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Aug 2022
A senior North Yorkshire Police officer has called the force’s average 999 response time of 20 seconds an “unacceptable number.”
Head of Operational Training, Planning & Logistics Superintendent, Michael Walker, made the comments as part of his update on the force’s performance at the monthly Public Accountability Meeting chaired by Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Zoë Metcalfe. He said:
Under Home Office targets, 90% of emergency calls should be answered in under 10 seconds.
The Stray Ferret reported last week that in July North Yorkshire Police were only answering 39.9% of these within the target period - the lowest in the country.
However, Supt Walker aimed to reassure the public that work was being done to reduce the problem.
He promised that there would be 10% more staff in the force’s York control room by the end of September.
Recruitment and training of new call handlers was already underway.
In the meantime, he explained, 20 police staff with previous experience of call handling had been brought in to assist the team.
This included serving police officers, though Supt Walker confirmed that they had only been moved where it had been deemed safe to do so.
He added that the force had a “determination” to improve.
Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Zoë Metcalfe and Superintendent Michael Walker in the Public Accountability Meeting.
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