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Staffordshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner reflects on abolition of his role

By Kerry Ashdown - Local Democracy Reporter   18th Nov 2025

Ben Adams, Staffordshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, has spoken out after it was announced that the role would be axed (image via LDRS)
Ben Adams, Staffordshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, has spoken out after it was announced that the role would be axed (image via LDRS)

Staffordshire's Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner has spoken out after the Government announced the role will be axed in the coming years.

Ben Adams was re-elected to the position last year – but will not be contesting a third term in 2028 following the national announcement last week.

Home Office minister Sarah Jones said the Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) role, introduced in November 2012, had not worked, with the public having little awareness of who their PCC is, and is showing little sign in improving confidence in police.

Their powers will be transferred to regional mayors or policing and crime boards made up of local council leaders.

In some areas, including Staffordshire, PCCs have also taken on the role of overseeing their local fire service, becoming Police, Fire and Crime Commissioners (PFCCs).

The first PCC elected in Staffordshire was Conservative Matthew Ellis, who was succeeded by fellow Tory Ben Adams in 2021 after elections were delayed by a year due to the Covid pandemic.

But Ms Jones, speaking in the House of Commons, said: "We will no longer run separate policing elections, and we will also abolish police and crime panels, the current structure that performs scrutiny panels for PCCs.

"We estimate that at least £100 million will be saved this Parliament by moving to these new arrangements.

"The reality is that the PCC model has weakened local police accountability and has had perverse impacts on the recruitment of chief constables.

"They have failed to inspire confidence in local people, in stark contrast to the mayoral model, which has clearly been ultimately more successful.

"Once delivered, the changes are expected to achieve savings to the Home Office of around £20 million a year, enough to fund around 320 extra police constables."

Mr Adams responded to the decision at Monday's Police, Fire and Crime Panel meeting (November 17). He said: "It's not every week you get abolished.

"It's certainly not every week you get told that something of that significance is going to happen and it's going to be announced an hour later, which I didn't appreciate.

"I didn't think that gave me and my colleagues around the country enough time to properly brief our teams prior to the announcement being made public.

"To summarise, the Government is not going to continue with the next election for Police, Fire and Crime Commissioners across the country.

"This term will run out in May 2028 and then there will be a move, in places that have strategic Mayors, to a Mayoralty where they will appoint a Deputy Mayor; possibly for both roles, possibly one Deputy Mayor overseeing both.

"I had already prepared my team and we were already working towards potentially passing onto a Mayor in three or four years' time. We were working the organisation into a position where it would be so lean and effective that a Mayor would be able to concentrate on their economic tasks.

"I think the thing that's concerned me about the proposals is there's likely to be an interim in the majority of areas that won't have Mayors, which will mean a Police Crime and potentially Fire Board made up of the top tier authority leaders and some independents.

"They will appoint someone along the lines of a Deputy Mayor, so a similarly-paid person to pay attention to the two services, but I'm not comfortable with the blurring of accountability across multiple council leaders."

The end of the current Commissioner's term of office in two and a half years' time is set to coincide with major changes to local government structure in Staffordshire.

The current county, district and borough councils are due to be abolished in 2028, to be replaced by a unitary authority system.

Councils are currently preparing proposals for future authority areas, with a November 28 deadline to submit detailed plans to the Government.

Five different proposals for revamping Staffordshire's political map have come forward, including an east and west split and new northern and southern councils.

Mr Adams told councillors at Monday's meeting: "To add to the weight of challenge that you all have as local government councillors and representatives, you will now have leaders who will be taking responsibility for community safety, setting up a new board to do that and potentially, in the bulk of the country, bringing fire and rescue under that banner too.

"There's real challenges there because Government has yet to clarify the position on the operational independence for fire, and to determine the employer; for fire I remain the employer at the moment, although that needs dealing with.

"The other concern for me is that in places that are going to have the boards, that will mean two transitions – one to a board and then possibly two years later onto a Mayor.

"That doesn't seem like good, efficient effective business to me, that feels like an opportunity for distraction and an opportunity for not a lot to get done.

"I am somewhat concerned that the pace of the last few years will not be repeated beyond 2028 for a while. But in the meantime, some reassurance for the public and businesses in Staffordshire, I'm not going anywhere for the next two and a half years.

"As far as I'm concerned this is a full-time operation. I will be keeping my oversight of the two services, watching the budget, making necessary investments and keeping the place as safe as I possibly can."

     

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