The Police Service of Northern Ireland’s (PSNI) Chief Operating Officer, Pamela McCreedy today (15 January) told MPs about the challenges facing the Police Service as a result of significant underfunding since 2010. This has led to a declining police officer and staff headcount in Northern Ireland and is having a serious impact on victims of crime, local communities and the PSNI’s workforce. She also emphasised the need for sufficient and sustainable funding going forward to enable the Police Service to recover. 

Pamela McCreedy was giving evidence in Westminster to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee. The Committee is examining the Funding and Delivery of Public Service in Northern Ireland’s.

She noted that since 2010 the PSNI’s budget had reduced by 3% while Health spending had increased by almost 90%. She set out some of the impacts of years of underfunding which include:

  • Reduced Neighbourhood policing where PSNI currently has 305 fewer Neighbourhood officers than in 2014 and 79 fewer than 12 months ago. Despite the importance of Neighbourhood policing, the Service has had to amalgamate a number of Neighbourhood Policing Teams (NPTs) to cover larger areas and a previous commitment to provide 16 hour daily coverage of Neighbourhood Policing has had to be removed.
  • A reduced capacity to investigate crime meaning slower investigations, and in some cases, a less satisfactory service to victims and knock on delays for the Criminal Justice System. 
  • 11 of Northern Irelands 28 station enquiry offices closing last year, reducing police visibility and accessibility to the public

The Chief Operating Officer told MPs that in order to address this declining headcount, PSNI has formally submitted an urgent Recovery Plan to the Department of Justice to recover officer and staff numbers to 7,000 and 2,572 respectively over the next three years. A new recruitment campaign for student officers is also launching this month. These are important first steps but the additional cost is estimated at around £200M over a five-year period and will require additional funding from the Northern Ireland Executive.

MPs asked about the impact of health and mental health-related calls on PSNI resources. Chief Operating Officer McCreedy noted that PSNI had become the emergency service of first and last resort. She highlighted that during a recent 4 week period, on average when waiting for a mental health assessment in Emergency departments, the waiting time for PSNI officers with a member of the public was nearly 14 hours. 

Speaking afterwards Chief Operating Officer McCreedy said “Policing is absolutely crucial in Northern Ireland and it is crucial that a sufficient and more sustainable funding settlement is achieved for policing in Northern Ireland if we are to deliver for the community in Northern Ireland”.

 

This evidence session is available to watch on the UK parliament website here 15 January 2025 - Funding and delivery of public services: follow up - Oral evidence - Committees - UK Parliament