17. |
Kent Community Safety Agreement PDF 82 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
- Mr Peerbux, Head of Community Safety, introduced
the report and delivered a presentation which outlined the purpose
and the functions of the Kent Community Safety Partnership.
- It was highlighted
that the Partnership team worked with local partners to tackle
community safety issues, it operated as a county-level strategic
coordinating group with a statutory responsibility for developing a
comprehensive community safety strategy.
- Upcoming focus areas
for the partnership included neighbourhood policing updates,
domestic abuse commissioning work and continued cross agency
collaboration.
- Superintendent
Steenhuis, Kent Police, explained that Kent Police had introduced a
new neighbourhood policing model, which aimed to deliver more
targeted and community focused policing across the county, with
several key components
- As part of the
Neighbourhood Beat Teams Initiative, each ward had a named officer
that the resident could identify online by entering their post
code.
- Child-Centred
Policing Teams, made-up of beat officers and Police Community
Safety Officers (PCSOs), focused on youth engagement and worked
closely with schools and the Youth Justice Team. Knife awareness
programmes had been delivered to over 20,000 students.
- Neighbourhood Task
Teams based in each district supported beat officers by addressing
complex issues such as antisocial behaviour with particular focus
on town centres, retail crime and actions to protect women and
girls.
- The Rural Taskforce
had achieved significant results in tackling serious thefts,
particularly involving farm machinery.
- Prevention Hubs
provided centralised support across areas including anti social
behaviour, drugs, licencing and child-centred policing, all aimed
at crime prevention and community engagement.
- Ms Cain,
Commissioner, provided the Committee with an overview of the
Sanctury Access for Eligible Residents Scheme (SAFER
Scheme).
- The SAFER Scheme was
launched in March 2024 to help domestic abuse survivors remain
safely in their homes through security enhancements and support
services.
- In the first thirteen
months, the scheme received 810 referrals, with 75% of households
receiving security improvements. It supported 1013 children and
targeted underrepresented groups including men, people with
disabilities and those in private housing across both high
deprivation and affluent areas.
- Kent also began
developing a Cyber Sanctuary Scheme to launch in 2026, offering
cyber security advice, home visits and training to address
technology enabled abuse, which affected over 72% of service
users.
- In response to
comments and questions it was said:
- Kent Police did not
have off-road motorbikes, due to budget constraints, instead drone
technology was utilised to address the issue of anti-social
behaviour. Superintendent Steenhuis highlighted the importance of
encouraging the public to report incidents and working with
landowners to limit unauthorised off-road vehicle use.
- The specialist
Anti-Social Behaviour Team (ASB) had managed complex cases, with
ASB identified as a priority across all Community Safety Units.
Effective partnership models, such as in Tonbridge, had been
encouraged throughout the districts. Targeted action against the
top 20 retail crime offenders, supported by criminal behaviour
orders and substance misuse interventions, had resulted in reduced
offending. ASB reporting had increased following enhanced community
engagement and a review of recording processes, which had
strengthened data accuracy and operational response. Offender tag
monitoring had ...
view the full minutes text for item 17.
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