Thames Valley and Hampshire police 拢39m call system delayed by year
- Published
A "cutting edge" computer system to be used to deploy police officers to emergencies has been delayed by more than a year and gone 拢12m over budget.
The joint initiative by Thames Valley Police and Hampshire Constabulary has now been put back three times since its original launch date in January 2018.
The forces say the system is "not performing to the standard we expect or require" and have allocated another 拢7m to the project.
It is now expected in spring next year.
The Contact Management Platform (CMP), developed by Microsoft, will be the first used by UK police forces when it goes live.
The system will replace more than 20 systems across both forces and give call handlers instant information on screen about a caller, recent crimes in an area and other data.
It will also recommend the most appropriate police resources to deploy, but "rigorous testing" has delayed the system three times.
Thames Valley Police and Crime Commissioner Anthony Stansfeld, who agreed an extra 拢4m of funding, said he was "supportive of the rigorous approach Thames Valley Police is taking" to the "essential" testing and the roll out of the CMP.
Mr Stansfeld added that it would also allow the force to improve more systems than originally planned.
In a joint statement Thames Valley Chief Constable Francis Habgood, and Hampshire Chief Constable Olivia Pinkney, said: "We are all keen to reap the benefits of CMP but we cannot compromise the safety of the public, officers and staff by rushing this."
Both added they "remain confident in the reliability of our current systems".
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