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TRIBUTES: Flowers at the scene.
Tributes laid at scene of crash MORE flowers have been left at the scene of a head-on car crash that killed two people. Around a dozen bunches of floral tributes have been laid in Victoria Road, Fenton, following the collision in the early hours of Saturday. A taxi driver and passenger were killed in the incident while another passenger and driver of a blue Jaguar were taken to hospital. The driver of the taxi was named by Lucky Seven Taxis as 31-year-old Talhat Mahmood from Normacot. Police bailed the 24-year-old driver of the Jaguar following his arrest on suspicion of dangerous driving but last night declined to name the 31year-old passenger from Sandford Hill, or say whether the two injured men had been discharged from hospital. Witnesses should call 0300 123 44 55.
CHOIR KEEPS ON SINGING SEE PAGE 15
Consultants will help force make further budget cuts
£480k EXPERTS TO SAVE POLICE CASH BY ALEX CAMPBELL
alex.campbell@thesentinel.co.uk
POLICE chiefs are set to spend almost £500,000 drafting in external consultants to help the force make further budget cuts and safeguard jobs. International professional services firm KPMG is to be called in to slash red tape and cut waste in back office services. The bill for consultants’ services will top £480,000 over 18 weeks – almost £4,000 a day, including weekends. But police chiefs, who say the force has exhausted its own ability to find savings, hope the investment will see a sevenfold return of almost £3.5 million. Chief Constable Mike Cunningham, pictured, said: “I am confident that any investment in consultants will deliver a more than adequate
retur n.” The Sentinel revealed last week that Staffordshire Police has lost 87 operational officers in 12 months and plans to shed 154 more over two years. Some officers are being forced to retire after 30 years of service under the A19 rule as the force cuts £38 million over four years. Recruitment has been frozen until May 2012 at the earliest. And a total of 124 police staff lost their jobs in 2010/11 and a further 152 will go in the next year. Consultants will work alongside staff in a number of departments before drawing up recommendations – providing the plan is approved by Staffordshire Police Authority at its meeting tomorrow. Mr Cunningham said: “There are savings to be made on the technical side through the reviewing of our business processes.
“These are things such as call handling and deployment, crime and defendant management and prisoner handling. “There’s good evidence there are significant efficiencies to be made. They are big areas of expenditure where we can save millions and I’m looking at it very closely. “But we don’t have the capacity in the force to review all of that ourselves.” Staffordshire Police Authority chairman David Pearsall said: “The consultants have been used by 17 forces across the country already and in some cases have delivered quite striking results. “People within the force have done a great job identifying savings up to now but they can’t go any further. Police staff and officers are not trained to do this kind of thing and the consultants should see things that we don’t see.” However Mark Judson, former chair-
Traders angry at ban on cars
man and current committee member of the Staffordshire Police Federation, said: “I find it quite difficult to comprehend why we’re spending so much money on consultants. “If we need expertise to assist us I’m sure it could be done at a much lower cost.” Staffordshire Police saved £11 million in 2010/11 and is hoping to make cuts of the same amount in this financial year. Alongside neighbouring West Midlands Police, the force has appointed a joint head of IT to streamline backoffice services. Police stations in Burslem, Stoke, Kidsgrove, Newcastle, Stone and Uttoxeter could also be closed and sold off in the next three years if suitable alternatives can be found.
What do you think? Email us at letters@ thesentinel.co.uk
BUSINESSES are claiming their takings have more than halved after traffic was banned from a town centre. The experimental trial in Longton has been criticised by traders, with some saying they will try to claim compensation from Stoke-onTrent City Council for loss of ear nings. See Page 4
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