‘Justice centre’ could be closed

A £3 MILLON office complex aimed at speeding up justice and giving crime victims a better deal could close under Government spending cuts.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) is proposing to shut its joint offices with North Yorkshire Police at Athena House, Clifton Moor, York.

The purpose-built complex cost £3 million, and was opened in 2005 in a bid to cut court delays and costs by putting police and prosecutors alongside each other working from the same files.

But now the CPS is proposing moving most of its North Yorkshire and York work to its Leeds base, though the organisation would maintain a York presence at a location to be announced.

It currently has 64 staff based at Athena House, including all those who handle cases from York and Selby.

A CPS spokesman said: “If implemented, the proposal will enable the quality of our service to the people of North Yorkshire to be maintained at a time when, along with all government departments, staff numbers are reducing considerably. Digital working will complement the proposed consolidation of our operations across Yorkshire and Humberside. It will enable information to be shared electronically across our offices in Yorkshire and Humberside, and with police colleagues. Eventually we will no longer be reliant on a paper file.”

The department will finish an “informal” consultation with its staff, trade unions, local courts, the probation service, police and others tomorrow.

A North Yorkshire Police spokesman said: “As the CPS are still in negotiations with their staff about a possible move, it is inappropriate for the force to make any comment at this stage.”

Athena House was opened by the then Chief Constable of North Yorkshire, Della Cannings, who hailed it as “essential” in making her force the best in the country and giving an “improved standard of victim and witness care”. Also at the opening was the then Director of Public Prosecutions, now Sir Ken MacDonald QC.

His successor, Keir Starmer QC, was in York last week for a pre-planned visit to meet and talk to staff.

The CPS said there would be no compulsory redundancies among its staff.

Comments(6)

meme says...
10:57am Wed 2 May 12

The amount of offices available at Clifton Moor and the lack of demand need CoYC to rethink their strategies for housing
Much of this land could be provided for housing increasing stock and getting rid of the office oversupply which is not needed

dementia says...
1:06pm Wed 2 May 12

No No Surely not. York City council had to build a new office block in the City Centre....cant have been any ready made solutions

big boy york says...
1:46pm Wed 2 May 12

i worked for the cps until last summer when i was made redundant this report doesnt mention that the piccadilly branch will also be going to leeds at the end of this year when the lease on the building runs out & the governments refusal to renew it there was once 6 floors working now whats left is crammed into 3 floors not only will cps staff lose there jobs but also the facility team, security & cleaners

whitehorse says...
4:43pm Wed 2 May 12

big boy york wrote:
i worked for the cps until last summer when i was made redundant this report doesnt mention that the piccadilly branch will also be going to leeds at the end of this year when the lease on the building runs out & the governments refusal to renew it there was once 6 floors working now whats left is crammed into 3 floors not only will cps staff lose there jobs but also the facility team, security & cleaners
Considering the complete lack of grammar or good English in this statement, I really hope you weren't a lawyer...

Pete the Brickie says...
5:05pm Wed 2 May 12



Athena House was opened by the then Chief Constable of North Yorkshire, Della Cannings, who hailed it as “essential” in making her force the best in the country



It can't have helped that much, the North Yorkshire service was one of the worst in the country under Ms Cannings. It was also much dearer than her shower which unlike this fiasco at least stopped her smelling of BO.



A CPS spokesperson said:

Digital working will complement the proposed consolidation of our operations across Yorkshire and Humberside. It will enable information to be shared electronically across our offices in Yorkshire and Humberside, and with police colleagues

The CPS said there would be no compulsory redundancies among its staff.




Pete translates says:

Us and the coppers had email, broadband internet, fax machines, telephones, radios, and every other type of communication equipment we have now back in 2005. What be don't have now however is a government which thinks money grows on trees, someone with a brain has asked us why we need this lavishly appointed office block to meet the police and each other in, we had to admit it was over the top and we can relocate all our staff elsewhere and use electronic methods to do these things, this being the case we can save a fortune by closing it and nobody will face redundancy. Luckily for us phones have got bigger screens now and Apple have invented ipads so we can claim our jobs would have been impossible before without blowing 3 million to build this particular large African/Indian mammal with a long memory and perculiar light colouring.

Guy Fawkes says...
11:41pm Wed 2 May 12

I believe that York had a perfectly good "justice centre" for several centuries, otherwise known as the Knavesmire.

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