Gc Edicion 175 Aniversario |
|
gafaspolicia.com |
Policía inglesa contrata servicios de una empresa para gestiones policialesPosted on 03/03/2012 por Jaime Tovar La Policía de
Lincolnshire contrata empresa externa para gestión policial
El Financial Times publicó en febrero (
http://on.ft.com/yZUYk9) una noticia sobre la policía de Lincolnshire, un condado inglés de un millón de habitantes, que ha contratado mediante concurso público a una empresa privada de seguridad, G4S, para construir y gestionar una comisaría de policía y prestar con su personal propio todos los servicios en que no es imprescindible la autoridad de la policía, como hacer detenciones.
La empresa llevará a cabo la custodia e identificación de detenidos, la operación de la central de mando, la atención al ciudadano, la investigación criminal, lagestión de multas, de accidentes de tráfico, las funciones de policía judicial, la tramitación de licencias de armas, la informática y comunicaciones, la gestión de personal, el mantenimiento de instalaciones y del parque móvil, la gestión de compras y otros servicios de apoyo, dejando para la policía sólo las funciones más estrictamente policiales.
El valor total del contrato es de más de 200 millones de libras para diez años de duración. Se calcula que esta decisión supondrá un ahorro de 16 a 20 millones de libras a lo largo de la vigencia del contrato, y forma parte de las medidas de esta autoridad de policía para gestionar los recortes derivados del programa de austeridad del gobierno británico.
El Presidente de la Autoridad de Policía de Lincolnshire, Barry Young, y el Jefe de Policía, Richard Crompton, han afirmado en un comunicado conjunto que “
Este nuevo enfoque significa que la fuerza policial más austera de la Gran Bretaña, que ya presta sus servicios al menor coste per cápita de población, será capaz de responder a los retos establecidos por el gobierno, y también los altos estándares de eficacia esperados por la gente de Lincolnshire. Esta no es una solución completa y la Autoridad todavía se enfrenta a importantes desafíos financieros, pero sí proporciona una base sólida para asegurar la calidad y la relación calidad-precio del trabajo policial de nuestras comunidades en el futuro”
Como parte del contrato G4S va a construir una nueva comisaría de policía con un complejo de oficinas de dos pisos y
30 celdas para detenidos, con un modelo que permite añadir células adicionales rápidamente en caso de necesidad.
______________________________________________________La noticia original__________________
Private contractors to build and run police station
February 12, 2012 9:38 pm
By Gill Plimmer and Helen Warrell
A night in the cells used to be spent courtesy of the boys in blue.
But from April private contractors will be building police stations and employing the staff to run them as well.
With police forces seeking savings in the face of the government’s austerity-led budget cuts, G4S, the world’s largest security company, has won the first contract in Britain to staff and build a police station. The deal, expected to be signed within days, represents the most radical outsourcing of law enforcement to the private sector yet.
The deal with Lincolnshire Police Authority will see G4S take over jobs formerly handled by police officers. In custody operations, for instance, uniformed sergeants with powers to arrest will always be on hand but G4S employees will do almost everything else, from accompanying offenders to their cells to carrying out drug testing.
Police representatives have already voiced misgivings. Simon Reed, vice-chair of the Police Federation, which represents rank and file officers, was cautious about the enterprise – pointing out that police force staff have an enshrined sense of public duty, whereas private employees may not.
“Our concern is the resilience of the companies doing this,” he said. “When we have national emergencies or unforeseen events, will they be able to bring their staff in to work long hours, regardless of what their contracts say?”
G4S says, however, that the deal will benefit frontline officers. Kim Challis, group managing director of the company’s government and outsourcing services division, said: “Not only does it support frontline policing, but it will help officers to make the best use of their time, allowing them to focus more on operational duties.”
The contract is worth £200m over 10 years with an option for a five-year extension. Other local police forces are considering similar partnerships this year.
As part of the contract G4S will build a new police station with a two-storey office complex and 30 cells on a “hub and spokes” model. This allows for additional cells to be added rapidly in the event of public disorder or a sports event that turns violent.
Just over half the force’s 900 civilian staff will transfer to G4S, while the remainder will be kept on as police employees alongside the 1,100 officers. New staff employed by G4S will undertake the security company’s seven-week training programme, which meets home office guidelines for custody workers.
The contract comes as police forces grapple with government-imposed funding cuts of about 20 per cent over four years. Barry Young, chairman of the Lincolnshire Police Authority, said the spending squeeze had brought the force to crisis point.
“The cuts left us with no choice but to look for drastic changes in the way we do things. We have always had some of the tightest funding conditions in the country and the [new spending settlement] meant it was imperative to close a huge funding gap.”
The force aims to make savings of £16m-£20m over the 10 years
Although police forces have already outsourced discrete parts of their operations to specialist companies, this is the most comprehensive deal yet. Last year it emerged that West Midlands police had contracted out some of their counter-terror operations to a team employed by G4S.
Ms Challis said “it was great to see a G4S concept coming to life”.
“The new police station is an integral element of our strategic partnership with Lincolnshire Police Authority. It’s a tangible way that we can deliver real savings to the authority, while providing police with the best facilities and technology available.