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Police chiefs order spending cut after £700,000 splurge

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Published Date: 29 October 2009
POLICE chiefs have ordered a crackdown on the force's spending on flights and hotels for officers after it emerged that £700,000 was spent over two years.
Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Mike McCormick set up a review of the travel costs after the expenses bill was revealed by the Evening News last month.

The review concluded there was a need for "more exacting scrutiny" over flights and accommodat
ion "given the constricting financial climate".

Police staff are now to be told travel to destinations, which have included Amsterdam, Los Angeles and Brazil, should "only be contemplated after a rigorous evaluation of the operational and organisational benefit". The force has also pledged to expand its use of video-conferencing in a bid to reduce the need for travel.

But the review's scrutiny of the two-year bill found that there was "no impropriety" and that all travel expenses had "followed the appropriate procedure".

The figures, released under the Freedom of Information Act, show that between January 2008 and September 2009, the force paid £471,695 for flights. Over 2008, the cost for flights was £281,361, with more than £36,500 spent on flights in one month alone.

Flight details were not provided as police said it could alert criminals to ongoing investigations. But the information did list the cities and airports visited, revealing that officers travelled to global destinations including Venice, Chicago, Bucharest, Copenhagen, Washington DC, Geneva, Bangkok, Brussels, Dublin, Cardiff, Montreal, Seattle and Zurich.

The review outlined a number of reasons why trips had to be undertaken and how each had to be justified before it went ahead.

Councillor Iain Whyte, convener of the police board, had told the Evening News that he wanted the costs to be looked at by the board's audit committee and the report was prepared for them.

Cllr Whyte said: "In these financial times, and when we are being encouraged not to travel unnecessarily, we should look at video conferencing and other ways to reduce costs."

Audit committee member Councillor Charles Dundas said: "Looking closely at expenditure is something I would expect from any public sector body and the police are no different in this. I'm pleased that the force has a clean bill of health with regards to any impropriety, but like any public body in this economic climate, they will need to look for cutbacks on spending."

A police spokesman said: "We have provided the audit committee with a full breakdown of the force's travel and accommodation expenses, setting out that around 50 per cent of expenditure relates to core duties such as extradition and operational policing – investigations and inquiries.

"The remaining costs relate to a mixture of training and meetings. Training, which is the larger share of this, is to enable officers and staff to improve theirs skills, knowledge and development to enhance service delivery. Attendance at meetings allows our staff to influence and hear about national developments and ultimately to discharge our responsibilities."





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  • Last Updated: 29 October 2009 10:19 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Law and Order
 
1

Tracker,

29/10/2009 12:25:42
Why all this money on flights: can the police not stay in Scotland and catch the criminals we pay them to catch? More walking the beat and fewer flights to foreign destinations. What exactly were police officers doing in Venice and Geneva that would help victims of crime?
2

Steven P,

edinburgh 29/10/2009 12:33:45
I am more than happy that Lothian & Borders Police officers are benefiting from the training and holiday opportunities offered in Chicago, Montreal, Bangkok and the like rather than attending burglaries and assaults in Dalkeith and Granton.
"To enable officers and staff to improve their skills, knowledge and development to enhance service delivery".
To improve their suntans and scuba diving skills more like.
3

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 29/10/2009 12:34:27
The polis should make sure that they have to go abroad first,instead of coming back with a tan and saying nah,nothing doing their boss.
4

Steven P,

edinburgh 29/10/2009 12:38:04
It reads even worse when you consider that similar junkets run up by police forces in Strathclyde, Fife, Tayside...
MPs, Scottish Enterprise, Police Forces all ripping off the public purse.
I want my money back!
5

Thomas the Tank,

Edinburgh 29/10/2009 12:40:17
Travel to such exotic destinations as Venice, Chicago, Bucharest, Copenhagen, Washington DC, Geneva, Bangkok, Brussels, Dublin, Cardiff, Montreal, Seattle, Zurich and Airdrie should "only be contemplated after a rigorous evaluation of the operational and organisational benefit". Is TempDCC Mike McCormick really trying to tell us that such basic financial controls, pretty puch universal in the private sector, were NOT in place previousto this FOISA revelation? What sort of cowboy outfit are LobPlod nowadays??
6

Jaco Pastorius,

29/10/2009 12:47:14
NEEE-naah!
NEEE-naah!
NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naa!
NEEE-naa-NEEE-naa!
NEEE-naah!
NEEE-naah!
NEEE-naah!
NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naa-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naa-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naa-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naa-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naa-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah-NEEE-naah!
7

Steven P,

edinburgh 29/10/2009 13:09:17
Out of interest, what happens to any air miles etc run up by Lothian Police Officers on trips to Washington and Montreal. Presumably, they use them for more freebie trips to Disneyland with the family instead (rather than 'training' jaunts to Venice with the mistress)?
8

Zaphod Burblebollox,

29/10/2009 13:22:18
Only £700,000 on a splurge? That's not trying hard enough, dudes! I spent more than that yesterday on options for the interior of my personal tramcar.
9

Big T,

29/10/2009 13:47:12
Pigs with snouts in the trough!

Well I never.
10

Ggordon,

29/10/2009 14:07:44

Jeeves some perks of the job. Hot air warming
11

James (1),

29/10/2009 14:18:02
Could the Deputy Chief Constable give a few examples of where this money was well spent? How it actually benefits the people of Lothian and Borders.
I am not talking about police going to bring some criminal back. There are too many big public organisations, the police being the main one, who spend money as if it was theirs.
Get back to what you are paid for. Policing your city.
12

abracadabra,

Fettes 29/10/2009 14:58:46
As someone who genuinely knows the true story these jaunts are limited to a selected few in the executive ranks with few PC plods ever given the opportunity.
If the Evening News truly wants to be an investigative newspaper then it should have identified the ranks and numbers of officers involved and not categorised all Police Officers as receiving these perks.
Similarly why do Executive Ranks with large salaries enjoy the perks of free private motoring denied to lower ranks on lower salaries.
Me thinks someone makes the rules to benefit themselves
13

archie12,

29/10/2009 17:46:11
I don't believe anyone has a complaint about legitimate trip[s to interview suspects, investigate crime, help trace witnesses etc.. It's the gravy train and industry of endless conferences, seminars, exchanges and ballyhoo where the same issues are discussed and examined again and again. There are people in all branches of public service who seem to spend their whole career amassing a portfolio of trips and visits without ever seeming to put any of it to practical use. That is what what frustrates everyone and might I suggest beginning with the drones who live in departments where they are functionaries but who begin to speak about "strategies" when they mean plans, "inter-agency approaches" when they mean speaking to someone in another department and the best - "intelligence led deliveries" meaning someone clipes or tells them what is going on!
14

archie12,

29/10/2009 17:49:13
I understand some of the USA trips were in connection with a very serious and protracted investigation but its the junkets which people really object to.
15

Thomas the Tank,

Edinburgh 29/10/2009 17:52:41
#12, Abra, Oh, I think there's a few others of us on here who know EXACTLY where you're coming from! For a long time, members of the so-called 'Force Executive' have been provided with 'company cars', with HMRC turning a blind eye to private mileage. I'm told Paddy Pumpkins infamously took his L&B top-of-the Range Rover on family holidays to France, and an ACC used his to long-distance commute to his family home in Hull - even when he was weekend 'duty officer'. Because they're fitted with concealed blues & twos, they're officially police vehicles, taxed & insured accordingly. They're even fuelled and serviced at Fettes. The lucky recipients are 'on-duty' as soon as they leave their house so not only are their journeys to and from work at public expense but they don't even pay tax on that.
16

jamboreee,

Edinburgh 29/10/2009 22:02:04
Well I am sure the hard working front line Police Officers will be relieved to know that a massive 50% of travel costs were actually spent on operational policing needs. What a morale boost for them to know that the other £350,000 was spent on the chosen few instead of being put into front line policing.

Can the Edinburgh Evening News not submit a further freedom of information request in order to ascertain:-

1. Exactly what the other (non operationally required) 50% was spent on?
2. Which officers (ranks and current posts) went on these trip?
3. Detail the specific training needs that cannot be met locally and justify why they can't be met locally?
4. Ask for concrete examples of where travel costs for training / meetings have actually resulted in "enhanced service delivery" for the public, or made the job of front line officers easier?
17

Zemi,

EDINBURGH 30/10/2009 00:07:23
It's not just foreign flights. If the jobcentre sees someone that someone who absconded from a social fund loan or shows up double claiming benefit England, they fly two coppers down, arrest them, fly everyone back and then charge them. Surely, the local English police could deal with something like that without it costing at least five plane fares?
18

tumshie heid,

30/10/2009 00:22:56
Add to that the ridiculous recent advertising campaign on bus shelters etc and its plain to see that their priorities are in the wrong place.
19

Chirpy Council Worker,

30/10/2009 07:16:48
#16 it was a council worker from portobello that submitted the foi requests to get the costing information.


 

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