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Amesbury Police Station to close next month alongside Salisbury police facility

WILTSHIRE Police has announced it will close both Amesbury Police Station and its Salisbury facility on Wilton Road as part of cost-cutting measures.

Both facilities are set to close by the end of April.

Following the closures, the Amesbury Neighbourhood Policing Team – who currently use the station as a touchdown point and detective cohort – will be based at Tidworth Police Station.

The Wilton Road police facility in Salisbury, which has no teams permanently based there, will close and the video interviewing facility there will be relocated to Tidworth.

The Devizes Borough Police Station will also close, with the local policing team and detective cohort relocating to police headquarters in Devizes, and a fully functional public front counter at the HQ will be delivered

The move comes as the force scrambles to find an additional £5.2m in savings in 2025/26.

Chief Constable Catherine Roper has said that communities will receive an enhanced offer from Neighbourhood Policing Teams (NPT) across the county following the closures.

Wiltshire Police previously outlined how savings would be sought primarily through estate and vehicle rationalisation before considering a reduction in the number of police staff.

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Chief constable Roper said: “As part of the review into how we deliver our service to the public due to the financial challenges we face, we’ve identified several opportunities to make our community offer more supportive.

“I remain fully committed to ensuring our frontline resources are serving in the places our communities need us the most and that we will continue to transparently review how we operate to ensure we achieve this.

“Our NPT will be enhancing their visibility in our communities by increasing the use of our mobile police stations, attending more local events and will continue to proactively publicise where they will be and how people can engage with them.

“Our communities in Amesbury, Ludgershall and surrounding areas have always been supported by our NPT which has deployed from Tidworth.

“Last year, this NPT attended more than 500 community engagements across the area – including school visits, drop-in sessions in local locations and attending community events.

“Across the next financial year, I will be expecting these engagements to increase.

“As per my commitment earlier this year, we will not close any police station which has a public front counter – the three facilities detailed here do not have any public access.

“However, with the proposal to open a fully functional public front desk at our HQ site by the end of April, we will be increasing the number of locations the public can access our services.

“We currently have 17 yellow phones outside police buildings across the county which have a direct line to our control room where the public can report crime and seek support.

“It is our intention to increase the number of yellow phones across Swindon and Wiltshire within the next 12 months.

“These changes form part of our drive to make our organisation more effective in delivering policing services across our county and Keeping Wiltshire Safe.”

Police and Crime Commissioner Philip Wilkinson, who supported the changes, said the buildings were earmarked for closures anyway.

He said: “I fully support the chief constable’s considered approach, which has been based upon operational need, in ensuring Wiltshire Police remains visible, accessible, and responsive to the needs of our communities – even in the face of significant financial challenges.

“While any change involves difficult decisions these buildings, which were used for office space and with no public access, had already been earmarked for disposal.

“This approach ensures that frontline policing is protected and officers are deployed where they are needed most.

“The chief constable has assured me that these efficiencies will enhance community policing, with an increased focus on neighbourhood engagement, improved use of mobile police stations, and more visible patrols.

“I will continue to work closely with the Chief Constable, providing challenge and scrutiny to ensure these plans deliver real, tangible improvements for the public.

“Together, we are committed to building trust and confidence in policing, ensuring that officers remain accessible, visible, and engaged with the communities they serve.

“By improving how officers engage with communities and ensuring resources are used effectively, we can deliver a stronger, more visible police presence across Wiltshire and Swindon, making our communities safer.”

The public can view the changes to our local policing footprint here.

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