Morale in Lancashire police is low, figures suggest

Police <i>(Image: File photo)</i>
Police (Image: File photo)
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One in eight officers plan to leave Lancashire Constabulary within two years, or are actively looking for jobs elsewhere, new figures reveal.

The Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW) said police officers are reaching "breaking point" and leaving the service due to pay and work conditions.

The PFEW's pay and morale survey, carried out in September and October last year, shows 12 per cent of the 775 officers in Lancashire Constabulary who responded, said they were planning to leave the service.

About four per cent said they intended to resign from the force within the next two years and eight per cent stated they are already looking for other employment.

Altogether, the rate is up from the previous survey in 2021, when 10 per cent of officers said they were planning to resign.

Nationally, 18 per cent of respondents said they intended to resign within two years or as soon as they could.

Steve Hartshorn, PFEW national chair, said: “Police officers are reaching breaking point and are leaving the service in their droves as every element of their pay and conditions has been gradually eroded in the space of a decade."

Mr Hartshorn added more than 8,000 police officers left the service in England and Wales in the year ending March 2022 – the highest number of leavers since comparable records began

He said about 1,800 officers who joined under the Government Uplift Programme have already resigned.

Of Lancashire Constabulary officers who said they were planning to leave the job, the main reasons cited for leaving the force were their morale (90 per cent), the impact of the job on their mental health and wellbeing (74 per cent) and how police are treated by the government (71 per cent).

The survey also showed 56 per cent of the area's officers said they had a low or very low level of morale - up from 55 per cent in 2021.

Additionally, 94 per cent said they do not feel the government respects them and 79 per cent said they do not feel respected by the public.

Mr Hartshorn added: “To rebuild the broken thin blue line, police officers need a pay award that acknowledges the cost-of-living crisis, their unique responsibilities and the restrictions imposed on their industrial rights.

"Otherwise, the profession will remain at risk and the disillusionment of our colleagues will deepen, the government must act.”

A Home Office spokesman said: “Policing is a career like no other and we need officers to keep communities safe and cut crime. We are injecting record funds into policing and giving officers the support, training and powers they need to crack down on crime.

“The government remains on track to deliver its pledge to recruit 20,000 police officers by March 2023. The overwhelming majority of new recruits recently surveyed report positive job satisfaction and want to remain officers for the rest of their working lives.”

Lancashire police has been contacted for comment.

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