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Metropolitan Police faces £5million bill on toilets and changing areas for transgender officers

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The Metropolitan Police could be facing a staggering £5million bill to construct new toilets and changing facilities for just 12 transgender officers.

Campaign group Good Law Project mounted a legal challenge after Britain’s largest police force promised to carry out a financial assessment on the costs of separate toilets for the dozen officers who may require it.


They argued guidance requiring single-sex toilets to be used only by those of the same biological sex breached the rights of trans people.

That guidance was temporarily pulled following the claims, prompting the force to crunch the numbers on what facilities would actually cost across its stations and main buildings.

A source told The Sun: “The overall cost of providing new toilets and changing spaces for transgender people at stations and main police buildings is conservatively estimated to be £5million.”

On top of that initial outlay, the force would face ongoing maintenance costs of around £300,000 annually.

Officials are now working to find an alternative solution to meet any potential legal requirements.

Retired Chief Superintendent Simon Ovens did not mince his words when commenting on the potential expenditure.

Metropolitan Police

The Metropolitan Police could be facing a staggering £5million bill to construct new facilities for just 12 transgender officers

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GETTY

“Most of the Met estate is old and not easily converted,” he said. “At a time of withering financial cuts, spending £5million on such things is frankly ridiculous.”

His criticism highlights the tension between meeting potential legal obligations and managing the force’s stretched finances.

A Met spokesman said: “We are reviewing our options to understand how any potential legal requirements could be met in the most cost-effective way.”

The ageing nature of police buildings across London means any conversion work would prove particularly challenging and costly.

This adds to concerns about whether such spending can be justified when frontline services are already feeling the pinch.

The potential fresh expense comes at a particularly difficult time for the force, which is already grappling a £260million funding gap.

Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley has been implementing significant cuts across the already overstretched organisation to address the shortfall.

\u200bSir Mark Rowley

Sir Mark Rowley has already been implementing cost-cutting measures as he looks to reduce the £260million funding gap

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PA

And the implications of this legal challenge could extend beyond policing.

The requirement to provide separate facilities for transgender individuals potentially affects a wide range of organisations.

Shops, restaurants and other businesses could face similar pressures to install dedicated trans facilities, raising questions about the broader financial impact across various sectors if such provisions become a legal requirement.

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