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Essex Police Challenge Meeting 12th March 2015

Austerity

Policing on a smaller budget will become the new normal

We estimate additional cost savings of

£50million to 60million by 2020We will have no choice but to deliver them

Since 2010 – saved £42million

Next year, a 4.7% cut in the Home Office grant funding means Essex will get £8.5million less to police the county. This follows 5 years of similar cuts.

Emerging Challenges:• Child Abuse demand• Domestic Abuse• Digital/Cyber Crime• Terrorist threat

Reducing Crime and Anti-Social Behaviour

2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06 2006/07 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 12 Mths to Jan-

uary 2015

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

140000

160000

180000

106,768

113,150

136,181144,512

134,789 132,378127,163

119,164112,842

104,796 103,445 105,077100,144 99,346 99,439

109,164

94,105

82,369 78,22871,412

61,75556,447 54,057 55,260

Force - Crime and Anti-Social Behaviour

All Crime Offences Anti Social Behaviour Incidents

Vo

lum

e

Significant Reductions

Vehicle Crime 18.4% (1674 offences)

Dwelling Burglary 10.2% (770 offences)

Robbery 14.3% (158 offences)

Increasing Trends and Challenges

Increasing TrendsSerious Violent Crime up 9.0%Serious Sexual Crime up 26.2%

Encouraging Under Reported CrimeDomestic Abuse

Hate Crime

Solving Crime and Bringing Offenders To Justice

• Essex is 25th out of 43 forces• Serious Violent Crime Outcomes up 9.0%• Serious Sexual Crime detections up 29.3%

2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 12 Months to January 20150

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

35000

20.0

22.0

24.0

26.0

28.0

30.0

32.0

31286 27042 28976 27166

29.8

27.0

29.2

27.3

Force - Number of Positive Outcomes & Solved Rates

Number of Outcomes Solved Rates (%)

Ou

tco

me

s

So

lve

d R

ate

s

Promoting Satisfaction and Public Confidence

Crime Survey for England and Wales • % Agree ‘Dealing with local concerns’ – 58.26%• % Agree ‘Confidence in the local police’ – 57.80%

User Satisfaction Survey

Essex Police Challenge Meeting 12th March 2015

TRANSFORMING THE ESSEX POLICE ESTATE

March 2015

TRANSFORMING THE ESSEX THE ESSEX POLICE ESTATEMarch 2015LICE ESTATE

The Estate Challenge for Essex

In addition to being unaffordable, the size, age, nature and distribution of the Essex Police estate is not best able to support modern policing and the Force’s transformation programme

The Force recognise a significant intervention is needed to overcome the existing estate constraints and unlock its potential

• Over-sized – too big for current and future staffing

• Under utilised - low levels generally• Poor quality - by modern accommodation

standards• Fragmented – too many small, dispersed assets• Inefficient – highly cellular and inflexible• Unaffordable – significant future R&M liabilities• Logistics issues – storage, parking, • Compliance – access, custody, building

performance• Resilience – single points of failure

Key Themes

The Force is undergoing significant change influencing future estate needs – public contact, custody, forensics, transport, training and support services form integral work streams of the Strategic Change Programme

Key Influences

• Operational Need – demand; operational structure• Agile Working – greater use of technology• Collaboration – multi-agency assets, shared services• Public Access – multi-channel, CRM system

• Rationalisation – fewer more effective strategic locations• Improvement – better quality, flexible accommodation• Affordability - sustainable energy efficient buildings• Flexibility – assets that can readily change and adapt to the Force need

Existing Estate Configuration

The existing estate is highly diverse in nature representing over one hundred years of piecemeal evolution. Inefficient by almost every measure, very few assets would be buildings of choice today

The estate is highly fragmented with sixty of the eighty buildings making up less than 20% of the estate (20 buildings comprise 80%).

Estate Metrics

• Over 80 properties• Over 1,000,000 sq/ft• 85% freehold• Dated, cellular accommodation• HQ makes up 25% of the estate• Police stations comprise more than 55%• Over £10m annual running costs• Significant lifecycle investment needed• £5.5m backlog maintenance• Net to gross of 70% (inefficient)• Extra £1.75 million per annum required to

“stand still”

Financial ConsiderationsPortfolio change must be affordable in both capital and revenue terms. The Force is seeking to finance the necessary investment from capital receipts, ideally with a positive balance. Mortgaging the investment is not a preferred option (PFI)

Significant future R&M liabilities need to be avoided. Retaining an interest in the redevelopment of the surplus estate also presents opportunities to generate long term revenue income

Doing nothing is not an option• Over £5m backlog maintenance• C.£10m existing annual operating cost• Plus £30m just to ‘stand still’ in medium / long

term

Estate Value• Portfolio valued at £55m - £70m• Half of portfolio value in only 2 assets• Further 14 assets valued at £4m - £6m

Concerns

Selling the ‘family silver’

Summary

Delivers a 21st Century policing service that provides access and reassurance to our communities and addresses victims needs

Key Decisions.- 2015

• Location of HQ• Size of HQ• Location of Hubs• Size of Hubs• Location of Local Contact Centres• Custody Strategy• Specialist Centre locations

Targets• 40% reduction in estate gross area• £2.5m annual property savings on £9m baseline• Avoidance of £multi R&M costs• Viable long term estate• Leaner, higher quality, flexible and ‘future-proofed’• Enhanced collaboration - force and other agencies• Good quality core assets with granular local

flexibility• More effective policing outcomes• Supports and facilitates regeneration

Essex Police Challenge Meeting 12th March 2015

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