The creation of a single Scottish police service was one of the biggest reforms in Scotland's public sector since devolution and was achieved by the deadline of 1 April 2013. Work is now urgently needed on a financial
strategy for achieving the £1.1 billion of savings expected from the restructure.
An Audit Scotland report published today, Police reform, looks at the planning and implementation of the
reform of the police service, and how well governance is operating.
The report says:
- The creation of a single police force was one of the biggest reforms in Scotland's public sector since
devolution and the biggest change to Scottish policing for more than 40 years. The Scottish Government, Police
Scotland and Scottish Police Authority (SPA) achieved much before the new service launched in April, creating
legislation, structures and national services. Front-line police services were kept running throughout - Planning the move to a single service was hampered by poor information, a lack of clarity about roles, and
difficult relationships between the government, Police Scotland and SPA. There have been significant changes to
governance arrangements, and some important strategies and plans are still under development - The government expects police reform to save £1.1 billion by 2026, but it is not clear how these savings will
be achieved. The SPA and Police Scotland need to finalise and agree a financial strategy with detailed savings
plans by the end of March 2014 - The government, Police Scotland and SPA need to agree how to monitor and report on whether the reforms are
achieving their intended benefits, and agree how to report on police performance.
Auditor General for Scotland, Caroline Gardner, said:
"The creation of a single police service has been one of the biggest reforms in Scotland's public
sector. Much was achieved over a short timeframe and front-line operations were maintained throughout. However, a lack of good information in non-operational areas like finance and staffing, and differing views on how the new
arrangements would work in practice affected planning for the move to a single police service."The Scottish Police Authority and Police Scotland will find it challenging to deliver the savings expected by
these reforms. There are a number of reasons for this, including limited flexibility with police officer and staff
numbers. They need to urgently agree a long-term financial strategy and savings plans."