Staffordshire Police operates with the same rank structure as other Home Office forces in Britain. Presently, the force operates with a senior leadership team consisting of a chief constable, deputy chief constable, two assistant chief constables and civilian assistant chief officer. Staffordshire Police has a
roads policing unit (RPU) who police the roads across the county, as of 2024 the unit is split into two teams, the Road Crime Team and Road Harm Team, the latter of which focussing on aspects such as traffic enforcement allowing the RCT to focus on a more intelligence-lead role. Staffordshire Police was one of two forces involved in the
Central Motorway Police Group along with West Midlands Police. This unit provided roads policing for the motorway network in the West Midlands (mainly M5, M6 and M42) until September 2024 when CMPG was disbanded. Staffordshire Police had a mounted division until 1999, when it was disbanded as part of cost-saving measures that saw 250 jobs cut from the force. Twelve jobs were lost with the closure of the division and the twelve horses from the division were sold on the private market, saving the force £500,000 per year (equivalent to ) in costs. In September 2008, the force announced that it intended to vacate the Cannock Road HQ Site and sell it for housing development, moving HQ staff to Lanchester Court, next to the existing Weston Road premises. Staffordshire
Police Authority, a separate organisation charged with oversight of the force, had 9 councillors (drawn from both
Staffordshire County Council and
Stoke-on-Trent City Council), 3
justices of the peace, and 5 independent members. The authority was abolished in November 2012, following the election of the first
Staffordshire Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC), Matthew Ellis. The office of the
police and crime commissioner and the individual elected is responsible for reducing crime and making the area they represent safer. The PCC decides how much council tax people will pay towards community safety services and policing and is personally accountable for all the public money spent, they are also responsible for communicating and representing public interests in the force area and holding the Chief Constable to account. In 2021, Ben Adams was elected as the new Police, Fire and Crime commissioner, a role previously expanded to include oversight of
Staffordshire Fire and Rescue Service. ==Staffordshire Police Cadets==