Home secretary refuses to cover cost of policing Operation Stack on M20 in Kent
Published: 16:00, 27 January 2016
Updated: 16:29, 27 January 2016
Kent taxpayers will have to pick up the bill for policing Operation Stack after the government refused to pay it.
The county's crime commissioner Ann Barnes applied to the Home Secretary to cover the £576,925 cost of enforcing the controversial system last year.
But she has now expressed her "utter surprise and disappointment" after Theresa May turned down the request.
The traffic management scheme - which allows lorries to park on the M20 while they wait to cross the Channel - was implemented several times last year.
It caused chaos for residents, motorists and lorry drivers, particularly between June 23 and August 2, when it was in place for 28 days in a row.
"It is simply not acceptable for those extra costs to be borne by the taxpayers in Kent" - Ann Barnes
At peak times, there were 112 members of Kent Police staff working on the operation every 24 hours.
Mrs Barnes sent a letter to the policing minister Mike Penning MP in November, requesting reimbursement under the Home Office Special Grant Process.
Speaking today after the bid was turned down, Mrs Barnes said: "Operation Stack is acknowledged as a national problem now, and yet policing services in Kent have been put under strain to deal with it.
"Local taxpayers should not have to pick up the bill for the inability of others to solve the problem.
"I need to discuss with the Home Office, as a matter of urgency, about how we can take things forward from here to make sure that Kent Police is not left carrying the can in the future.
"It is simply not acceptable to have to routinely divert police resources to cover Stack and for those extra costs to be borne by the taxpayers in Kent.
"In fact, on my way to the office only this morning I was worried when I passed hundreds of lorries parked up on the M20, thanks to a difficulty in the tunnel and the adverse weather conditions.
"It would seem from the Home Secretary’s decision that should Operation Stack be called again the taxpayers of Kent will be unfairly expected to pay for policing it. This misery has been going on for years and will continue until we get a long-term solution."
In a statement, the Home Office said that the request had been carefully considered but did not comply with its guidance on making discretionary payments to cover unexpected costs.
Mike Penning, the policing minister, hinted that the force could cover the costs from its reserves:
"Police forces should include within their policing and budget plans reasonable contingencies for unexpected events in their areas," he said.
"Special Grant funding is usually only available when the additional costs are more than one per cent of the PCC's budget, or where the additional costs might threaten the financial stability of the force.
“At 31 March 2015, the Kent PCC had £34.4m in resource reserves, which increased by more than ten per cent last year.”
The Home Office statement added that the sum requested represented 0.2% of the force budget and any emergency funding had to equate to a minimum of 1%.
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