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News from Joanne McCartney: Government cuts could mean significantly fewer police officers

Created on
15 October 2015

Speaking at a public meeting in Enfield last night the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, has said that London could lose as many as 8,000 police officers if planned Government cuts and changes to the police funding formula go ahead. The meeting, part of the Commissioner’s Roadshow series was chaired by Labour London Assembly Member Joanne McCartney who said that the Commissioner’s unprecedented intervention illustrated “just how wrong the Home Secretary is to claim her cuts to the police force are not hitting the front line.”

The Commissioner said that across the capital 8,000 police officers could be lost. If shared equally across all the Met’s frontline teams, including firearms and sexual offences specialists, borough police forces would lose about 25% of their officers, for Haringey that would mean 151 officers lost.

If however specialist units were protected and the 8,000 officers were all lost from London boroughs, Haringey would lose 265 police officers, the equivalent of 44% of the current local force. Coming alongside plans currently being discussed to axe all of London’s PCSOs Ms McCartney warned that the Commissioner’s comments showed that another round of vicious cuts would “devastate the police force”.

The Commissioner went on to warn of a return to police forced to rely on funding levels not seen since the 1970s saying "I genuinely worry about the safety of London." The Commissioner also raised questions about the Met’s ability to deal with a rerun of the 2011 London riots or a major terrorist attack if the cuts went ahead.

Since May 2010 the Met has already seen £600m slashed from its budget resulting in 215 fewer police officers and PCSOs in Haringey.

Speaking after the public meeting, Labour London Assembly Member for Enfield and Haringey, Joanne McCartney AM said:

“The Commissioner’s warning of a return to 1970s levels of funding show just how wrong the Home Secretary is to claim her cuts to the police force are not hitting the front line. Since 2010 Haringey has already lost 215 police officers and PCSOs with plans now afoot to scrap all the capital’s PCSOs entirely. Losing significantly more officers in Haringey, up to 8,000 in total across the whole capital, would devastate the police force.

“With around £1bn of further cuts coming down the line there is a real danger we’ll see an undoing of all the progress made by London’s police force as the clock is turned back. There’s no doubt that cuts to neighbourhood policing are already having a massive impact, with violent crime in the capital already on the rise. With the Commissioner now warning about London’s ability to respond to major incidents and terrorist attacks there can be no doubt about the danger the Home Secretary's cuts are putting the capital in.”

ENDS

Notes to editors

Notes

           

  • Commissioner’s Roadshow Event, Enfield took place on 6.30pm Wednesday 14th October 2015 at Aylward Academy, Windmill Road N18 1NB.

 

 

 

 

Haringey

London Borough Total

Current police office numbers
(Aug 2015)

603

18,179

Loss of Police Officers (25% cut)

151

4,545

Loss of Police Officers (44% cut)

265

7,999

     

Uniformed officers cut to date
(May 2010 to August 2015)

215

5,655

 

  • The Commissioner’s comments were made in an interview with the Evening Standard which is available here and then reiterated to a public meeting in Enfield on Wednesday evening as part of the Commissioner’s Roadshow series.

 

  • Joanne McCartney is the Labour London Assembly Member for Enfield and Haringey.

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