Figures obtainedby the 'Times Educational Supplement'(TES)as part of Freedom of Information requests shows that in the three months surrounding the 23Junevote - May, June andJuly last year - 30 of England's police forces recorded a 54 per cent increase in reported hate crimes and incidents in schools.
There was an 89 per cent risein police reports of hate crime in May 2016, the month before the referendum was held, compared to the same month the previous year.
Stand Up to Racism group said: "Recent figures showing a spike in reported hate crime in school during the referendum campaign is a cause for massive concern".
"The referendum campaign was marred by a toxic and negative debate around immigration which a small minority have taken as a green light to commit racist attacks and hate crimes," it said.
Assistant Chief Constable Mark Hamilton, the NPCC's lead for hate crime, said: "We know that national and global events have the potential to trigger short-terms rises in hate crime and we saw this following the EU Referendum last year.
"Police forces took a robust approach to these crimes and reporting returned to previously seen levels. Clearly any hate crime is unacceptable and these numbers are still far too high."
"We have increased the central reporting and monitoring functions to enable us to recognise spikes earlier. This will be used to assess any threats that may arise and inform local police activity," Hamilton said.
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