At least £21m of help for victims could be wasted if controversial government plans to hand control of budgets to police and crime commissioners go ahead, according to the charity Victim Support.
Victim Support states that even by the Government’s own estimate the costs of this form-filling would mean the loss of:
Intensive support for 25,000 victims of domestic violence
Support for 20,000 victims of antisocial behaviour
Installation of 15,000 home alarm kits for victims of burglary and
100,000 personal alarms given to victims of personal or street crime.
Victim Support is therefore calling on the Government to rethink plans which it believes are unworkable, damaging and dangerous and could abandon people when they are at their most vulnerable.
Victim Support is also publishing a Victims’ Services Alliance response to the consultation, with 24 victims and witnesses organisations altogether.
If implemented, Victim Support note the Government’s plans will also:
Break up the existing network of nearly 7,000 highly trained Victim Support volunteers, which currently saves the taxpayer over £20m a year.
Without this network, victims of large scale criminal incidents, the police and local authorities will all be less able to rely on consistent local support.
Create patchy services for victims and witnesses. This – and the Government’s desire to focus support on far fewer types of crime – means that some victims may miss out on any support.
Reduce the money available to spend on victims and witnesses by
£3m per year, by reducing Victim Support’s ability to fundraise.
Divert millions of pounds to private sector firms – money which would be better spent on helping victims.
Put the security of victims’ personal information at risk – with significant implications for the police who currently routinely share victims’ data with Victim Support.
Javed Khan, chief executive of Victim Support, said: “We welcome some of the Government’s proposals for victims and witnesses. However, we have serious concerns about plans to break up existing secure and locally-based ways of helping them in favour of what will inevitably be a more expensive, fragmented and inefficient system.
“It makes no sense to reinvent the wheel by asking police and crime commissioners to purchase services for victims. Victim Support has been successfully giving help to victims and witnesses for nearly 40 years.
"It is simply unacceptable that they could lose out on support to the value of £21m because of additional red tape and paper pushing. It’s making innocent victims needlessly suffer twice.
“Getting it right for victims and witnesses should be about putting their needs at the heart of changes, not making proposals which have the potential to abandon them when they are at their most vulnerable.”









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