Fall in number of police officers in England and Wales
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The number of police officers in England and Wales has slipped to its lowest level in two years, figures show. The headcount of officers employed by 43 forces stood at 148,886 at the end of September 2024. This is down 883 from a peak of 149,769 at the end of March and the lowest total since the end of September 2022 (144,346), according to Home Office data published on Wednesday.
There has been a similar drop in the number of full-time equivalent (FTE) officers, which stood at 146,868 at the end of September. This is down 878 from a record 147,746 six months earlier and the lowest since September 2022 (142,146). The figures indicate the challenge the Government faces in its vow to boost police numbers, with both measures previously on an rising trend since 2019.
Last month, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer promised a named, contactable police officer for every neighbourhood in England and Wales as he laid out his “plan for change”. It came after Labour pledged to recruit 13,000 new police officers, PCSOs and special constables to bring the total police workforce to a level above its peak 15 years ago.
The figures show there was a slight increase in the total paid police workforce – which includes officers, staff and police community support officers (PCSOs) – to 236,655 FTE in the latest period, up 425 compared to six months earlier (236,230). FTE is the standard measure for comparing workforce figures, but the Home Office also records headcount numbers and used this as its preferred method for reporting progress on the previous Conservative government’s campaign to hire thousands more recruits in England and Wales – a target that was met in March 2023.