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| Committees > MPA > 26 May 05 > Responding to the report of The Morris Inquiry - update | |||
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Page summary This resource is from the Committees section. This is report 11 of the 26 May 2005 meeting of the MPA Committee and provides and update to the response to the report of The Morris Inquiry. Sections available here: Content Responding to the report of The Morris Inquiry - updateReport: 11 SummaryThis report provides an update on the work of committees and the Steering Group in taking forward the recommendations of the Morris Inquiry Report. A. RecommendationsThat the report be noted. (Any observations from the Equal Opportunities & Diversity Board and the Human Resources Committee will be reported to the full Authority.) B. Supporting information1. In February the Authority agreed to adopt the Morris Inquiry Report as a framework for change in the MPS and the MPA. In doing so, it also agreed the process for taking the work forward. The 37 recommendations in the report were allocated to the relevant committees – the Equal Opportunities & Diversity Board, the Human Resources Committee and the Professional Standards & Complaints Committee; these committees are now responsible for ensuring the work is taken forward. The Morris Steering Group is responsible for taking the strategic overview to ensure that progress is being maintained and to address cross-committee / service issues. 2. So, the detailed work will be carried out via these committees. However, the Steering Group is anxious to maintain the profile and importance of this work by way of regular reports to the full Authority or the Co-ordination & Policing Committee as appropriate. This is the first such report. 3. Two other reports have been published in recent months:
Strategic themes4. What the MPS and MPA officers have proposed, therefore, and the Steering Group supports, is an approach that groups the recommendations of all the reports in eight strategic themes, each with a stated outcome and a strategic owner at a senior level. The Steering Group was the first point of consultation and these proposals are due to be considered by the MPS Management Board in early June. Consultation and communicationStrategic owner: Deputy Commissioner Paul Stephenson Strategic outcome: To ensure that all staff are involved where appropriate in the decision-making processes and that the outcomes are clearly communicated within the MPS. Support for staffStrategic owner: Martin Tiplady, Director of Human Resources Strategic outcome: To provide support through packages that are designed to cater for the changing needs of staff across a wide range of issues Recruitment and progressionStrategic owner: Martin Tiplady, Director of Human Resources Strategic outcome: To ensure that open and transparent recruitment and retention processes exists for all staff and that they are able to develop to their full potential within the MPS. DiversityStrategic owner: Deputy Commissioner Paul Stephenson Strategic outcome: To ensure that all staff, in their actions and behaviour, promote respect and value all aspects of diversity. Training and developmentStrategic owner: Martin Tiplady Strategic outcome: To ensure that all staff and managers are appropriately developed to enable them to carry out their role to a competent standard with confidence. Professional standardsStrategic owner: Assistant Commissioner Alan Brown Strategic outcome: To ensure that DPS conducts its business in a manner that secures the confidence of the organisation and the public with the use of appropriate investigative practices and robust management Building capabilityStrategic owner: Assistant Commissioner Alan Brown Strategic outcome: To improve service delivery by reducing duplication and bureaucracy, enhance capability through devolving to the front line, and utilising resources in a sharper and smarter way. MPA issuesStrategic owner: David Riddle, Deputy Chief Executive Strategic outcome: To ensure that the MPA discharges its responsibilities in a number of areas, including police complaints and discipline and the general duty under the Race Relations Amendment Act. 5. In addition, the Steering Group will need to agree an approach to addressing those recommendations with national implications, but on which the MPA will have a view and would want to see progressed. 6. The Steering Group will be arranging for the strategic owners to attend its next three meetings to hear from them their vision, strategy, timeframe and resources for taking forward their strategic theme. 7. The Steering Group has not finally settled the detail of how in practice it will maintain a strategic overview and monitor progress. However, it is proposed that a main part of its approach will be to select one key recommendation for each theme, which could be seen as a ‘portal’ through which improvements in other areas of MPS work would occur. Focussing on these recommendations will provide a strategic steer to the delivery of these outcomes and will complement the work being carried out by the MPA committees. External involvement and Independent Advisory Groups (IAGs)8. The Steering Group is conscious of the need to make implementation an inclusive exercise, building in points along the way to consult with all relevant stakeholders. It has also decided that it would be helpful to have appropriate representatives of the five issue-based IAGs working alongside the Steering Group, not necessarily attending every meeting but by being involved at appropriate stages. 9. The Steering Group has also decided, in some ways as a spur to progress, to hold a Stakeholder Conference in December – one year on from the publication of the Morris Report – focussing on what has been achieved since publication. 10. The Morris Report made a number of recommendations about Independent Advisory Groups. The Steering Group is unlikely to propose acceptance of the recommendation that the MPA should appoint the members of IAGs, but the Steering Group can see merit in the view that there should be greater transparency about appointments, role and operating procedures and scope for enabling the IAGs to exchange ideas from each other and elsewhere. The Steering Group will be returning to this issue at its next meeting and is conscious that the IAGs themselves must be engaged in the process of developing best practice. Work in Committees11. It is probably fair to say that the committees are at the stage of developing their thinking on how to carry out their role in relation to the Morris recommendations. The Professional Standards & Complaints Committee has a work programme and both the Equal Opportunities & Diversity Board and the Human Resources Committee are actively considering how to take the work forward. Now that the MPS has a process for addressing the recommendations in a manageable way progress through the committees is expected to pick up – the Steering Group will monitor this as part of its role. C. Race and equality impactRace and equality issues are fundamental to the Morris Report. They must, therefore, also be integral to the way that the MPA and the MPS address its recommendations. As part of this, there must be provision in the programme to consult with and involve stakeholder organisations at relevant stages. D. Financial implicationsNo specific implications arising from this report. E. Background papersF. Contact detailsReport author: Simon Vile, MPA. For more information contact:
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| Committees > MPA > 26 May 05 > Responding to the report of The Morris Inquiry - update | |||
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