This
story came to me Sunday, through Twitter-pal UK Cop Humour, who usually tweets a
lot of silly
stuff. But this one is
different.
Background:
there have been a lot of cutbacks to frontline policing in the UK—I don’t know
the details, but there have been huge numbers of tweets about it, and the basic
research I’ve done indicates the usual: Parliament demands value for money, do
more with less, etc. Same thing for fire and ambulance services, and public
(NHS) hospitals.
(As an
aside, and you can interpret the politics on your own, Parliament has also just
voted themselves an 11% pay raise. This was their response to the continuing
scandals about what they were claiming
as expenses—well, if we can’t be reimbursed for theatre tickets, duck
blinds and packets of crisps, then I need to make much more than £66,396 per
year for a half-time job. And, Bob’s-yer-uncle, an extra £7300!)
You
should read this story all the way through because you need to catch the tone,
but the summary is that—apparently due to budgetary cutbacks—a local station in
some unnamed city was deemed adequately staffed at four officers…to cover 12 square miles…on a
Saturday night.
Listen—12
square miles in any British city is going to include double- or triple-digit
numbers of bars, clubs, pubs, liquor stores and other venues that invite all kinds of
troublemaking, so to declare minimally-acceptable staffing on a Saturday night as
four officers is kind of eye opening to begin with.
But the
story’s not about that—not directly, anyway. It’s about a cop being called out
to the home of a 95-year-old woman, whom he calls Doris for purposes of
narration (and I’m referring to the constable as “he” for purposes of
narration, as well, since I don’t know his/her anatomical disposition), who
needs an ambulance to take her to the hospital that discharged her only hours
before. Doris had got up at 2100 to make a cup of tea, slipped, fallen and
cracked her head. It took her four hours to drag herself to the phone to call
999; at the time of the call, no ambulance “could commit”, so they sent out one
quarter of the available police, the only one not already involved in some
action.
Once at
the scene, our guy tried for two hours to get an ambulance to take Doris to hospital…a
couple of miles away. He couldn’t move her for fear of breaking something—she’s
95, for pity’s sake, and he’s only got himself there. He couldn’t even get her
sitting up without massive pain, so she lay on the floor until finally, at 0320,
the paramedics arrived. It took these trained professionals 40 minutes to get
her into their bus and stabilized for the journey.
Well,
the bare bones of this story don’t do it justice, so you have to read the
original. Because the anguish, the frustration, the helplessness and maybe
some fear, are all evident in the cop’s account. Which, he points out, is going
to repeat by some order of magnitude when they close down his station and move those
four officers seven miles away. To save money.
(I’m
sitting here wondering how many police stations or extra ambulances could be funded
by the approximately £4.75M per year MP raises will amount to. But I understand
we’re talking different pots of money. And nobody’s going to pry that dosh from
the parliamentary fists. As with pols pretty much the world over, when it comes
to money, they’ve got the grip of a pit bull.)
Now,
here’s the thing that struck me about this: at age 95, Doris has survived the
influenza pandemic of 1918-19, the General Strike of 1926, the Great
Depression, World War II, post-war austerities that lasted through much of the
1950s, Thatcher and a whole raft of other things. This is obviously a woman
with heart and nerve, even if her joints are rheumatic and her step a bit
uncertain.
And the
1942 Beveridge report that led to post-war social changes in Britain was based
on the notion that everyone had made sacrifices to defeat Nazism, and therefore
the nation owed its citizens some basic things—housing, education, employment, healthcare.
You can make the case that subsequent generations have taken the piss over this
social contract, and God knows that the NHS is completely swamped and falling further
behind every day.
But the
Dorises of Britain fucking earned
these services, including not being discharged from hospital if there was any
question of her ability to care for herself (no intermediary care facility? WTF?),
and to have an ambulance respond without having its metaphoric ankles chewed on
for hours. By cops—so they knew the
need was genuine. Even, as our narrator points out, deploying a pair of constables might at
least have got Doris comfortable for that unconscionable wait.
As you
know, I’m acutely aware of emergency
services here in the Valley they call Silicon—every time the engines from
Fire Station No. 4 roll I listen for any follow-on sirens on El Camino that
might indicate there’s something really awful going on.
But it’s
all awful; whenever these guys are
called out, it’s always awful for someone.
As the story of Doris and our lone, frustrated, helpless cop illustrates. So
there’s just something fundamentally wrong about this situation.
I’m not
talking about fairness—we all know that life isn’t fair. This is about a social
contract made with people like Doris, which her elected government has reneged
on; in fact, her elected government is pretending it doesn’t exist.
I
understand that the budgetary problems didn’t show up last week; they’ve been
building for decades. And there are multiple layers of causes and blah, blah,
blah. And for all the people involved in the various melees, robberies, road
accidents and whatnot that went on while our constable remained with Doris—really
sorry your government thinks that four officers constitutes adequate staffing
for a Saturday night.
Meanwhile,
the Dorises of the country lie in pain on their floor, the constables are
weeping (inside if not outright) at their inability to help, and Parliament is
spending £65,000 to do up a couple of toilets for the House of Lords because
what they have now isn’t befitting their status in the world.
O brave
new world indeed that has such people in’t!
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