Issue - meetings

Community Safety Strategy

Meeting: 15/11/2021 - Cabinet (Item 154)

154 Community Safety Strategy pdf icon PDF 203 KB

Cabinet Member: Cabinet Member for Communities, Safety & Business Recovery, Councillor Manju Shahul-Hameed

Officer: Interim Corporate Director of Sustainable Communities, Regeneration & Economic Recovery, Sarah Hayward

Key decision: no

Additional documents:

Decision:

RESOLVED: To recommend to Full Council the adoption of the Community Safety Strategy, as set out in Appendix 1 of the report.

Minutes:

The Cabinet Member for Communities, Safety and Business Recovery (Councillor Manju Shahul-Hameed) introduced the report which would recommend to Council, subject to Cabinet approval, the adoption of the new Community Safety Strategy. She outlined the strategy, praised the coordination of partners and identified the key themes. Lastly, she welcomed the new Director of Culture & Community Safety officer, Kristian Aspinall.

 

In response to Members questions, the Interim Corporate Director of Sustainable Communities, Regeneration & Economic Recovery (Sarah Hayward) firstly stated that local councillors would be part of discussions in concord with the boards and action point plans as part of the planned further engagement. In terms of female safety, there had been ongoing work with the Family Justice Centre who recently completed a survey of 500 young people women in schools to hear their views on safety in preparation for Mayors Office of Policing and Crime(MOPAC) funding. LB Hammersmith & Fulham received similar funding and Croydon was learning from their experience.

 

In relation to a point raised in relation to a new safety focus in the Thornton Heath area, Superintendent Andy Brittain stated that the borough of Croydon was a large area and there was now an increase from one to two inspectors for the whole borough. Knife Crime remained a priority for Croydon; approaches included community engagement, in addition to enforcement strategies and extending their more focussed work from New Addington to Thornton Heath. They were looking to strengthen the ward panel structures and for those to be more representative of the community.

 

In response to Member concerns raised around women’s safety and the night time economy, Superintendent Andy Brittain told Cabinet that the Metropolitan Police Service (MET) had just launched the Street Safe app. He explained the app was to log incidents that may not reach the threshold to formally report a crime and allowed users to pin on a map where incidents occurred. To date since the launch there had been 1,500 reports across London. Secondly, he stated that Croydon had a dedicated team who supported issues with cohesion and safety arising from the night time economy and were on-call 24/7. Additionally, they were sharing training around the borough on ‘Ask Angela’, which was a code phrase for women to use in venues to be safely removed from a dangerous situation in a public setting.

 

Members raised the following points:

·         The council’s licensing powers and conditions for spiking and needle assaults needed to be reviewed.

·         The community was worried about crime, particularly knife crime, and antisocial behaviour. The Labour Administration had made that a priority to address.

·         National government funding for policing had decreased since 2010 which had consequences today.

·         The strategy was positive piece of work and enhanced the focus on the Public Health approach.

·         The council and health services could learn from successful police and community support operations and practices.

·         It was noted this work had been delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic

 

The following points were clarified:

·         High priority neighbourhoods, as detailed in the report, would be  ...  view the full minutes text for item 154