Helicopter help costs North Yorkshire Police force £125k

HIRING airborne help to carry out searches and track criminals cost North Yorkshire Police £125,000 last year.

The bill for the force’s use of a search helicopter owned by a neighbouring force can be revealed by The Press following an analysis of North Yorkshire’s annual accounts.

As well as the cost of borrowing helicopters, the force also had to pay West Yorkshire Police £25,000 during 2011/12 for the assistance of its underwater search unit, including a boat which is used to scour the region’s waterways for missing people and those who have found themselves in difficulties on its rivers.

North Yorkshire Police does not have its own helicopter, meaning it enlists the help of an “eye in the sky” run by forces such as West Yorkshire Police and Cleveland Police when it is deemed necessary.

It can be used for tracing suspects and it can also be used to monitor large crowds at football matches and other sporting occasions and major events.

Recently, a helicopter was brought in as part of North Yorkshire Police’s investigation into a fight in York which left former boxing champ Henry Wharton in hospital.

In January, it was used in an operation to catch a suspected burglar who was eventually found hiding in a wheelie bin in the city.

There are currently plans for a new UK-wide airborne service to fight crime.

Helicopters run by forces across England and Wales are to be merged into a single National Police Air Service in a move intended to save more than £15 million off the bill for policing from the air.

The new service would see the number of aircraft operated by police reduced from 31 to 23 across 20 bases.

Comments(7)

ouseswimmer says...
8:20am Sat 8 Sep 12

I dread to think what the cost of following the Olympic Torch came to. I still have no idea just what they expected to see that anyone on the ground couldn't.

CHISSY1 says...
12:56pm Sat 8 Sep 12

ouseswimmer wrote:
I dread to think what the cost of following the Olympic Torch came to. I still have no idea just what they expected to see that anyone on the ground couldn't.
"Obviously you know nothing about helicopters"

markymmark says...
7:51pm Sat 8 Sep 12

Recently, a helicopter was brought in as part of North Yorkshire Police’s investigation into a fight in York which left former boxing champ Henry Wharton in hospital.

I thought he said that he fell playing football !!

PKH says...
11:22pm Sat 8 Sep 12

Yet more cheap lazy headlines from the press. It would cost a darn site more than £125k for NYP to run their own helicopter and £25k to have their own underwater search team.

Big Nic says...
5:08pm Sun 9 Sep 12

What's all this anti police rubbish this paper is spouting. The reason for the bill is because actually running a helicopter would cost 10 times that amount so instead the police pay only for what they need. The reason one is brought in is to provide a better service to the public they serve often in situations where a life is at risk.

Even AndyD says...
9:16am Mon 10 Sep 12

PKH wrote:
Yet more cheap lazy headlines from the press. It would cost a darn site more than £125k for NYP to run their own helicopter and £25k to have their own underwater search team.
Quite and what is with all the Freedom of Information stories? Seems to be one a day almost. Google suggests FOI searches can cost the taxpayer £600 a time, maybe we should have a story about how much the Press is costing the taxpayer each year!

Pete the Brickie says...
11:28am Mon 10 Sep 12

Even AndyD wrote:
PKH wrote:
Yet more cheap lazy headlines from the press. It would cost a darn site more than £125k for NYP to run their own helicopter and £25k to have their own underwater search team.
Quite and what is with all the Freedom of Information stories? Seems to be one a day almost. Google suggests FOI searches can cost the taxpayer £600 a time, maybe we should have a story about how much the Press is costing the taxpayer each year!
That might be true in some cases, but they are allowed to charge a "reasonable fee", however most requests take no more than a minute or two of a force legal clerl's time and it would cost them more to process the invoices.

I agree that hiring a helicopter is cheaper than owning one, the sharing policy is a government initiative to prevent misuse and waste.

I know of an instance where NYP called for the Humberside force's chopper to assist in the arrest of two members of the public who were attempting to detain a car thief in the absence of police officers, the police assistance prior to the moment one of them struck the thief was to provide a crime number and warn one of them pursuing his stolen car not to use a mobile phone while driving as he begged them for help.

click2find

About cookies

We want you to enjoy your visit to our website. That's why we use cookies to enhance your experience. By staying on our website you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more about the cookies we use.

I agree