POLICE Scotland’s civic watchdog has been dismissed as a government-appointed quango which is blurring transparency and accountability in scrutiny of the force.
Reform Scotland said the creation of a single police force was “a mistake” and reform is necessary to reinstate local policing.
The Scottish Police Authority (SPA), a board of 11 ministerial appointees from the public and private sector, should be replaced by a much larger board including councillors from every local authority, the think tank has recommended.
It also criticised the Scottish Government’s centralisation of police funding, insisting councils cannot have meaningful input on local policing unless they also control some of the revenue.
In a paper on reinventing local policing, Reform Scotland said: “He who pays the piper calls the tune, and if local authorities are to have any meaningful input into policing in Scotland they must contribute toward the cost of policing.
“There needs to be a change back to the old system where there is roughly a 50/50 split in funding policing between local authorities and the Scottish Government.
“The Scottish Police Authority is basically a quango with members appointed by government and this blurs transparency and accountability.
“The membership should be made up of a split between local government and central government appointees to reflect the split in funding.
“To ensure that the need for diversity and flexibility is accommodated by a single police force, it would be necessary to have a representative from each local authority.”
The think tank acknowledged that a board featuring councillors from 32 local authorities would be very large but it has also recommended a review of council boundaries as part of a wider programme of reform.
Reform Scotland research director Alison Payne said: “The creation of Police Scotland was a mistake and in the absence of any further wholesale reform we all have a responsibility to make the smaller changes which can help re-create local policing.”
Liberal Democrat justice spokesman Liam McArthur said: “Officers, civilian staff and communities alike have been left counting the cost of these botched reforms.
“The SNP were warned time and again that centralising the police would damage local policing but they did not listen.
“There is an urgent need to put democracy back into policing and boosting the role of councils in shaping local policing plans would be a sensible step in the right direction.”
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