The National Police Improvement
Agency (NPIA) needs to play a vital co-ordinating role to successfully
deliver the joined-up IT recommended by Sir Ronnie Flanagan’s review, say senior
officers.
The former HM Inspector
of Constabulary’s evaluation of UK policing was commissioned by then home
secretary John Reid last April to look at ways to reduce bureaucracy and manage
resources more effectively.
Police forces need significant modernisation, said Flanagan in the final
report published last week.
“We need dynamic and flexible policing which can prioritise and respond to
changing needs,” he said.
Technology investment, particularly in mobile devices, could help cut
bureaucracy. There is also a role for more innovative schemes such as body-worn
cameras. see story, below.
But IT plans will only be successful if they are joined up across all 43
independent forces.
Currently up to 70 per cent of data is entered more than once, according to
Flanagan. And effective procurement could cut the cost of mobile devices by more
than half.
“The service must act corporately or we will waste millions of pounds on 43
different, but similar, IT solutions for operational processes which are all
based on the same criminal law,” says the report.
But national co-ordination is no easy task, former
West Midlands chief constable
Lord Dear told Computing.
“Forces have wanted more joined-up IT for a long time, but it requires heavy
investment and a central infrastructure,” he said.
Previous attempts have floundered because of low take-up by individual
forces.
Senior officers say it will be down to the NPIA which was launched last
April to provide central direction.
“It is crucial that the NPIA takes a lead in implementing Flanagan’s
recommendations. All forces are starting from different places, which is the
problem with a universal strategy,” said
Police Superintendents’ Association
vice president Derek Barnett.
Staffordshire Police
Inspector David Edge said: “The NPIA should take a lead role in producing
assistance and procurement strategy.”
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