Chair Criminal Cases Review Commission. Member Women’s Justice Bd.
Ex Victims’ Commissioner, Solicitor Gen & PCC. Fellow St Hilda’s Oxford. Writer. Labour Party

Category: BLOG

  • Male Victims of Domestic Violence Supported by Commissioner Funding

    More male victims of domestic abuse will receive help and support following funding from Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird.

    Commissioner Baird has awarded £2,000 to Community Counselling Cooperative from her Supporting Victims Fund – a fund set up and made available to organisations that have the aim of helping victims cope and recover from their experience of crime.

    The not for profit organisation understands there’s a need for therapeutic support for male victims of domestic abuse. With this in mind, it wants to provide further support by seeing more male victims both for one to one therapeutic work as well as peer support groups.

    Community Counselling Cooperative also wants to increase awareness that men can also be victims of domestic abuse and that they too require support and advice which isn’t readily available in the area.

    The work carried out by the group so far has found male victims who have been physically beaten and financially abused as well as emotionally and psychologically targeted.

    It aims to provide emotional and psychological support to victims and information to give them options and choices; support victims through the criminal justice system and ensure they have an exit strategy at the end of the project.

    They hope to provide support to as many male victims in the area as possible using a team of trained and qualified therapists.

    Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird said: “There’s lots of help and support out there for female victims of domestic abuse but it has to be acknowledged that there is far less provision for male victims.

    “Because of this, it may be assumed there isn’t a need for this service for men, however this isn’t the case.

    “It’s so important that people understand that men can be victims of domestic abuse and do need help and support. Many men may suffer in silence thinking they won’t be believed or fearful of breaking the cycle of abuse and leaving a relationship for reasons such as not seeing their children again.

    “That’s why it’s essential we have groups like Community Counselling Cooperative who, in one year, aim to give 15 men access to one to one counselling and 20 men to be part of one or two peer support groups.

    “I hope the funding I’ve given the group will help them in this aim.”

    Simon Campbell, Director of Community Counselling Cooperative, said: “The Male Survivors of Domestic Abuse project is very pleased with the support that Vera Baird has given us.

    “Financially this enables us to really map out the extent of the problem in the region – as well as provide the therapeutic support to reduce the distress that this abuse causes.

    “Moreover by backing our project the Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner is making a big, bold statement: Domestic abuse is a serious issue and can affect anyone at anytime.”

    For more information on the Community Counselling Cooperative visit communitycounsellingcooperative.co.uk

  • Resolve to continue pressure on drink and drug drivers

    Northumbria Police’s Commissioner and Chief Constable have spoken of their great concern following newly published figures showing people are still risking lives through drink or drug driving.

    But they have promised that they will continue to keep the pressure on anyone using the region’s roads and putting lives at risk through Northumbria Police’s Operation Dragoon.

    National figures for the month-long summer drink and drug campaign show that despite an extensive campaign during the World Cup people simply have not listened.

    “These figures are disappointing given the intensive campaign held over the World Cup,” said Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird.

    “There simply is no excuse for drink or drug driving and it’s unbelievable that people put their lives and other innocent lives at risk.

    “Their reckless actions bring pain and heartache to families and communities which last a lifetime and destroys the future of not only those whose lives are lost but also the people who take these actions.”

    Chief Constable Sue Sim said: “Drink or drug driving costs lives, it can have devastating consequences and long-term repercussions. Even a small amount of alcohol can have a serious effect on your driving ability.

    “We treat drink and drug driving as a serious matter and any motorist stopped at any time by a police officer in their day-to-day policing could be required to provide a specimen of breath or take a drug test.

    “Operation Dragoon is currently running and is aimed at making the roads safer for everyone. We will not stand by and allow dangerous drivers to put people’s lives at risk.”

    Nationally just under 1,000 of the failed tests involved under 25s.

    The Commissioner continued: “People must take responsibility for their actions and be fit enough to drive if they get behind the wheel.”

    She praised Northumbria’s recently launched Operation Dragoon, aimed at every road user, from drivers of any vehicles or motorbikes, to cyclists and pedestrians, raising awareness of road safety across all ages.

    “This campaign is all about getting the message out to all road users that their actions matter and ultimately could be a matter of life and death.

    “I know the Chief Constable is passionate about this operation and has made it a key issue for the force.”

  • Commissioner calls for profits to come to the region.

    Northumbria Police & Crime Commissioner, Vera Baird QC, has joined North Rock Foundation Chairman Alastair Balls’ call to the Chancellor to consider a “reasonable and fair” proportion of profits made by the Treasury from Northern Rock’s former holdings to come to the region.

    Vera Baird said: “The Northern Rock Foundation has helped many charitable organisations across the region and the money has been invested in develop to ease disadvantage, support the arts and tackle issues such as domestic abuse.

    “The Chancellor now has the opportunity to save the Foundation and show his commitment to the North East. George Osborne claims he supports the region, by delivering security for the Foundation he will show that he is listening to North East public opinion.

    “I have contacted the Chancellor, urging him to support the valuable work of the Foundation. The Northern Rock problems were a difficult time for the region and he now has a unique opportunity to ensure funding for the Foundation’s excellent work for many years to come.”

  • Changing the Policing Landscape

    The Policing Landscape.

    Policing is at the heart of all communities, it creates safety and promotes confidence. However, the landscape on which policing in England and Wales is carried out has changed dramatically in recent years. Crime has been falling since the mid nineties but there has not been a corresponding reduction in demand for police work. Preventive and protective mechanisms have got on one hand more local and on another more complex and the type of crimes investigated, as well as the numbers of them, continue to change year on year.

    A report entitled \”Reshaping Policing For the Public\” has been published today, a joint piece of work from a group of individuals from the police, trade unions and Police & Crime Commissioners. It responds to the need for a national debate on the future of policing as recommended in last year\’s HM Inspector of Constabulary\’s report, Policing in Austerity, Meeting the Challenge and it will be a useful starting point for that discussion.

    Everyone agrees that the challenge is huge – the major one being finances. Currently police funding is based on a complex formula which causes very unequal distribution between forces, but basically there have been government cuts so far of a quarter of police funding and the plan is to cut another quarter by 2020. Some more affluent areas such as Surrey get more funding from local council tax than areas like mine in Northumbria, which gives them a great advantage in a time of national government cuts. Since 85% of Northumbria Police force budget comes from national government, when that is cut, it\’s a cut into most of our funding. We have lost 23% of our budget whilst Surrey, which gets 52% of its police funding from council tax has lost only 12% of its total. At the same time as my force takes huge cuts my colleague in Devon and Cornwall is arguing that his local taxpayers pay twice for policing, once as part of a large chunk of council tax and again to the inland revenue to fund the Home Office grant. Clearly it is not straightforward but the days of cuts along straight percentages have to end and more regard given firstly to the revenue, capital and reserves of each individual force and then to the demand they are responding to.

    Only 12% of calls to Northumbria Police are about crime; the national average is only 22%. The other 80-90% includes responding to missing people, dealing with road traffic incidents, stop and search, dealing with people with mental health issues and anti social behaviour. There is an additional, relatively new, tranche of work, which is not response policing but continues in the background all the time. It includes child protection programmes, Troubled Families programmes, participating in multi agency public protection teams which monitor known dangerous offenders to protect the public, MARACs which offer wraparound care to repeat victims of the most dangerous domestic abuse and Integrated Offender Management which is working with probation to stop re-offending especially of prolific known criminals. The role of a typical police officer has changed immensely through all of this, piling on new duties which are certainly in the public interest but which take up, according to the College of Policing\’s research, a significant part of the policing day and which simply hadn\’t been invented the last time any one looked seriously at how to fund the police.

    Further, crime may no longer be going down. The latest crime figures will show that there is no longer a downturn but a national increase of 2% in recorded crime,which is spread across 30 or more of the police forces in England and Wales. It is never easy to sort out whether increases in recorded crime represent increases in actual crime, more reporting or better recording. The problem is that the Home Office links its funding directly to levels of crime. Everyone has heard Theresa May saying that people have been crying wolf that if police funding is cut crime will go up. The first trouble is that she doesn\’t know whether it has or it hasn\’t. On the one hand police got into trouble from a Select Committee for not recording crime. That has led recently to the Police and crime Commissioner for Norfolk, where crime appears to have rocketed, but really what has happened as he makes clear, is that his force have felt obliged to record somebody throwing a biscuit at someone else, a child swinging his boxing gloves in a silly way and catching another child and a range of other events that the public would not call crime, to be recorded as offences. On another hand, Northumbria Police and their partners have pioneered a ground-breaking operation called Sanctuary which has unearthed considerable sexual exploitation where there was only a hint of it for them to go on. We have the biggest increase in reports of sexual abuse amongst all forces this year and we are, perhaps surprisingly, very pleased, It is not because there is more sexual exploitation most of which goes unreported it is because Sanctuary has made its mark and victims know they can report with confidence because our police and our victims services understand these crimes.

    It takes perhaps twenty times as much officer time and skilled resource to achieve 103 the number of charges of sexual offending in Sanctuary as it does to catch 103 phone thieves, people who damage cars, shoplifters and burglars. So, simply counting recorded crime as the basis for funding is like building a house on mud.

    The report goes beyond funding and looks at the bones of a new model for policing. This would leave local 24/7 response and neighbourhood policing capability, including safeguarding vulnerable people as now, resourced locally and linked even more closely than now with partners like local authorities, whose housing, social services, safeguarding, licensing and a score more functions are required if an all-round job is to be done on problem solving and tackling crime in communities. The emphasis should be on \’getting upstream of crime\’; through work such as Troubled Families programmes. There is a case for shared budgets and management to streamline and boost efficiency

    This would be supported with more collaborative arrangements across forces for
    Specialist investigative work, operational support such as public order resources, dogs, horses, firearms and, criminal justice support would be organised on a regional basis. Public surveys suggest business support such as legal, corporate communications and human resources should follow too.

    As a governance system, local PCCs would soon have insufficient reach to be responsible for all of these ascending layers and though they may not be ideal, they are better than the former unelected, unaccountable police authorities and restoring local government scrutiny would be equally inadequate.

    Recommendations are also made about the buy in from central government. If changes are being implemented locally and regionally, the speed at which Whitehall works needs to increase dramatically. There needs to be more coordinated funding streams and authority to budget, fund and commission jointly the new ways of delivering services.

    The report at least starts the debate and should not now make its way on to a shelf in Whitehall and collect dust. It says that there needs to be clarity on what the role of the police should be and then on how to organise and how to fund that role fairly and that it needs to have emerged by the end of this year and I agree. Nobody foresees forced mergers because the public remain very attached to their local forces and as much can be achieved by collaboration but apart from that if we are to ensure that our low-crime communities continue to be as safe as they are now, anything goes.

  • Commissioner Welcomes Firearms Licensing Fee Increase

    Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird has welcomed the announced increase in firearms licensing fees.

    The Home Office announced the increases on Thursday which are said to create a fairer and more effective system for forces, licence holders and the general public.

    The increases will be applied to new and renewals of firearms and shotgun certificates from April 6 and will be the first time there’s been a rise since 2001.

    Northumbria Police currently recoup around 80% of the cost of issuing a licence. These increases mean the granting or renewing of a firearms or shotgun certificate would become largely cost neutral for the force.

    Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird said: “Fees for firearms licensing are set down nationally and have remained the same for many years. I have called on the Home Office to implement these fee changes for some time, I’m pleased that they have now taken action.

    “The current fees simply aren’t sufficient to cover the processes carried out by Northumbria Police to grant the certificates.

    “In an average year, the force grants 600 certificates and renews 2,541. These numbers reflect the force’s large rural area within which many farmers, gamekeepers and landowners keep guns for vermin control and hunting. It’s also an area where organised shoots are common.

    “Like all other forces, we are facing further deep budget cuts in Northumbria and are constantly looking at all our activities to ensure we can make savings and efficiencies.

    “Anything that can help Northumbria balance the books is of course good news and the increases will see us become cost neutral when issuing or renewing a firearms certificates in the future.”

  • HMIC Report Stop and Search Powers 2: Are the police using them fairly and effectively?

    Vera Baird, the Police and Crime Commissioner for Northumbria has welcomed a new report into the use of police Stop and Search powers.

    In December 2014, Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) required all forces to complete self assessments regarding progress against ten recommendations made by HMIC in 2013. In addition, Northumbria Police was one of nine forces visited by HMIC, whose report is out today.

    Vera Baird said:

    ” There has never been any serious criticism of the use of stop and search by officers in Northumbria Police. People from black or ethnic minority backgrounds are not disproportionately subjected to these powers and the relatively high number of arrests which follow suggest they are being used well and responsibly.

    In my view, one of the reasons why performance in such areas has improved is because of the direct input of members of the public, recruited by me as Police and Crime Commissioner to help scrutinise how these essential but easily abused powers are used.”

    Assistant Chief Constable, Jo Farrell said:

    “HMIC noted on their latest visit that officers showed good knowledge of their powers and that an extensive training programme has already taken place.

    “Pending the delivery of a national training package, we decided to develop our own and to date almost 2,500 frontline officers have taken part. It is designed to improve their understanding both of the use of the powers and of the information we need to record to ensure stop and search is fair, appropriate and effective. This has included supervisors who undertake regular audits.

    “We still need to make written and electronic records more accessible so we can continue to ensure that no group is being disproportionately affected, but overall we are pleased to have made good progress”

  • COMMISSIONER WELCOMES HMIC REPORT – VULNERABLE CHILDREN AND ADULTS NEED CARE, NOT CUSTODY.

    Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner Vera Baird has welcomed an HMIC report which finds that children need care, not custody.
    In January 2014, the Home Secretary commissioned HMIC to conduct a thematic inspection on the welfare of vulnerable people in police custody. The inspection looked at a number of areas which included those with mental health problems, those from black and minority ethnic backgrounds and children.
    The inspection considered the end to end process. Inspections were undertaken in six force areas, Northumbria was not one, but Police and Crime Commissioner, Vera Baird QC, has committed to learning from the report to ensure Northumbria Police delivers the best care possible when dealing with vulnerable children and adults.
    There are a number of recommendations in the report which Northumbria Police will review carefully to ensure local practice follows national guidelines.  The Force’s current custody action plan and equality delivery plan already cover some of the areas highlighted in the report.  Commissioner Baird will now ensure that the report is updated to include the information highlighted in the HMIC report.
    Vera Baird said: “Custody suites and the use of handcuffs or limb restraints are for those suspected of committing a crime – not for people who are suffering mental health.  In Northumbria, we have dedicated nurses who provide support to people suffering from mental health. 
    \”Moving forward, Northumbria Police will continue to work with partners to ensure the best service available is given. I expect to see a reduction in the use of police custody for those suffering from mental health issues or vulnerable children in custody”.
    Northumbria Police is about to extend their successful street triage project where police officers and mental healthcare workers work together at peak times to avoid detaining people under the Mental Health Act and ensuring they get the support they need.
    Conclusions of the report found that custody should also be avoided for children. Where appropriate, Northumbria Police will seek alternatives to arrest. This could include a voluntary interview at a station, a person’s home or solicitors’ office.
    Mrs Baird added: “We can learn from this HMIC report, moving forward we will continue to work with partners to ensure effective support for young people is achieved, rather than bringing them in to custody. 
    \”The street triage is having a positive effect and improvements to our electronic records system will help ensure we are recording all the information expected by HMIC. 
    \”Northumbria is doing well, our drive and determination will ensure we are delivering an outstanding service for vulnerable people and children in custody.\”

  • Northumbria’s Police and Crime Commissioner welcomes findings of Commons Education Committee

    The Commons Education Committee inquiry has reported that all schools in England should have to teach sex and relationships education (SRE) – this is an issue that Vera Baird has campaigned about for many years.
    The Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner said: “Young people learn so much at school and from each other.
    “It’s important we teach them about sex education, how good relationships can be formed and how they should be maintained.
    “Some youngsters will come from homes were they witness domestic abuse, so relationship education will show them that abuse is not the norm and there is help out there.”
    The Commons Education Committee investigated SRE as in 2013 Ofsted found that more than a third of schools were failing to provide age appropriate SRE.
    The Committee has now urged the Government to take action; the coalition Government has said it would consider the findings carefully.
    Vera Baird said: “The Committee has made it clear that action needs to be taken and that Personal, Social and Heath Education (PSHE) needs to have the same importance as other subjects.
    “I am pleased that the Shadow Education Secretary, Tristram Hunt has agreed that Labour will make age-appropriate sex and relationship education compulsory in all state schools.”
    The Committee’s recommendations include:
    ·     The Department for Education developing a ‘work plan’ for introducing age-appropriate PSHE and SRE as statutory subjects in primary and secondary schools.
    ·     The Government endorsing and publishing updated guidance on SRE from subject specialists.
    ·     Ofsted resuming regular surveys of PSHE provision.
    ·     Schools consulting regularly with parents on SRE provision, with parents retaining the right to withdraw their child.
    ·     SRE to be renamed Relationships and Sex Education.
    Vera Baird said the recommendations were to be welcomed, but added that she hoped parents would see the long term value of SRE and not withdraw their children from such lessons.

  • Vera Baird addressing national conference on the Investigation and Prosecution of Rape


    Northumbria’s Police & Crime Commissioner, Vera Baird QC, will be addressing a national conference in London on Wednesday 28th January, which will be focusing on the Investigation and Prosecution of Rape.


    The conference, which is being hosted by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), will hear from experts in this field, including Director of Public Prosecution, Alison Saunders, Professor Liz Kelly from London Metropolitan University and Vera Baird QC.


    Mrs Baird will be speaking about the innovative Court Observers Panel that she has established in Northumbria. The panel, which began its work this month, will now be present at all adult rape trials at Newcastle Crown Court.  
    It is made up of people with relevant expertise on the topic, drawn from the voluntary and community sectors, including lawyers, and then given special training to take part.


    The panel will report back to Mrs Baird in her role as Northumbria Police & Crime Commissioner, particularly noting the unacceptable appearance of any myths and stereotypes in court, such as the suggestion that victims have in some way contributed to what has happened; for instance, by the way they have dressed.


    The Court Observers Panel will also consider whether the complainant\’s needs are being properly considered in each case, whether the impact of sexual abuse on the ability to testify is being properly taken into account during proceedings and any sense of the victim being tried rather than the defendant.


    It will work as part of a new system in tandem with the Rape Scrutiny Panel, which will be similarly drawn from the voluntary and community sectors. The Rape Scrutiny Panel also begins work this month and will examine case files where it has been judged that no crime has been committed, or which were said not to have achieved the required threshold of evidence to be sent to the Crown Prosecution Service. They will also examine failed prosecutions, to look for ways to improve the process for future occasions.  


    Vera Baird said: “Having to give evidence in a rape trial is very traumatic, and it is important that the courts appreciate this and ensure that the needs of the victim are always considered and that inappropriate questions are myths are dealt with.  

    “I\’m delighted to have the opportunity to share Northumbria’s innovative panel experiences at the CPS.  I’m hopeful that delegates present will want to see similar panels in their communities.


    “I want these innovations to increase confidence in the process, encouraging victims and witnesses to report incidents, whilst assuring defendants that any improvements in the system will protect them too.”   

  • Commissioner Asks Public Advice on the 2015/16 Police Precept

    Northumbria’s Police and Crime Commissioner is asking for the views of local residents on the amount of money households are asked to pay for its policing service.

    “As your Commissioner I have to set the police precept – the amount everyone pays directly for policing on their Council Tax bill – and I want to ask your views about whether I should increase the precept this year?” the Commissioner Vera Baird said.

    The maximum amount it can be raised by without a costly referendum is 1.99% which would bring in an additional £630,000 a year for policing in Northumbria.

    Currently someone living in a Band D property pays £1.67 per week in council tax for their police service – most residents living in Northumbria have a council tax Band A property and so only pay £1.11 per week.

    The rise would mean a Band D property owner would pay an extra 3p a week to £1.70. For those living in a Band A  property the increase would be an extra 2p a week bringing the cost up to £1.13.

    An alternative to this is to increase the precept by 1.5% which would increase a Band D payment by 2p a week to £1.69p bringing an extra £470,000 each year for policing in Northumbria. The Band A payment increase would be less than 2p a week and just under £1.13 a week.

    The third option would be to have no precept increase and accept a freeze grant from the Government of £389,000. However, this grant would only be paid this year and as the precept would remain the same, it would have to be looked at again next year

    The Commissioner said: “Our force has suffered tremendously from Government cuts to grants with £45.8m lost in the past four years and a further £11.8m lost this year.

    “These cuts have had a more serious effect than if we raised more of our funding through the council tax and the financial challenge the force faces now is its worst, though the Chief Constable and I are doing our very best to preserve the high standards of policing that we are used to here.”

    Northumbria Police currently has the lowest police precept of all the 43 police forces in England and Wales, the average across the country being £3.30 per week.

    Vera Baird said: “We need every penny we can get and I’m asking if people would be content to pay a maximum increase of 3p a week on a Band D property to protect our local policing. I want to hear what local residents think is best for Northumbria.”

    To take part in the very short on line survey/consultation, which takes less than a minute to complete and is open until 31 January 2015, go to: www.surveymonkey.com/r/policeprecept