Cheshire East urges chief constable to scrap plans to axe 70 per cent of county's PCSOs
By Belinda Ryan - Local Democracy Reporter 15th Dec 2025
By Belinda Ryan - Local Democracy Reporter 15th Dec 2025
Cheshire East Council is urging the chief constable to scrap plans which could see up to 70 per cent of the county's PCSOs axed.
All but one of the 69 councillors present at this month's meeting of the full council, backed a notice of motion from Cllr Janet Clowes (Con) and Cllr Julie Smith (non-grouped) calling for plans to axe 60 of the 87 roles to be rescinded.
The call comes after Cheshire Police launched an internal consultation last month to save £13 million over the next four years through reducing PCSOs (police community support officers) and redistributing warranted police officers into neighbourhood policing teams.
Cllr Smith (Handforth) said: "PCSOs are neighbourhood policing.
"They're the visible face of our police force. They are human facial recognition and their role within our communities must not be underestimated."
She told the councillors at Tatton Park: "At the start of every shift, our PCSO in Handforth posts on social media.
"The post includes his photograph, phone number, an email address and a brief rundown of his itinerary for the day.
"This is then shared to 10 community Facebook pages, which are accessed by more than 4,000 members.
"This is neighbourhood policing.
"The reassurance that our residents have, that they can contact a police officer there and then, should they need them.
"We have been told that this invaluable service is to be replaced by a warranted neighbourhood officer who can only be contacted by an email or a 20-minute call to 101, both of which, in my personal experience, have failed miserably in recent months."
Cllr Clowes said Chief Constable Mark Roberts' plans to cut the number of PCSOs seemed to directly contradict government policy.
"The neighbourhood policing guarantee clearly states that rebuilding the links between police forces and our communities will be achieved by delivering additional neighbourhood warranted officers and PCSOs.
"This is not a choice between warranted officers and PCSOs, but a required rise in both designations," she said.
"A decision to reduce PCSOs by a whopping 70 per cent appears to be contrary to the objectives of the national program."
The Wybunbury councillor added: "What the hard quantitative, strategic or financial data cannot adequately portray is the qualitative value of the PCSO role in our communities…
"In particular, the role of PCSOs in our rural communities cannot be underestimated, and it is difficult to understand how their roles can be replicated by warranted officers across large geographical areas.
"The value of the role is immense."
The notice of motion will now be sent to the chief constable and the police and crime commissioner.
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