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FROM THE COMMONS
Police funding
could mean a hefty
council tax increase
by QUENTIN DAVIES M
P
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IT IS TIME to bring out into the open the row about the funding of
Lincolnshire Police which has been going on for months behind the
scenes.
We have always had first class policing in Lincolnshire, a force that
displays all the finest qualities of the service – tact, fairness,
firmness when required, steady judgement and conscientious dedication to
the public good.
Policing is paid for partly by a Home Office grant (in other words, the
national taxpayer), partly by a precept which is included in the council
tax (i e the local council tax payers). The current police budget for
the county is around £95 million a year. We are entitled to more Home
Office grant under the national funding formula but £1.6 million is
being temporarily withheld to provide transitional relief to other
constabularies. Without this being withheld, the grant would increase
next year by 6.3%. If it is withheld, the increase goes down to 2.7%,
roughly the rate of inflation.
Against that background, Lincolnshire Police Authority, supported by the
county council, has come out with a budget for next year which increases
by 7.3%, then by 8.3%, then by 6.5% - an increase of 24% by 2010-2011,
to be paid for by a staggering increase in the council tax police
precept (or levy) of 60% over three years, thus adding £107 a year to
the council tax on a Band D property.
This is where I part company with the police authority and the county
council. I have always seen it as a first duty of an M P to protect the
taxpayer. An increase in the council tax, certainly of this order of
magnitude, must be the last, not the first resort.
We must press the government to release the £1.6 million to us now. I
believe if we focus on this we may get it. If we indicate that we think
the council tax is an easy answer we will not.
In July, I wrote to the Chief Constable, following meetings with him and
the police authority, with a number of suggestions for savings without
impacting front line policing. They included more use of civilians in
back office jobs (we are below the national average in civilianisation),
making use of specials (trained volunteers who are the equivalent of the
T A in the army) and less use of uniformed officers in traffic policing
now we have electronic cameras.
I believe that the police should concentrate on three priorities: crime
prevention, crime detection and the maintenance of public order.
Anything else is a less than efficient use of a vital resource.
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Quentin Davies has been the
Member of Parliament for the Grantham and Stamford constituency,
which includes Bourne, since 1997 (and for Stamford and Spalding
before that) and in 1998, he received the Backbencher of the Year
award. He was a member of the Conservative Party until June 2007 when
he defected to the Labour Party. |
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