professional standards and employment in the
Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) has
just issued its
Report, which concludes that the MPS lacks a common understanding of
diversity. The Inquiry is chaired by
Sir Bill Morris assisted by former South Wales Chief Constable
Sir Anthony
Burden, and Anesta Weekes QC. It has published a survey designed to provide
some quantitative data to support the Inquiry's work. The Inquiry noted that they had heard much about the MPS approach to ‘diversity’, which dominated the evidence they received. They were left with the concern that there was no common understanding of diversity in the MPS. They were afraid that it remained, at worse, a source of fear and anxiety and, at best, a process of ticking boxes. They voiced concern that some of the MPS's efforts to promote diversity across the organisation have been counterproductive and that the MPS may now be witnessing the start of a backlash. The Inquiry believed that this would be "catastrophic". The policy, they considered, was right; it is the approach and application which they argue should be reviewed. The Inquiry also expressed concern that some managers lack the confidence to manage black and minority ethnic officers without being affected by their race. The evidence demonstrated "clear disproportionality in the way black and minority ethnic officers are treated in relation to the management of their conduct". This represents discrimination which need to be addressed urgently. The Inquiry's concern was such that they are:
The Inquiry considered that managers lack confidence in managing other issues of difference, whether of gender, disability, sexual orientation or faith. The evidence also showed that insufficient priority had been given to differences other than race. The Inquiry's conclusion was that:
However, in an acknowledgement that the scope of this
qualitative research was inevitably limited, a survey was also commissioned on specific areas related to employment and workplace behaviour:
job satisfaction; workloads and work-life balance; fairness; equality and
diversity; learning and development; line management; resources and the physical
working environment; and communication. Less than a third of respondents felt that their contribution
was valued. Overall, the MPS does not fared poorly against the Inquiry
benchmarks, often failing by a significant margin. Levels of job satisfaction in
the MPS were lower than expected. The following results of all fell short of the Inquiry benchmarks by significant margins:
Under half (49%) of all of respondents agreed that the MPS treats people equally regardless of their ethnicity, again falling significantly short of the Inquiry benchmark. Analysis by ethnicity indicated that Black/Black British respondents and Chinese/Other respondents held the most negative views; only 29% of Black/Black British, and 38% of Chinese/Other respondents agreed that the MPS treats people equally regardless of their race. |
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