Overall summary
Our inspection assessed how good North Yorkshire Police is in nine areas of policing. We make graded judgments in eight of these nine as follows:
We also inspected how effective a service North Yorkshire Police gives to victims of crime. We don’t make a graded judgment in this overall area.
We set out our detailed findings about things the force is doing well and where the force should improve in the rest of this report.
Important changes to PEEL
In 2014, we introduced our police effectiveness, efficiency and legitimacy (PEEL) inspections, which assess the performance of all 43 police forces in England and Wales. Since then, we have been continuously adapting our approach and during the past year we have seen the most significant changes yet.
We now use a more intelligence-led, continual assessment approach, rather than the annual PEEL inspections we used in previous years. For instance, we have integrated our rolling crime data integrity inspections into these PEEL assessments. Our PEEL victim service assessment also includes a crime data integrity element in at least every other assessment. We have also changed our approach to graded judgments. We now assess forces against the characteristics of good performance, set out in the PEEL Assessment Framework 2021/22, and we more clearly link our judgments to causes of concern and areas for improvement. We have also expanded our previous four-tier system of judgments to five tiers. As a result, we can state more precisely where we consider improvement is needed and highlight more effectively the best ways of doing things.
However, these changes mean that it isn’t possible to make direct comparisons between the grades awarded in this round of PEEL inspections with those from previous years. A reduction in grade, particularly from good to adequate, doesn’t necessarily mean that there has been a reduction in performance, unless we say so in the report.
HM Inspector’s observations
I have concerns about the performance of North Yorkshire Police in keeping people safe and reducing crime. In particular, I have serious concerns about its strategic planning and organisational management. In view of these findings, I have been in regular contact with the chief constable, as I do not underestimate how much improvement is needed.
These are the findings I consider most important from our assessments of the force over the last year.
Senior leaders should ensure they have effective oversight of the force’s enabling services and develop an effective workforce plan so they can provide policing services
Senior leaders in the force haven’t had enough oversight of their enabling services, such as HR and IT, or of the impact that failures in these areas have had on policing services. Structures that control the support functions aren’t effective. At the time of our inspection, the force was working to improve its performance management plans, but significant challenges in its enabling services were hampering service delivery. The lack of an effective workforce plan is creating workforce pressures. A lack of trained staff and a high number of vacancies are also hampering the service the force provides.
The force should review its operating model for investigations and protecting vulnerable people, and the resources required to meet those demands
My inspection team found that the force didn’t have enough trained detectives and there was only a limited plan to address this. This is a challenge nationally, but in this force the pressures placed on individual investigators were apparent during the inspection.
The force should improve the speed with which it answers and responds to emergency and priority calls
The force is substantially below the national standard of answering 90 percent of 999 calls within 10 seconds, with only 41.9 percent being answered in this time frame. The time taken for officers to arrive at emergency and priority calls is another area where the force needs to improve.
The force works well with partner organisations and communities to keep people safe
The force works well with partner organisations to prioritise early intervention to safeguard vulnerable people. This includes Operation Ambience multi-agency visits to people identified as being vulnerable, designed to reduce vulnerability and make people safer.
The leadership team has accepted and responded quickly to address the issues we have identified
The leadership team have worked closely with my inspection staff and I am pleased that they haven’t waited for this report to be published to respond to our findings. The force has developed a detailed plan to address the concerns and areas for improvement we have established.
My report now sets out the fuller findings of this inspection. While I congratulate the individual officers and staff of North Yorkshire Police for their efforts in keeping the public safe, I have concerns about corporate processes. I will monitor the progress towards addressing the cause of concern and areas for improvement I have established.
Roy Wilsher
HM Inspector of Constabulary
Providing a service to the victims of crime
Victim service assessment
This section describes our assessment of the service North Yorkshire Police provides to victims. This is from the point of reporting a crime and throughout the investigation. As part of this assessment, we reviewed 90 case files.
When the police close a case of a reported crime, it will be assigned what is referred to as an ‘outcome type’. This describes the reason for closing it.
We also reviewed 20 cases each when the following outcome types were used:
- A suspect was identified and the victim supported police action, but evidential difficulties prevented further action (outcome 15).
- A suspect was identified, but there were evidential difficulties and the victim didn’t support or withdrew their support for police action (outcome 16).
- Police decided formal action wasn’t in the public interest (outcome 10).
While this assessment is ungraded, it influences graded judgments in the other areas we have inspected.
The force needs to improve the time it takes to answer emergency calls. Repeat and vulnerable victims aren’t always identified
When a victim contacts the police, it is important that their call is answered quickly and that the right information is recorded accurately on police systems. The caller should be spoken to in a professional manner. The information should be assessed, taking into consideration threat, harm, risk and vulnerability. The victim should also receive appropriate safeguarding advice.
The force needs to improve the time it takes to answer emergency calls. When calls are answered, the victim’s vulnerability isn’t always assessed using a structured process. Repeat victims aren’t always identified, which means this information isn’t taken into account when considering the response the victim should have. Call handlers give victims advice on crime prevention and usually give advice on how to preserve evidence.
The force doesn’t always respond to calls for service promptly
A force should aim to respond to calls for service within its published time frames, based on the prioritisation given to the call. It should change call priority only if the original prioritisation is deemed inappropriate, or if further information suggests a change is needed. The force’s response should take into consideration risk and victim vulnerability, including any information obtained after the call.
The force isn’t always responding to calls for service within appropriate timescales. The force hasn’t set published targets for response times and occasionally there are long delays before officers respond. Victims weren’t always informed of delays and therefore their expectations weren’t always met. This may cause victims to lose confidence and disengage from the process.
The force makes sure that investigations are allocated to staff with suitable levels of experience
Police forces should have a policy to make sure investigations are allocated to suitably trained officers or staff for investigation or, if appropriate, not investigated further. The victim of the crime should be kept informed of who is dealing with their case and whether the crime is to be investigated further.
We found the force allocated recorded crimes for investigation according to its policy. In nearly all cases, the crime was allocated to the most appropriate department for further investigation.
The force carries out effective and timely investigations with appropriate levels of supervision
Police forces should investigate reported crimes quickly, proportionately and thoroughly. Victims should be kept updated about the investigation, and the force should have effective governance arrangements in place to make sure investigation standards are high.
In most cases, the force carried out investigations quickly and completed relevant and proportionate lines of inquiry. Most investigations were well supervised, but victims weren’t always kept updated throughout. Victims are more likely to have confidence in a police investigation when they receive regular updates.
A thorough investigation increases the likelihood of perpetrators being identified and a positive result for the victim. In most cases, victim personal statements were taken, which gives victims the opportunity to describe how that crime has affected their lives.
When victims withdrew support for an investigation, the force didn’t always consider progressing the case without the victim’s support. This can be an important method of safeguarding the victim and preventing further offences from being committed. On most occasions the force recorded whether it considered using orders designed to protect victims, such as a domestic violence protection notice or domestic violence protection order.
The Code of Practice for Victims of Crime requires forces to carry out a needs assessment at an early stage to determine whether victims need additional support. The force didn’t always carry out this assessment and record the request for additional support.
The force doesn’t always assign the right outcome type. An auditable record of victims’ wishes isn’t always held
The force should make sure it follows national guidance and rules for deciding the outcome of each report of crime. In deciding the outcome, the force should consider the nature of the crime, the offender and the victim. And the force should show the necessary leadership and culture to make sure outcome types are used appropriately.
When a suspect has been identified and the victim supported police action, but evidential difficulties prevent further action, the victim should be informed of the decision to close the investigation. The force used this outcome correctly on most occasions and always updated the victim.
When a suspect has been identified but the victim doesn’t support or withdraws their support for police action, an auditable record from the victim should be held confirming their decision. This will allow the investigation to be closed. Evidence of the victim’s decision was absent in some cases reviewed. This represents a risk that victims’ wishes may not be fully represented and considered before the investigation is closed.
In some cases, when an offender has been identified, the police can decide that formal action isn’t in the public interest. If this outcome type is to be correctly applied and recorded, it must be appropriate for the nature of the offence and can be applied only if certain criteria are met. In most cases we reviewed, the circumstances of the case didn’t meet the national criteria for the use of this outcome type. The force didn’t always inform suspects of the decision to take no further action and to close the investigation.
Engaging with and treating the public with fairness and respect
North Yorkshire Police is good at treating people fairly and with respect.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to treating people fairly and with respect.
The neighbourhood teams engage with local communities to identify problems
The neighbourhood teams engage with local communities to identify local problems and then work with other organisations, such as the council, schools and housing providers, to resolve them. The inspection team found good examples of creative ways to engage with communities. One example is ‘cops v kids’, where officers join young people in online game competitions and discuss safety-related topics while playing. A further example is one officer’s initiative to engage with the Afghan community, culminating in him taking a night course, to better understand the communities he served. This resulted in improved engagement from the community and better relations with local officers and police community support officers.
The force doesn’t have a finalised county-wide engagement strategy, making it difficult for it to assess the impact of its engagement and how it influences the policing of North Yorkshire
There is evidence of good levels of engagement, in person and through social media, both in terms of broadcasting information and two-way discussion with communities. But there is no force-wide view of engagement or evaluation of the impact of its approach. Despite this, we found that neighbourhood teams are identifying and engaging well with their communities and there is good oversight locally of the work being done. The force is finalising an engagement strategy, which will include an engagement plan, with appropriate senior officer oversight and governance.
The workforce understands the importance of treating the public with fairness and respect
The force has provided unconscious bias training to all its staff. This allows individuals to identify and avoid allowing stereotypes and cultural influences to affect their behaviour and decisions. All police officers have received training in the use of stop and search powers, effective communication and the use of force. The training emphasises the importance of explaining each stop and search and considering how the search is conducted. Where student officers were found not to meet the expected standards of behaviour, we found evidence that they were challenged and supported to improve their policing approach. This challenge was less clear with officers outside their initial training period. The force is aware of this and has started training supervisors to address this.
The force monitors the use of force and stop and search powers well
Officers are aware that they must use body-worn video (BWV) for all stop and search encounters and when they use force. The video is used as part of ongoing monitoring. The force has developed an automated system for monitoring use of stop and search. The officer submits a stop and search record, and the system then notifies a supervisor to prompt a review of the circumstances. This notification has a link to the record of search and the BWV footage; once reviewed, a feedback notification is sent to officers. Stop and search champions select random samples of the quality of the supervisory reviews. Any common themes that emerge are shared with a stop search working group and the new use of powers board.
The force has established area-based community review groups, which review stop search and use of force and then share cases with the force-wide strategic scrutiny group. The scrutiny and community review groups are independently chaired and attended by a good representation of the community. All attendees have received training in stop and search and have been offered the opportunity to go on patrol with officers. Both groups review documents connected to the incident, view the BWV footage and provide feedback to officers. The force responds to this feedback and has recently undertaken detailed reviews of all strip searches and all searches involving young people.
During our inspection, we conducted an audit of stop and search records. This assesses the grounds the searching officer recorded when completing the stop search form. ‘Reasonable grounds for suspicion’ is an objective test, in that it expects that a reasonable person given the same information would also suspect that the individual is carrying the item sought. We reviewed a sample of 205 stop and search records from 1 January to 31 December 2021. Based on this sample, we estimate that 86.8 percent (with a confidence interval of +/- 4.4 percent) of all stop and searches by the force during this period had reasonable grounds recorded. This is broadly unchanged compared with the findings from our previous review of records from 2019, where we found 83.0 percent (with a confidence interval of +/- 3.9 percent) of stop and searches had reasonable grounds recorded. Of the records we reviewed for stop and searches on people from ethnic minorities, 12 of 15 had reasonable grounds recorded.
The force uses analytical reports to understand the effect of stop and search and use of force on communities, which is changing operational practice and training. The force is making progress in understanding disproportionality in these areas and improving the recording of the self-defined ethnicity of those involved.
Good
Preventing and deterring crime and antisocial behaviour, and reducing vulnerability
North Yorkshire Police is adequate at prevention and deterrence.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to prevention and deterrence.
The force prioritises prevention and early intervention
The force has a prevention and early intervention strategy, underpinned by a delivery plan. A board chaired by an assistant chief constable oversees this. There is a focus on early intervention and working with other organisations to make people safer. The board has successfully implemented an improved briefing system and is working to improve local services for communities.
The force is professionalising neighbourhood policing
The force has developed an accredited level three qualification in neighbourhood policing to professionalise its approach, supplemented by additional continuous professional development events which share good practice. The chief officer team also formally recognises and celebrates innovative problem-solving activities at an annual event, which reaffirms the wider importance that neighbourhood policing brings to the force.
During our inspection, the positive impact of neighbourhood policing was evident in the results of a community-led process called Deep Democracy. Here, the police and other organisations help communities take responsibility for long-standing local problems and use local knowledge to develop sustainable solutions for dealing with them.
The governance and performance management for neighbourhood policing is unclear
Responsibility for the management of neighbourhood police officers and staff differs across the three force command areas. As a result, the partnership hub and local neighbourhood teams lack strategic direction, meaning co-ordinated efforts to prevent crime and antisocial behaviour may be lost. The force has now established a neighbourhood policing strategic meeting to address this.
The force would benefit from reviewing its approach to problem-solving
The three policing areas benefit from local problem-solving community hubs, which bring together operational teams and partner agencies to solve problems using a shared case management system called ORCUMA. The inspection team were impressed with this co-located approach to solve issues, reduce vulnerability and make people safer.
The force has developed IT data dashboards designed to help frontline neighbourhood staff quickly identify vulnerable victims, repeat callers and locations where there are increased levels of crime and antisocial behaviour. However, some officers and staff are yet to receive the required software training to effectively undertake this type of analysis, meaning some of their observations are based more on knowledge gained from interactions with the public and partner agencies. To better understand the root causes of problems and some repeat demand, the force would benefit from the provision of training to address this gap.
The police partnership hub retains oversight of problem-solving activity through an IT dashboard implemented in summer 2021. At the time of the inspection, the dashboard had a record of 8 of approximately 50 problem-solving plans the force believed they were managing. Significantly more problem-solving activities were being undertaken with partners using the ORCUMA system, which aren’t reflected on the police dashboard. Neighbourhood staff described the process of creating a problem-solving plan as being complicated and time-consuming. Many indicated it was easier to work with partner agencies to problem-solve using the ORCUMA system.
The force needs to review its resources within neighbourhood policing using its understanding of likely future demand
The force has an understanding of neighbourhood policing demand and how this is likely to change in the future. However, this level of understanding isn’t reflected in the number of staff allocated to neighbourhood policing roles required to service that demand. There is a reliance on officers from neighbourhood policing to undertake daily response duties, which takes them away from their core role of problem-solving, targeted activity and community engagement. The creation of the initial enquiry team was designed to reduce demand on response and neighbourhood staff, and has resulted in the removal of six police community support officers from neighbourhood police teams. Their new role is to deal with antisocial behaviour calls over the telephone, collect exhibits such as CCTV footage and to help investigators. This has effectively moved staff from a preventative role to a call handling position, and misses the opportunity to improve the contribution from local neighbourhood teams.
The force management statement indicates that in the 12 months to July 2021, the deployment of neighbourhood policing to incidents has reduced by 90 incidents a month. In contrast with the feedback to inspection staff, there is no monitoring to understand when neighbourhood officers are removed from their areas, or a policy to specify when this is allowed to happen.
Adequate
Responding to the public
North Yorkshire Police requires improvement at responding to the public.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to how well the force responds to the public.
The force understands its daily demand and the associated risk and vulnerability
The force has a daily management morning meeting in each of its operational areas to understand any risks to services. The leads for each of these areas then attend an online force-wide meeting to ensure that resources are allocated to the emerging issues of the day. This meeting was chaired by the duty superintendent who could, where required, move resources across the force. Since our inspection, arrangements have been reviewed and the governance of this meeting has been reinforced. The duty chief officer chairs this meeting to provide strategic oversight of the risks being managed by the force. The force would benefit from taking a longer-term view of how it allocates resources to meet current and predicted future levels of demand.
The force does benefit from mental health services working within its control room during busier times, and a 24-hour contact number to mental health specialists to provide advice to responding officers. This results in timely information from specialists being shared with officers to help them to reach better-informed decisions for people whose mental health conditions make them vulnerable.
Methods of online contact are limited
The public can contact the force on its webpage, but other online methods of contact are limited. The use of online reporting is an opportunity for the force to reduce the number of telephone calls it receives and to allow a member of staff to potentially speak with more than one person at a time. We found that staff were looking at the online reports on an ad hoc basis, which delays both the assessment of risk and the response to the member of the public. This represents a missed opportunity to increase the efficiency of handling contact from the public.
The force is attempting to improve its service to the public by resolving calls at first contact over the telephone
The force has recently invested a considerable number of experienced officers into an initial enquiry team, which is designed to improve service to victims and free officer time by increasing the number of incidents resolved without the need for officers to attend in person. The team undertakes an initial investigation to a point where there is enough evidence to either question a suspect or close the investigation. A team of police community support officers is available to deal with calls relating to antisocial behaviour and to attend locations to collect evidence such as CCTV. The police officers for this team have been taken from other areas of policing and are a mixture of officers who are undertaking restricted duties and those who are unrestricted. The force would benefit from considering the efficiency and effectiveness of its whole approach to resolving calls raised by the public.
The force has a large number of vacancies both in its control room and on response teams, which adversely affects services and staff welfare
The occupational health unit’s offer to support contact staff and response officers is positive, but inspection staff found that officers and staff don’t feel that well-being is a force priority. The force told us that the control room loses 25 percent of its staff each year mainly because people don’t wish to stay in the role. Its attempts to fill these vacancies hasn’t been effective, placing more pressure on staff and encouraging further staff to leave. The force has recently changed its approach to recruitment in this area. Early indications are that this has had a positive impact on the number of applications for roles.
The uniform response teams have a large proportion of student officers and, as is the case in many forces, the increased training away from the work is reducing the numbers of officers available to respond to calls for service. Following the inspection, the force has reviewed its approach to training and placed additional student officers on the response teams.
Requires improvement
Investigating crime
North Yorkshire Police requires improvement at investigating crime.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to how well the force investigates crime.
The force is undertaking effective investigations, but there are areas to improve
Our victim service assessment found that in 86 of 90 cases we reviewed, effective investigations were carried out. In 73 of 78 relevant cases reviewed, appropriate investigative opportunities were taken from the outset and throughout investigations. However, during our two recent inspections we have found examples of more serious investigations being undertaken by officers who aren’t sufficiently trained to undertake them. This is mainly because the force doesn’t have enough trained staff. The force is trying to resolve this by providing increased supervision from trained detective sergeants for specific crimes. This is placing significant pressure on all staff.
The governance and oversight of investigations needs further development
The force has a good understanding of crime demand and an allocation policy which is based on threat, harm and risk. However, the force isn’t using its understanding of crime demand to improve services, and its strategic oversight of investigations requires improvement.
In 2018, the force reviewed the resource required for investigations and increased the number of detectives accordingly. However, since then, the force has never been fully resourced, nor has it further reviewed the number of resources required in this area. The approach across the three area commands is inconsistent, resulting in different levels of service being provided to victims across the county. Managers and staff criticised the practice of investigators working across all types of crime rather than in specialist areas.
Inspection staff found that the investigation hubs were a good approach that created a positive learning environment, where detectives worked with uniformed officers who were seeking to become detectives. But this approach wasn’t consistent across the force. There was a frustration from staff that senior officers weren’t addressing the challenges experienced by investigators and this was making their role more difficult. Despite this, the officers and staff are working hard to mitigate the impact of this ineffective governance. The occupational health unit was working closely with investigation staff who clearly needed support, but many staff didn’t engage as they described being too busy to do so.
The force has adopted a new performance approach, which is led by the deputy chief constable and results in senior officers reviewing how they provide services to then make improvements. One performance meeting was focused on the response to serious sexual offences. This identified that a previous decision to stop training had resulted in insufficient trained officers to deal with the initial reports of these crimes. The training has now restarted to improve the initial response.
The force needs to reduce the backlog within its digital forensic unit
The force has invested to increase the staffing within its digital forensic unit and to update the technology it uses to examine the content of mobile phones and computers linked to investigations. The inspection team identified that the force had a 12-month backlog in these digital lines of inquiry, resulting in delayed investigations that adversely affected victims. In April 2022, the increased staffing for the digital forensic unit was approved, but in October 2022 it was still not fully resourced due to delays in recruitment and further staff resigning. The force has a plan to address these vacancies and to work with existing staff to discourage them from leaving for jobs in the private sector.
Requires improvement
Protecting vulnerable people
North Yorkshire Police requires improvement at protecting vulnerable people.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to how well the force protects vulnerable people.
The force has a good understanding of the nature and scale of vulnerability, but it fails to use this insight to ensure that resources are allocated to meet this demand
Protecting vulnerable people is strategic priority for the force and is in the police and crime plan. The force has a good understanding of the nature and scale of vulnerability, which is informed by partner information and included in its force management statement. However, the force fails to use this insight, and resources aren’t aligned in a way that meets the demand, which reduces the resilience of the force’s approach. The inspection team saw the negative personal impact on staff at all levels caused by inefficient working practices and large numbers of vacancies. The absence of an effective vulnerability board has allowed this position to worsen, without senior officers being fully aware of the risks and impact on their ability to protect vulnerable people.
The force does provide ongoing safeguarding support to victims, but there is no strategic oversight of these services
The force provides ongoing safeguarding support to vulnerable victims and recognises where there is a risk of harm. Staff have been given training to speak with children when they attend incidents, to ensure their voice is captured and the impact of the incident on them is understood. The force is introducing more detailed child protection training to officers in response to the National Child Protection Inspection (NCPI).
The force is proactive in its use of ancillary powers, such as domestic violence protection orders and the domestic violence disclosure scheme. Trained safeguarding staff review incidents to see where these powers can be proactively used. The inspection found good use of these powers and positive action where there were breaches.
The force has piloted Project Shield, which the inspection team has identified as good practice. This scheme enters all non-molestation orders onto the Police National Database, so if a victim who is usually resident in North Yorkshire is elsewhere in the country, the local police force can directly access details of the non-molestation order.
The NCPI identified ten separate areas where the force needs to make urgent improvement to the services it provides. A gold group chaired by the deputy chief constable has been created to manage the force response to the recommendations made after the NCPI report. There remain areas that require further development following this inspection, which is reflected in the force action plan. These areas include the force response when children are reported missing. While the approach has been reviewed and training has been given, there is still more to do to consistently improve the response. The force should work to raise awareness of criminal exploitation – this will help officers and staff to understand why people should be supported as victims and not pursued as offenders. This will challenge perceptions that mean staff fail to understand exploitation and instead describe people as engaging in dangerous lifestyles. If staff don’t understand exploitation, they will miss the vulnerability of those who are being criminally exploited, and options to make people safer won’t be fully explored.
The force benefits from good partnership working
Protecting vulnerable people is the core theme of the force tasking meetings, which are attended by local partners including local authorities in the force area. The inspection team found significant evidence of meaningful partnership working, including established multi-agency safeguarding hubs.
Multi-agency risk assessment conferences are established, with positive engagement from partner organisations. These conferences follow the nationally recognised SafeLives guidance when considering domestic abuse cases.
Requires improvement
Managing offenders and suspects
North Yorkshire Police is adequate at managing offenders and suspects.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to how well the force manages offenders and suspects.
The force is effective in apprehending and managing suspects and offenders to protect the public from harm
The force takes a risk-based approach to arresting outstanding suspects. The three areas hold daily management meetings each morning, which review the previous day’s activities and plan for the day ahead. They discuss the management of suspects and wanted offenders, who are prioritised based on the risk they pose to the public. Suspects considered a higher risk, or who have been difficult to arrest, can be escalated to the force’s daily management meeting so force-wide resources can be deployed to arrest them.
The force uses bail and the alternative of released under investigation effectively for suspects, with a focus on the threat, risk and harm from the circumstances of the investigation.
The force has an established programme for integrated offender management
The force’s approach to integrated offender management follows the guidance from the College of Policing. It benefits from a good working relationship with the probation service to identify offenders to be managed to reduce their offending. Offenders are selected using a scoring system that considers how recent, frequent and serious the offending was and how many victims were affected. The force has identified a 19 percent reduction in offending by those on the programme. The force has now appointed a dedicated sergeant to lead the approach to integrated offender management, which will be beneficial.
The force effectively risk assesses registered sex offenders, but would benefit from clearly recording police activities to reduce risk
The force uses a nationally recognised risk assessment tool for the management of registered sex offenders. The risk assessments are completed by trained staff, and were found to be detailed and identified potential risk areas to monitor. The risk management plans were found to be generally clear in structure, but some changes should be made to improve quality and consistency. The police activities to reduce risk weren’t always clearly documented. The absence of effective supervisory oversight and performance management, with the need to improve recording and consistency, does make this an area that the force should focus on.
All breaches of registered sex offender notification requirements or breaches of order are recorded. The force uses polygraph technology and benefits from two dedicated digital media investigators to support the examination of devices belonging to offenders, enabling early identification of further offending. The force would benefit from reviewing the equipment (including vehicles) provided to staff to support the management of registered sex offenders to improve the efficiency of their approach.
The force has a dedicated team dealing with all online child abuse. The force would benefit from reviewing how this team shares information with multi‑agency safeguarding hubs
The force has a dedicated team dealing with all online child abuse. When dealing with these investigations, its preferred approach is to promptly arrest the suspect and not to wait for them to attend a police station voluntarily. The team is able to undertake research and develop intelligence about suspects. The caseloads within the team are manageable. The force monitors these investigations, so that the level of risk and the speed of enforcement action can be managed.
The team told the NCPI that it had agreed with social care services that it wouldn’t share information until enforcement action had been taken. The force should review this approach because any delay in sharing information potentially delays opportunities to safeguard vulnerable people.
The online abuse team relies on the digital forensic unit to download data from mobile phones and computers to be used as evidence. The digital forensic unit has delays of approximately 12 months, and these delays are slowing down investigations. This is compounded by the fact that the equipment used to assess the information obtained from computers is old and slow, which hampers investigations further.
Adequate
Disrupting serious organised crime
We now inspect serious and organised crime (SOC) on a regional basis, rather than inspecting each force individually in this area. This is so we can be more effective and efficient in how we inspect the whole SOC system, as set out in HM Government’s SOC strategy.
SOC is tackled by each force working with regional organised crime units (ROCUs). These units lead the regional response to SOC by providing access to specialist resources and assets to disrupt organised crime groups that pose the highest harm.
Through our new inspections we seek to understand how well forces and ROCUs work in partnership. As a result, we now inspect ROCUs and their forces together and report on regional performance. Forces and ROCUs are now graded and reported on in regional SOC reports.
Our SOC inspection of North Yorkshire Police hasn’t yet been completed. We will update our website with our findings (including the force’s grade) and a link to the regional report once the inspection is complete.
Building, supporting and protecting the workforce
North Yorkshire Police requires improvement at building and developing its workforce.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to how well the force builds and develops its workforce.
Officers and staff are proud to serve the communities of North Yorkshire
We found that staff were proud to serve the communities of North Yorkshire and that there was a sense of belonging within the force, particularly when they spoke about their teams. But there was a consistent theme of frustration from staff at all levels about raising issues with senior leaders and nothing ever changing as a result. Staff raised communication within the force as an issue. We found many examples of force-wide communications to staff, but it was clear that staff didn’t pay attention to them as they were focused on their tasks that day and disengaged from this type of communication. The force should consider how it communicates information to the workforce to ensure reasons for changes are fully understood and enable greater involvement.
The force has restarted its work to make its workforce more representative of the communities it serves
The force previously had a dedicated team working to increase the diversity of the workforce, promote equality in the workplace and to make the force more inclusive. However, with the changes to their people services, this work was paused for over 18 months. The deputy chief constable has recognised the gap and has overseen a new strategic approach, developed an effective operational plan and provided enough resources to lead this work. The force has stated that it has seen an increase in the diversity of people applying for the most recent round of recruitment for police officers. The increase in applications for roles is positive, particularly following previous recruitment campaigns that have been unable to identify suitable candidates to fill the vacant roles. However, this is yet to translate to a more diverse cohort of new police officers joining the force. In the year ending 31 March 2022, 1.7 percent of police officer joiners to North Yorkshire Police were from an ethnic minority background. This was less diverse than the 2.4 percent of officers in the force from an ethnic minority background (as of 31 March 2022).
The force has promoted the code of ethics and an ethical culture
The deputy chief constable chairs the ethics board made up of representatives from throughout the organisation, supported by the ethics strategy and delivery plan. Each of the departments and divisional areas has a vision group, which considers local issues affecting local staff. These will be discussed by the group and escalated, where appropriate, to local senior officers and to the force-wide board for discussion. One example of the discussion related to how staff were coping with the cost-of-living crisis and what the force could do to offer support.
The force is providing training to supervisors to improve their leadership skills and to help them have difficult conversations with staff, focused on improving standards and performance. We also saw the professional standards department using reflective practice to improve how officers and staff discharged their duties.
The force has invested in the policing education qualifications framework
The force was an early adopter of the policing education qualifications framework and has developed its approach with the Open University. The courses have been developed for the Police Constable Degree Apprenticeship and more recently the Degree Holders Entry Programme. The transition to the policing education qualifications framework was completed within the College of Policing time frames. The force has methods in place to monitor the progress of officers from the start of the programme. It can demonstrate its understanding of the supportive interventions required to ensure students improve and maximise attainment in scored assessments.
The force has described considerable pressure on response due to the increased proportion of training abstractions for officers on the programme. Since the inspection, the force has reviewed the secondments for student officers and removed the non‑essential elements, resulting in an increase in officers available for response duties. This change in approach has also enabled the movement of experienced officers from the response teams to their investigation teams.
Requires improvement
Tackling workforce corruption
We now inspect how forces deal with vetting and counter corruption differently. This is so we can be more effective and efficient in how we inspect this high-risk area of police business.
Corruption in forces is tackled by specialist units, designed to proactively target corruption threats. Police corruption is corrosive and poses a significant risk to public trust and confidence. There is a national expectation of standards and how they should use specialist resources and assets to target and arrest those that pose the highest threat.
Through our new inspections, we seek to understand how well forces apply these standards. As a result, we now inspect forces and report on national risks and performance in this area. We now grade and report on forces’ performance separately.
North Yorkshire Police’s vetting and counter corruption inspection hasn’t yet been completed. We will update our website with our findings and the separate report once the inspection is complete.
Strategic planning, organisational management and value for money
North Yorkshire Police is inadequate at operating efficiently.
Main findings
In this section we set out our main findings that relate to how well the force operates efficiently.
The force lacks an understanding of future demand and lacks effective plans to make sure it has the right resources in place to meet future needs
The force has an understanding of future demand based on previous and current data. It doesn’t have plans in place to ensure it has the capability and capacity to meet the changing nature of future demand, such as cyber-enabled crime. The force doesn’t have an effective understanding of the current skills of the workforce, nor the learning and development needs of its staff.
Overall analysis should be improved, and a comprehensive workforce plan is required to make sure that the force has the capacity and capability to meet future demand, specifically in areas such as investigations.
The number of detectives in the force is insufficient to meet demand and this has been a problem for the force since 2018. There are vacancies in investigation teams that manage more serious and complex investigations. This is in addition to response teams being under-resourced. The force has been aware of these gaps and has a plan to increase the number of staff, but it doesn’t have enough tutors to support their development.
The lack of investment or supporting plans has placed additional pressure on the existing workforce. Detectives are required to support inexperienced staff working towards their accreditation on top of their own workload and this isn’t sustainable.
The force financial plan is balanced but lacks detail on how the force will meet its future demands
There is a good level of fiscal management in the force; the force is well funded and has reported year-on-year underspends. The force acknowledges that this needs to be addressed. Despite the available funds, the force isn’t making sufficient progress on its priorities due to the challenges it has. This means that the communities in North Yorkshire receive less policing than they have paid for. The failure in service delivery presents a risk to future funding through precept (income from local council tax). The force confirms that in 2021/22 it will deliver a balanced budget, that there is sufficient capital financing to deliver its plans for the year, that it holds sufficient reserves and that the council tax precept rise is in line with Government thresholds.
The force is a high precept force, receiving 44 percent of its total funding for 2021/22 through local precept, and isn’t as challenged as others in relation to its finances. The force states it needs to save £825,000 for the period 2022/23 and has identified savings of £500,000 for that period. Based on these figures provided by the force, it needs to make further savings of £325,000. The identified potential savings of £500,000 are made through budget adjustments and include areas such as staff vacancy management. We found little evidence that a detailed efficiency plan was in place.
Without detailed planning it isn’t clear how the force can assure itself that its finances are being used in the best interest of the communities of North Yorkshire. The force will need to continue to balance an underspend while seeking increases in precept, so will need to produce a more detailed public report on future demand and investment.
Inadequate
About the data
Data in this report is from a range of sources, including:
- Home Office;
- Office for National Statistics (ONS);
- our inspection fieldwork; and
- data we collected directly from all 43 police forces in England and Wales.
When we collected data directly from police forces, we took reasonable steps to agree the design of the data collection with forces and with other interested parties such as the Home Office. We gave forces several opportunities to quality assure and validate the data they gave us, to make sure it was accurate. We shared the submitted data with forces, so they could review their own and other forces’ data. This allowed them to analyse where data was notably different from other forces or internally inconsistent.
We set out the source of this report’s data below.
Methodology
Data in the report
British Transport Police was outside the scope of inspection. Any aggregated totals for England and Wales exclude British Transport Police data, so will differ from those published by the Home Office.
When other forces were unable to supply data, we mention this under the relevant sections below.
Outlier Lines
The dotted lines on the Bar Charts show one Standard Deviation (sd) above and below the unweighted mean across all forces. Where the distribution of the scores appears normally distributed, the sd is calculated in the normal way. If the forces are not normally distributed, the scores are transformed by taking logs and a Shapiro Wilks test performed to see if this creates a more normal distribution. If it does, the logged values are used to estimate the sd. If not, the sd is calculated using the normal values. Forces with scores more than 1 sd units from the mean (i.e. with Z-scores greater than 1, or less than -1) are considered as showing performance well above, or well below, average. These forces will be outside the dotted lines on the Bar Chart. Typically, 32% of forces will be above or below these lines for any given measure.
Population
For all uses of population as a denominator in our calculations, unless otherwise noted, we use ONS mid-2020 population estimates.
Survey of police workforce
We surveyed the police workforce across England and Wales, to understand their views on workloads, redeployment and how suitable their assigned tasks were. This survey was a non-statistical, voluntary sample so the results may not be representative of the workforce population. The number of responses per force varied. So we treated results with caution and didn’t use them to assess individual force performance. Instead, we identified themes that we could explore further during fieldwork.
Victim Service Assessment
Our victim service assessments (VSAs) will track a victim’s journey from reporting a crime to the police, through to outcome stage. All forces will be subjected to a VSA within our PEEL inspection programme. Some forces will be selected to additionally be tested on crime recording, in a way that ensures every force is assessed on its crime recording practices at least every three years.
Details of the technical methodology for the Victim Service Assessment.
Data sources
999 call answering time
Call answering time is the time taken for a call to be transferred from British Telecom (BT) to a force, and the time taken by that force to answer it. This data was first published on 31 May 2022 showing data from 1 November 2021. The data is available on Performance | Police.uk (www.police.uk)