Thursday 11 April 2024

Thoughts on the Northern Territory Police Review 2024

 

…we will divest us both of rule,

Interest of territory, cares of state…

King Lear Act one, Scene one.

 

The publication of the NT Police Review (link here) provides a useful opportunity to consider the policy underpinnings of the role of policing in the NT. The review was undertaken by Vince Kelly, a former NT police officer and former head of the NT Police Association and was supported by a secretariat comprised of staff from the Chief Ministers Department and the NT Treasury. It set out 18 recommendations. I don’t propose to list them or summarise them.

 

The NT Government this week published the review, announcing that it accepts 15 of the 18 recommendations (link here). The Government has also announced a major boost to capital investment for police related infrastructure of $125 million over the coming five years. In the media release (link here) the Chief Minister asserts that the 2024 NT Budget provides $570 million over five years to implement the recommendations of the review.

 

My own take is that overall, the review is a major step in the right direction, and if implemented effectively will improve the quality of policing in the NT considerably. However, this is coming off a low base, with serious pre-existing underlying governance and management issues ensuring that the implementation task will be challenging. As Mr Kelly notes in his foreword, the review follows ‘a decade-long period of organisational and, in many instances, personal trauma for the institution of NTPF and individual members’.

 

The Executive summary provides useful context to the challenges the review is seeking to address:

The current demands for service on NTPF are unequivocally at the highest levels in the history of the agency. Those demands are being serviced in an increasingly adverse operating environment characterised by escalating levels of criminal offending across a number of crime types, corresponding community concern and alarm around issues of community safety and business confidence. … Historically, the NT has consistently recorded higher rates of crime across the majority of crime types and this pattern has continued with an overall crime rate more than double the national average. In the period 2018-2023 assault rates in the NT rose by 44.5% and crime against property rose by 16.8%.

Commensurately, in per capita terms, the NT is the most highly policed population in Australia, with 730 operational police staff per 100,000 people, compared to a national average of 281. When examined in geographical terms, NTPF provides policing services across a geographical area of approximately 1.42 million square kilometres, servicing a population of 252,473 people, of whom some 30% identify as Indigenous with approximately three quarters of that population living in remote and very remote areas.

 

These contextual observations, which have been evident for at least the past 25 years, suggest to me that while fixing the management, resourcing and governance of the NT police is important (indeed crucial), it will not of itself address the underlying structural drivers of this social dysfunction (and I am not referring just to the Indigenous population of the NT when I use this term). Unfortunately, our political system (in both the NT and nationally) appears incapable of focussing on, let alone proactively addressing, these deeper structural impediments. In essence, the NT (and arguably remote Australia generally) remains overwhelmingly neocolonial in its institutional structures, with substantial public and private investment available for commercial ‘development’ that extracts resources but leaves little in the way of ongoing infrastructure (physical, social or cultural) once those investments run their course.

 

Notwithstanding this strategic perspective, it is nevertheless important in my view that NT Police capabilities are progressively strengthened and modernised. To this end I add a small number of comments (in no particular order) regarding the review recommendations and the NT Government proposed response.

 

First, the recommendations that were not accepted by the NT Government provide demonstrable proof (if any is needed) that the NT Government is the prisoner of an ideology that prioritises commercial interests over the public interest. In her media release regarding the review, the Chief Minister states:

 The Territory Government does not accept the recommendation to reduce Police Auxiliary –  PALI – coverage on bottle shops in the Territory [recommendation 11] and does not accept the recommendation to discontinue using private security services in relation to reducing anti-social behaviour [recommendation 12].

 

There is no explanation or rationale provided for these decisions, and in my view, in each case the review made a credible policy argument in support of the recommendation. Yet in each case, they would have adversely affected commercial interests, in particular the alcohol industry and the commercial security industry. This blog has previously pointed to the overweight influence of alcohol interests  (link here and link here). The failure of the NT Government to prioritise the public interest in the development of alcohol policy is both a massive health and social catastrophe and is sowing the seeds of future social and economic dysfunction across the whole community.

 

Second, while the review recommendations relating to the Aboriginal Community Police Officer Program [recommendation 16, page 87] appear to be moving in the right direction, it seems well beyond time that the NT Government and the NT Police should bite the bullet and do away with what are (within the NT police organisational hierarchy) second class employees. There is no reason why Aboriginal Territorians should not expect to be recruited and trained to fill ordinary police roles.  Overall, the NT police employ only 10 percent Indigenous staff in a jurisdiction where the population is 30 percent Aboriginal, and where a substantial proportion of police efforts and activities are directed towards Aboriginal citizens. Such a decision will require political leadership. The continuation of the status quo (albeit with a strategy for incremental improvements taking decades) merely serves to confirm the point I made above that the NT remains a neocolonial outpost. I do not discount the implementation challenges in making the shift I am advocating, but the status quo in not merely untenable, it is corrosive of public trust, and thus makes the challenges of ensuring public safety for all more difficult.

 

Third, the section on remote police infrastructure (page 26) raises a more general issue not raised by the review (notwithstanding the involvement of the NT Treasury on the review secretariat). I refer of course to the principle of horizontal fiscal equalisation. The NT has been funded since at least the 1980s for the cost of providing remote policing services via its allocations of GST revenues as determined by the Grants Commission. There is no link between the calculation of the funding due to the NT and the geographic allocation of available funding. The fact that high levels of underinvestment in police services have persisted over decades despite the NT being notionally funded to provide those services serves to demonstrate (once again) that the structural determinants of public expenditure and investment are exclusionary rather than inclusionary (or even discriminatory).

 

Fourth, the case study on Gunbalunya included in the review as an appendix is worth a look as it makes tangible the impact of underinvestment in policing in remote communities. While the review makes no comment, the clear implication (confirmed by my own anecdotal knowledge) is that the levels of police resourcing in communities are chronically low.

 

Fifth, there are several fascinating data tables in the appendix to the review. To pick just one, section #28 lists real recurrent expenditure per person in the population for police services by jurisdiction over time. Over the past decade, the NT has consistently spent three times the average of all other Australian jurisdictions on policing per citizen. This is not just about remoteness but reflects the severe underinvestment in the full panoply of social and physical infrastructure necessary for building and sustaining viable communities.

 

Conclusion

This review and its implementation is a welcome step to improving the capacity and capability of the NT Police to ensure community safety across the NT. Unfortunately, it will not be sufficient to ensure that community safety outcomes improve and don’t worsen. These basic expectations for a modern democratic society have been progressively placed at risk over the past two decades in the NT. The solution requires more fundamental reforms, which in turn will not happen without the instigation and proactive involvement of the Commonwealth. Unfortunately, the Commonwealth appears disinclined to do anything more than offer band-   aids. Both levels of government appear to have divested themselves of the responsibilities of ‘ruling’ in the public interest.

 

My pessimistic conclusion is that the social cohesion of the NT will likely worsen over the coming decade. While the absence of social and physical infrastructure (housing, education outcomes, health outcomes) will be chief contributors, the trigger for flare ups will likely be the absence of an effective regulatory regime for alcohol consumption in the NT. The role of the police will become more visible and more important as they are given the task of dealing with the consequences of long-standing policy ineptitude by the NT political class.

 

11 April 2024

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