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September 19, 2005: Home Secretary Responds to HMIC
The police service was today invited by Home Secretary
Charles
Clarke to come forward with firm proposals for the creation of strategic
forces in each region. He made the announcement in response to the
publication last week of a report ‘Closing the Gap’
by
HM Inspectorate of
Constabulary. (HMIC) which found that the current 43 forces structure is no
longer fit for purpose. HMIC was commissioned to provide a ‘professional
assessment of whether the present 43 force structure is the right one to meet
the challenges posed by the current and future policing environment’.
The report showed that the present structure is not sufficiently robust to
provide the necessary level of protective services, such as major
investigations, that the 21st century increasingly demands. It concluded that
some reorganisation of forces is necessary in the interests of efficiency and
effectiveness of policing. While a number of restructuring options are
available, it recommended creating strategic police forces of sufficient size to
provide both effective neighbourhood policing and protective services. Mr Clarke
said:
“HMIC have worked hard on this thorough report which will
shape the future of policing in this country. I welcome it as an important
contribution to this vital debate.
“It is clear that policing needs to change if it is to meet the challenges of
the modern world. We’ve already made the first step change with reforms which
are putting neighbourhood policing at the heart of every community. By 2008
every citizen will have officers who are dedicated to policing their streets.
“I want to see local police teams working in – and responsible for – an area
which in most places will be the size of one or two local wards. This will
allow residents to influence the policing in their areas so the crimes they
are most worried about are dealt with. It also makes the police accountable,
along with local councillors, to their local community. Working with local
police community support officers and voluntary and community organisations
like Neighbourhood Watch, a strong and resilient local police presence will be
established for every community in the country.
“These local teams will form part of a basic command unit, where a senior
officer will be able to set unique priorities for their patch to address
problems in that area. The senior officer will have responsibility for their
area and will have the power and responsibility, working through effective
local crime and disorder partnerships, to make policing work for the
communities they serve. These basic command units must, as in almost all cases
today, be coterminous with the local district or unitary councils so that
co-operation can be made fully effective.
“On the basis of this structure we need to bring into effect the second step
change – providing an effective police force above the local basic command
unit level to provide support for every locality and to deal with serious and
sophisticated crime. The modern threats we face today from terrorism,
international drug and people traffickers and financial crime gangs need
police forces which have the resources and capabilities to match the
criminals.
“As the HMIC report indicates, currently, some forces are simply too small to
meet these challenges. We need strategic forces able to address them
effectively and to provide the support which localities need. Doing things 43
different ways no longer works and the implication of the HMIC report, which I
accept, is that inevitably we will have less forces in the future. But with
local accountability for tackling crime delivered by neighbourhood policing,
bigger, more strategic constabularies will mean we will have forces ready and
equipped for policing in the 21st century.
“I am now asking the leadership of every police force in the country to
respond to the challenges set out by the HMIC Report and make their proposals
for the best way to create this new strategic framework. I am confident that
the challenge will be met professionally and speedily.”
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