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Police and Crime Commissioner Jenny McKibben, Deputy Police and Crime Commissioner for Norfolk. Reducing Crime by Reducing Crisis The health and well-being impact on crime and anti-social behaviour 19 & 20 March 2013. Where are we now?. Listening and planning mode
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Police and Crime Commissioner Jenny McKibben, Deputy Police and Crime Commissioner for Norfolk Reducing Crime by Reducing Crisis The health and well-being impact on crime and anti-social behaviour 19 & 20 March 2013
Where are we now? • Listening and planning mode • Police and Crime Plan – draft received unanimous support of Police and Crime Panel (8/3/13) • Precept agreed and approved – extra £1m + for policing and crime • Commissioning – continuity for 2013/14
Next steps - • Formal notification of agreedCrime & Disorder Reduction Grants • Issue Police and Crime Plan – official launch at the end of March • Commissioning by ‘zero based’ methodology for 2014/16
Bett’s 10-Point Pledge • KEEP Norfolk one of the lowest crime counties in the country • FIGHT serious and organised crime • SUPPORT victims of crime, vulnerable and elderly people • PROTECT the frontline in the face of cuts • PROTECT local policing from privatisation • USE targeting and prevention to reduce demand on police • WORK with young people to stay clear of crime • LISTEN carefully to the community, reaching out to minority communities and the disengaged to ensure policing is fair and equitable • REJECT party politics and work with other Independents to provide a national voice • USE Restorative Justice to achieve long-lasting solutions
PCC draft Crime & Disorder Reduction Objectives • Reduce priority crime, anti-social behaviour and reoffending • Reduce vulnerability, promote equality and support victims • Reduce the need for service, through preventative and restorative approaches and more joined up working with partners; protecting the availability of front line resources
Health and links to crime • Cost of drug related crime nationally - £14 billion • Alcohol a factor in half of violent crimes • Violent crime costs the NHS £2.9 billion • Public Health Reforms, what they mean for Drug and Alcohol Services • DrugScope 2013.
Pathways out of offending • Accommodation • Education • Health • Drugs & alcohol • Finance • Children & families • Attitudes, thinking and behaviour
Why wait until someone offends? We need to ensure interventions are made at the earliest opportunity which will impact positively on: • Those vulnerable to being victims of crime • Those vulnerable to offending • Locations vulnerable to crime and ASB So what are the Pathways out of vulnerability?
Successful zero based commissioning • Will enable us to work together to reduce vulnerability. • Understand – hearing the views of public, victims and stakeholders • Plan – deciding with partners how our objectives can be achieved • Do – influencing and commissioning • Review – assessing impact and feeding back to the public.
Our approach to Commissioning • Integrated • Focused on delivering the PCC Crime and Disorder Objectives • Against clear, measurable outcomes • Transparent bidding process • Cost effective mechanism
Norfolk PCC 2013/16 Commissioning Timeline 2016 October ‘15 Formal evaluation April ‘14 Services commence October ‘13 Select successful services June ‘13 Announce areas to be commissioned Produce commissioning criteria 2013
Questions? • Thank you for listening! • Jenny McKibben • Deputy PCC for Norfolk. • mckibbenj@norfolk.pnn.police.uk • opccn@norfolk.pnn.police.uk