
Attacks on emergency workers in Cumbria were recorded more often than almost anywhere else in the country last year, figures show.
Home Office figures show Cumbria Constabulary recorded 544 assaults on emergency workers in the year to March.
Most of the alleged victims were police officers – there were 403 assaults without injury on PCs last year and 95 with injury, while there were 46 on other emergency workers.
The total number recorded last year was up from 425 in 2020-21, when assaults on emergency workers who are not police constables were recorded for the first time.
Using the latest population estimates, that equates to 10.9 offences for every 10,000 people in Cumbria – meaning it was also one of the highest rates in England and Wales.
Across the two nations, 44,600 emergency worker assaults were recorded in 2021-22 – a rise of 10 per cent on the 40,400 the year before.
Since the Assaults on Emergency Workers Bill came into law in 2018, the maximum prison sentence for common assault on an emergency worker has been 12 months.
The offence applies to attacks on ‘blue light’ workers such as the police, paramedics and fire fighters, along with many others, including prison officers, NHS workers, and St John Ambulance volunteers.
The Police Federation said the rise in assaults on emergency workers was appalling and must not be tolerated or seen as just part of the job.
Steve Hartshorn, national chairman of the organisation, added: “Crime levels rose once COVID restrictions were lifted and a split-second act of violence, whether an injury is sustained or not, often leaves devastating and long-term effects on police officers.
“The physical and mental scars of these assaults can last a lifetime and are unacceptable.
“Assaults on emergency workers are a stain on society and many of these assaults which are recorded without an injury would have been vile spitting and coughing attacks.”
He said it is vital judges and magistrates make full use of the new law to ensure the sentence handed down reflects the seriousness and gravity of the crime.
Separate figures show that the proportion of offenders charged has fallen nationwide, from 68 per cent to 62 per cent in 2021-22.
In Cumbria, 497 emergency worker assault investigations concluded last year, with 65 per cent resulting in a charge or summons – down from 70 per cent in 2020-21.
PTSD 999, a support organisation for all emergency services, said stronger sentencing for offenders would protect both the public and those facing assaults.
Gary Hayes, co-founder of the group, said: “Assaults on emergency service workers can be traumatising but not necessarily at the time of the event, the effects on the individual may present itself days, weeks, months or years later.
“There is no time scale as to how and when someone may start to struggle with an assault.”
A Government spokesman said: “Assaults on members of our emergency services are unacceptable, which is why this government has doubled the maximum penalty for assaulting an emergency worker.”