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Named, dedicated police officers and PCSOs for towns and villages across Hampshire and Isle of Wight, says PCC

Donna Jones, Police and Crime Commissioner for Hampshire and Isle of Wight, has today announced communities, towns and villages across Hampshire and Isle of Wight will have named, dedicated police officers and PCSOs with the first of these in place by April 2024.

News OnTheWight asked how many would be based on the Island, and were told “that decision will sit with the new chief constable when he arrives”.

Donna Jones said,

“I have spent the last 18 months as your police commissioner listening, learning and talking to thousands of people. I was convinced very quickly that bringing back local named police officers to serve you and your communities was the right thing to do.

“Since then, I’ve been working on finding the money to pay for more police officers and been successful in doing that; by the end of next month 600 extra police officers will have already been recruited – 100 more than our national target, and two weeks ago I announced another 50 new officers on top of that to be recruited over the next year. Next year I hope to do the same.

“Now is the time to again make clear I am committed to giving the public what they want and need; a stronger relationship with their local police force and to feel safe in their communities.”

Working across local neighbourhood policing teams
Both PCSOs and police officers work across local neighbourhood policing teams. Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary already have a number of dedicated individuals in communities and ensuring the public know who they are & how to get hold of them will a priority.

The Police Commissioner says she has worked on these plans with the new Chief Constable Scott Chilton, who takes up his new role on the 23rd February 2023.


Image: jojakeman under CC BY 2.0