TONY Hogg has this week announced that he will not seek re-election as police and crime commissioner for Devon, Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly next May.

Mr Hogg, who was elected in November 2012, said he was proud of his achievements during 32 months in office.

'The vision of the PCC role at the 2012 election was undeveloped but I have been strongly motivated throughout because I know now that it is an essential role and the police have never been held to account so effectively — a view confirmed by Her Majesty's Inspector of Constabulary,' he said.

Mr Hogg has always been at pains to explain that police governance did not begin with the election of PCCs.

'The governance role of policing has been in place for 180 years in one form or another and, as PCC, I replaced the police authority,' he said.

'The police authority was a very different model primarily conducting scrutiny work. My team conducts a far wider ranging and deeper body of work; put simply we are now delivering much more for less cost.

'For example, the police authority would not have conducted a fundamental review of the 101 service, transformed the police performance-reporting model, commissioned services from community safety providers or established a victim care unit — all big pieces of work achieved since I took office.

'And, based on police authority assumptions, we would have had less police officers by now.'

Mr Hogg said he is firmly focused on what he wishes to achieve in his remaining eight months in office.

'I have three main priorities that will keep me working right up to the point that I hand over to the next commissioner — improving police funding, effective community policing and the transformation of volunteering and the Special Constabulary,' he said. 

'My campaign to achieve fair funding for Devon and Cornwall Police in the annual policing grant forms a leading part of our plans to meet public sector savings targets.

'Without approximately £12-million that a fair formula would bring to Devon and Cornwall, much of what we currently take for granted will be at risk including neighbourhood policing and the connection the police have with the public.'

Before he hands over to a new commissioner Mr Hogg will be engaging in the development and implementation of a new policing model which Chief Constable Shaun Sawyer is in the process of producing.

Mr Hogg's final priority is to offer the public better opportunities to support the police through volunteering both as special constables and non-uniformed roles.

'This year we will launch significant schemes to attract members of the community who want to play a part in policing. Volunteering better links policing to the community, strengthens social capital and helps provide a visible presence,' he said.

Mr Hogg said although he had been elected as a Conservative, there was no place for party politics in the role of the commissioner.

Mr Hogg said it had been 'a privilege and a pleasure' to serve as police and crime commissioner and he would miss talking to the public and spending time with police who did 'a fantastic job, often unrecognised'.