LONDON, Jan. 26 -- The government of the United Kingdom issued the following news:

The largest reformsto policing since forces were professionalised2 centuriesago have been announced today (26 January) by the Home Secretary.

A white paper titled 'From local to national: a new model for policing', outlines a radical blueprint for reform, so local forces protect their community and national policing protects us all.

Force mergers

The government willlaunchareview intodramatically reducingthe number of police forcesin England and Wales.

Consolidatingthecurrent model will make the police more cost-efficient, giving thetaxpayermorevalue for money, while also ensuringa less fragmented system that willbetter serve the public and make them safer.

This is a moment to reset policing'sfocusand return toitscoreprinciples - restoring neighbourhood policing and tackling local crime by delivering a structural overhaul to meet the demands of the modern world.

National Police Service

A new nationwide police force will be established to fight the most complex and serious crimes.

The new National Police Service will attract world-class talent and use state of the art technology to fight complex and serious crimes, lifting the burden on overstretched local forces and allowing them to focus on catching local criminals.

The service will bring the capabilities of the National Crime Agency, Counter Terrorism Policing, regional organised crime units, police helicopters and national roads policing under a single organisation.

As one force, it will be better equipped to share technology, intelligence and resources to stop the growing threat from crime that has become increasingly complex, digital, online and with no respect for constabulary borders.

A national police commissioner will be appointed to lead the force and will serve as the most senior police officer in the country.

It will enable local officers to spend more time supporting victims of crime and delivering neighbourhood policing, rather than navigating the forensics system.

This will give victims confidence as their case will be supported by world‑class specialist expertise, and the latest technology, no matter where they live.

Part of the new National Police Service's remit will be to take on responsibility for forensics from the 43 local forces with direction set centrally from the new organisation.

Demand for specialist digital forensics means there are 20,000 devices awaiting analysis at any time.The service will deal with these backlogs and help the police keep up with the ever-increasing pace of change in technology.

Frontline policing will save £350 million by scrapping outdated procurement approaches, which will instead be used to fight crime.

Under the current localised model, each of the 43 forces often procure technology, equipment and clothing themselves, meaning 43 different teams undertaking the same work.

The new National Police Service will end this inefficiency, taking on the responsibility for shared services, equipment and IT.

The National Police Service will buy equipment once on behalf of all, saving money through economies of scale and reinvesting the savings back into frontline policing to go after criminals.

Accountability and standards

Ministerswill be handed new powers to intervenedirectlyin failing forces, sending in specialist teamsto turn them aroundso theyfight crime more effectively.

If crime solving rates orpoliceresponse times are poor, the Home Secretarywillbe abletosend inexpertsfrom the bestperformingforces toimprovetheirperformance,so theycatch more criminals.

The Home Secretary willrestorethe power to sack failing chief constables.New laws will handministersstatutory powers to force the retirement,resignationor suspension of chief constablesif they are poorly performing.

The forces will also be directly accountable to the public, withnew targetson999 response times, victim satisfaction, publictrustand confidence.Theseresultswill bepublishedand forces gradedsocommunitiescancompare.

To further reinforce accountability, His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary Fire & Rescue Services will gain statutory powers to issue directions when forces fail to act onits recommendations. 

Alongside these force-wide measures, the government will also ensure the highest standards from individual officers.To strengthen safeguards and ensure those unfit for policing are kept out of the profession, the government will introducelawsto impose robust, mandatory vetting standardsforall police forces, ensuring the public is protected.

These new standardswill enable forces to exclude those with a caution or conviction for violence against women and girls offences from policing.

Stronger requirements on forces to suspend officers who are under investigation for these crimes will also be introduced.

Policeofficers willbe requiredto hold andrenew a licencethroughout theircareersotheylearn new skills as criminal techniques evolve.

TheLicencetoPractisewillensureofficersarebestequippedwithproblem solving and technologicalskillsthey needtocatchmorecriminals.

Drawn from other professions such as lawyers and doctors, officers will have to demonstrate that they have the skills needed to fight crime. Those who fail to reach the required standard, following opportunities to try again, will be removed from the profession.

Neighbourhood policing

Under new reforms, response officers will be expected to reach the scene of the most serious incidents within 15 minutes in cities and 20 minutes in rural areas, and forces will be expected to answer 999 phone calls within 10 seconds.

These new targets will ensure that all forces provide the same level of police response to crimes.

Currently, data on response times is collected differently across forces, and police are not held accountable if targets are not met. Reforming the system will create more transparency and consistency across the country.

Where forces fail to deliver, the Home Secretary will send in experts from the best performing forces to improve their performance, including when unmet response‑time targets are part of broader systemic failing.

To fight everyday crime, the government will ramp up its pledge to restore visible neighbourhood policing and patrols in communities through an extension of its Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee.

This has already placed named, contactable officers in each neighbourhood. Under the extension, every council ward in England and Wales will have its own named, contactable officers, creating more local points of contact and giving officers a deeper understanding of the issues in their area.

Police forces will also recruit the brightest and best from universities in a new recruitment drive to cut crime and catch more criminals.

Modelled on Teach First, the government is investing up to £7 million to attract top students from universities into specially trained graduate neighbourhood police officer roles in England and Wales.

Retailers across the country will see a major crackdown on organised crime gangs thanks to £7 million in new government investment aimed at dismantling criminal networks from the ground up.

This funding will supercharge intelligence-led policing to identify offenders, disrupt the tactics used to target shops, and bring more criminals to justice.

Technology

The government is making the largest investment intostate-of-the-artpolice technology in history, with over £140millionto be investedto roll outtechnologiestocatch more criminals and keep our communities safe

The number of live facial recognition vanswill increase five-fold,with50vans availableto everypoliceforce in England and Wales to catch violent and sexual offenders.

The government will also roll out new artificial intelligence (AI) tools which will help forces identify suspects from CCTV, doorbell and mobile phone footage that has been submitted as evidence by the public.

A newnational centre onAI-Police.AI-will beset up torolloutAIto all forcesto free officersfrom paperwork, delivering up to6 million hours back to the frontline every year - the equivalent of 3,000policeofficers.This means more police on the streets fighting crime and catching criminals.

More tech specialists will work in police forces to outsmart modern criminals and put more fraudsters and organised crime bosses behind bars.

The move will enable police forces to uncover more vital hidden evidence on phones and laptops to secure more convictions of professional criminals and keep people safer from crimes such as child sexual abuse.

Public order

A new senior policing role will be introduced to lead the police's nationwide response to public disorder, and galvanise and co-ordinate responses to major incidents.

The senior national co-ordinator role for public order policing will sit within the new National Police Service. They will not be responsible for local public order responses, which remain within the remit of chief constables, and instead sit at a higher strategic level of oversight, with responsibility for decision-making over the most significant national public disorder, such as the widespread disorder seen in the summer of 2024 and the riots that started in London in 2011.

While local policing responses will stay the responsibility of chief constables, the new role will provide national oversight and decision-making on mobilisation and resourcing, with enhanced powers to:

* direct resources under mutual aid arrangements and require forces to contribute during major disorder * ensure mandatory data sharing between forces * set a national strategy for public order policing * monitor and implement relevant recommendations from His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services

Officer wellbeing

The government willexpandtherolloutof thededicatedMentalHealth CrisisLineso all officersand staffcan access mental healthsupport, andhave committed toits fundinglongterm.

Officersand staff in front-facingandhigh-riskroleswillalso be offeredpsychological riskscreeningseach year so officerssuffering can be signposted tothe bestsupport when they need it most.

Traumatrackersoftwarewill be made available to every force and ensuresenior leaders canidentifyandsupport staff at the highest risk and intervene at an earlier stage.

Mandatory training aroundresilience and mentalhealthfor newrecruits andsupervisorswill be introducedandtreated as protected learning time.

Special constables

Experts in cybersecurity and technology are being encouraged to join the Special Constabulary, as police forces across England and Wales ramp up their efforts to tackle modern crime.

Since 2012, the number of special constables in England and Wales has fallen year-on-yeartojust 5,534as of March 2025. This is down73% from 20,343 in2012.

To reverse this decline, the Home Office will work with policing to streamline the recruitment process for Specials, making it easier for people to volunteer, while maintaining consistent high standards of vetting and training. Steps will also be taken to ensure existing Specials are incentivised to remain in the role, by better integrating them into the wider police force.

Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.