Threads / Police Covenant Implementation / A number of stakeholders identified that the officer mainte…
Written Evidence Published 28 Jan 2026 ↗ View on Parliament

A number of stakeholders identified that the officer maintenance grant has led to police forces increasingly using officers in staff roles (that do not require a warranted police officer) – an expensive and inefficient practice.34 In written evidence, Leapwise estimated that this practice is costing policing at least £55 million a year.35 We were concerned that this approach to funding police officers may be incentivising practices that deliver poor value for money. The Home Office acknowledg...

A number of stakeholders identified that the officer maintenance grant has led to police forces increasingly using officers in staff roles (that do not require a warranted police officer) – an expensive and inefficient practice.34 In written evidence, Leapwise estimated that this practice is costing policing at least £55 million a year.35 We were concerned that this approach to funding police officers may be incentivising practices that deliver poor value for money. The Home Office acknowledged that successive governments 28 Q 60 29 Q 59 30 Letter from the College of Policing, 8 December 2025 31 Q 59 32 C&AG’s Report, para 1.6; Q 52 33 Q 34 3 Type: conclusion | Number: 15 | Response status: accepted Government response: 3.1 The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Recommendation implemented 3.2 The government has listened to policing’s concerns about the financial and operational impacts of requiring forces to maintain a centrally set number of officers; and have as