Cllr Barry Dare, the leader of Gloucestershire County Council, says cutting council waste to fund more police on the beat has proved popular.
When I meet Conservatives from other parts of the country, they tend to
think I have an easy job. ‘Gloucestershire -they must weigh your votes
there!’ seems to be a commonly expressed view. Sadly, not so. Only
three of Gloucestershire’s six MPs are Conservative and until 2005
Conservatives had been in opposition on the County Council since 1985.
One of the key ways we set about changing that was through innovative
policies. We knew from canvass returns that crime and the fear of
crime was one of the key issues for Gloucestershire people. This was
true in both rural and urban areas. At the same time, a lot of people
were keen to tell us that doing something about it wasn’t our problem.
Labour and the Liberal Democrats refused to take any action – they
preferred to blame the police. Even some Conservative colleagues
thought that, because crime was ‘the police’s job’, we could ignore it.
For two reasons I disagreed.
Firstly ideologically, I’ve never been a fan of councils passing the
buck or evading responsibility for the problems people in their areas
face. A council leader’s job is just that, to lead, not to hide behind
statutory responsibility. Secondly, tactically, I knew if we were the
only party addressing the problems facing people in the county, then
we’d be more likely to win the election!
That’s why I decided that one of our top 5 manifesto pledges would be
turning council waste into police officers. We knew after 20 years of
Labour and Liberal Democrat waste and high taxes that there would be
plenty of fat to trim. I wanted most of those savings to go to keeping
tax down – but we agreed that a small portion should go to paying for
what we believe are Britain’s first council funded police officers. We
promised to put an extra 63 police officers on the beat across
Gloucestershire – one for every council division in the county. These
would be real, full time, police officers, who would dedicate the
majority of their time to beat patrolling – not paperwork.
The pledge clearly resonated with the electorate – not just because it
delivered them the extra police they wanted – but because it marked a
change of attitude, from can’t do Lib/Lab to can-do Conservatism.
Conservatives took control for the first time in 20 years. Of the
£40m pa we trimmed from the council’s budgets, we are devoting £2m pa
to extra police – and parts of Gloucestershire which haven’t seen a
policeman on patrol for decades are now seeing the difference. By next
May all 63 extra officers will be on the street, and we will have
fulfilled our promise. Across Gloucestershire, crime has fallen 19%
since 2005. I certainly wouldn’t try to take all the credit for that –
but I know our officers have made a real difference. I’d also point
out that we haven’t delivered it at the expense of the taxpayer. We’ve
also delivered the council’s lowest ever council tax increases, two
years in a row.
I suppose that, as County Council groups start to write their
manifestoes for the next election, my message is be bold – and focus on
what the public want – not what others tell you you ought to do. It’s
the recipe that worked for us last time in Gloucestershire – and which
we will be sticking to in 2009.