Wednesday 10 December 2014

Notes from Community Safety Meeting held 4th December 2014 at Denny Bowling Club. 

Present: Cllr John McNally, Cllr M Oliver, Cllr B McCabe, Cllr J Blackwood. Chief Inspector M Patterson, Insp J Kellet, Bill Gray Neighbourhood Watch and Franca Cianni, Area Estates Co-ordinator and Community Safety Wardens. + members of the public.

Bill Gray chaired the meeting and opened meeting thanking all for attending.  He indicated they were looking to extend the neighbourhood watch scheme to Banknock.

The theft of car keys from properties was a concern for the community.

BG noted he regularly put out alerts via the neighbourhood watch when anything happens. They currently have 20 neighbourhood watch signs in the Denny area.  Denny currently has 81 members on the scheme. You can join neighbourhood watch on line at Denny and District Neighbourhood Watch.

The area currently has 9 community police officers for the Denny-Banknock Ward.  The Fire Service is also promoting home safety with safety visits and installation of smoke alarms when necessary.

Chief Inspector Paterson noted community concerns regarding the perception of policing in the area in light of the recent incidents that have taken place.  She indicated that she has daily meetings to look at incidents in the area, identify the risk for victims and prioritise actions required.

Crime in the area was down 10% (Denny/Banknock Ward) Chief Inspector Paterson noted these figures were also subjected to audit.  There has been a 14% drop in minor assaults in the area.

With regards to the police station it was noted most contact was now made by phone and some via the internet.  CI Patterson said it was a positive sign if you didn’t see police in the area as it was an indication nothing was happening in that area and resources were targeting other areas of need.  The detection rate for house burglaries was around 50%, this we were assured is a very high detection rate for this type of crime.  The Community Investigation Unit based in Denny has 10 x officers to focus on the Denny area. This and the Community Safety Partnership which consists of, Housing and Fire Service, etc look at targeting shared resources in target areas.

Chief Inspector Paterson went on to say the policing model had changed in May this year. Community teams are now on new shift patterns.  A number of these shifts now
see officers deployed in plain cloths. 

On social media C Inspector Paterson noted Falkirk had the highest twitter response in Scotland.  She went on to say she also wrote a weekly article in the Falkirk Herald. If you have an interesting article regarding the police run it by her and she may submit in the paper.  C Inspector Paterson also cautioned the reporting on social media as it often report inaccurately what was actually happening.  If you think a serious incident has happened in your area, phone the police they will confirm or otherwise.  They will not however give you any information on an on-going case.

Franca Cianni, Area Estates Co-ordinator spoke about the role of the community safety team.  They were created to deal with ASB such as young people making a nuisance of themselves, noise, jumping in front of cars etc. The litter team is also her responsibility.  They can issue fixed penalty tickets now £80 (just gone up).  They work in conjunction with detached youth teams and SACRO.  Warning letters are issued if person is under 16 with fixed penalty tickets issued if 16 +.  Alternatives for u16s are education lessons they must attend in relation to litter and litter picks if appropriate to reinforce message.

A number of questions were asked on the night and included:

Q: Community safety – how do you prioritise?

A: database information coded to highlight areas of prioritised work. Staff are allocated specific areas.  Individuals are contacted for further information if required and are also contacted with updates to complaint.  They have a Facebook page that provides updates.

Q: 101 calls…it takes about 10 minutes to explain problem to operator before you get passed to an officer. Why is this?

A: Allows officers to assess priority of issue. Helps ensure something serious is not missed.

Q: Neighbourhood Wardens, why stop them at 10.00pm?

A: any complaints after this time are deemed to be of a more criminal nature.  This is done in conjunction with police as there are often behavioural changes.

Q: CCTV is not monitored or recorded.

A: Agreement service in Falkirk will remain the same as before. CCTV does have recording function. Operator looks after a number of banks of cameras.  Allows the police to look back at incidents that have happened and obtain evidence.

Q: Homeless people creating problems in Denny.

A: This is Housing policy.  It does create problems. Police do not make comment on types of offenders in area. eg sex offenders.  Ward report is provided to community councils.  Police attended 70 from 72 community council meeting in last year and take them seriously.

Q: Church had windows broken recently.  People are sleeping in doorway etc, what phone number do I call?

A: 999 is the emergency number and 101 is the non emergency number for contacting the police.

Inspector Kellet informed the audience that police had targeted young people hanging around in groups to help reduce the fear of crime near the ATC hall in Denny.  Community Safety Teams could also target this.

Chief Inspector Paterson informed that Police Scotland has to loose £100m every year for the next 10 years.  This means putting focus on what needs to be done.  She went on to say she and Insp Kellet will take email messages and phone calls from the public from the public to make them more assessable. 
Q: Rural crime in this area is it a problem in Denny? (Carronbridge in particular)

A: West area of division a problem for this sort of crime.  Smart Water substance allows police to identify if someone has this on their person. Sign noting smart water area has helped reduce crime.

With regards to Carronbridge it is not problematic at this time.  Chief Inspector will put details of link out to neighbourhood watch regarding smart water.

Q: Family victim of crime. Household break in/car stolen. Police response great. However when this happens people one street away have no idea this has happened.  Concerned no awareness in this area.

A: Herald article noting this had happened. C Inspector notes this type of crime weekly in paper.  People were advised not to leave keys near the front door. Thieves were ‘fishing through letterboxes’ stealing them and then stealing the vehicles.

Intervention Officers (Police home security officer) will carry out a home security survey and advise on any minor changes you could make to make your property safer.  PC Hunter is based at Denny and PC Gardiner at Falkirk.

Q: Speeding traffic. Spine Road on Facebook. Never heard anything else about this?

A: Police were not aware of this as an issue at this time.  Insp Kellet asked that people report such incidents if it becomes an issue again.

Q: Volume of calls. Everyone else thinks someone else will phone police.  Example being recent quad bike incident in the Gala Park.

A: Police can chap door and speak to individual concerned.  Members of the public are encourage to provide information to them, especially if they know who it is that is committing the crime.

The Fire Service indicated they had leaflet dropped, in particular elderly people, for home fire safety checks.  They also indicated the number of malicious fires in the Denny area had gone down.