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National Crime Prevention Council. National Food Service Security Council Conference Crime Prevention Networks August 7, 2012 National Crime Prevention Council 2001 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 901 Arlington, VA 22202 Phone: (202) 261-4153 Fax: (202) 296-1356 www.ncpc.org.
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National Crime Prevention Council National Food Service Security Council Conference Crime Prevention Networks August 7, 2012 National Crime Prevention Council 2001 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 901 Arlington, VA 22202 Phone: (202) 261-4153 Fax: (202) 296-1356 www.ncpc.org
Crime Prevention Networks • At the end of this workshop, you will: • Understand the mission and work of the National Crime Prevention Council (NCPC) • Identify 4 strategies to partner with NCPC and our national crime prevention networks (CPCA/NCPA)
NCPC - Protecting What Matters Most Our Mission Drives Our Work: To be the nation’s leader in helping people keep themselves, their families, and their communities safe from crime NCPC is a private, nonprofit organization 501(c)(3)
1980 - Introduction of McGruff • McGruff preceded NCPC • A “crime dog” is created by a Saatchi and Saatchi executive, Jack Keil, on a napkin in a Kansas City airport (late 1970’s) • “Take A Bite Out Of Crime” becomes McGruff’s famous slogan in his first ad in February 1980
McGruff is an Icon • McGruff’s recognition has increased to 83% from 77% in the last five years • His image and message resonate deeply • 6 out of 10 adults said they would likely act on McGruff’s advice • More than 90 percent of adult Americans say McGruff is • Effective Relevant • Respected AND Trustworthy • Helpful Caring • Also, 72% think he’s cool!
1982 – The Birth of NCPC The National Crime Prevention Council is formed to manage the National Citizens’ Crime Prevention Campaign and promote crime prevention throughout the United States
NCPC Strategic Goals • Protect children and youth • Partner with government and law enforcement to prevent crime • Promote crime prevention and personal safety basics • Respond to emerging crime trends
Protecting Children and Youth • McGruff.org • Nominated for a “Webby” award in 2007 for outstanding children’s site • Redesigned in 2011 • McGruff Readers Series • A violence prevention curriculum for elementary schools • Lessons for grades 1-5 on managing conflict, bullying, staying safe at home, and safety on the Internet
Protecting Children and Youth • New cyberbullying resources for victim service providers • Community Works lesson plan clusters focus on crime prevention • topics for youth, such as gangs, sexual assault, substance abuse, • underage drinking, hate crimes, and other issues for middle to high • school students • First-timers project focuses on getting crime prevention messages • to 18 to 24-year-old youth • New elementary school curriculum will tie lesson plans • to the recently redesigned McGruff.org and Samantha’s Choice • COPS grant to train and provide resources to law enforcement on • bullying
Partnering with Government and Law Enforcement • CPCA created in 1979 and NCPA created in 2007 • Provide a dissemination network for NCPC’s product and a connection to the law enforcement and crime prevention fields • Establish a constituent base for NCPC, along with our McGruff network • NCPC has a history of working with local government, law enforcement, and community in its cities work • NCPC receives grants from federal agencies to support local government, law enforcement, and communities nationally in public safety
Promote Crime Prevention and Personal Safety Basics • Federal investment in the Campaign leverages corporate and other • partnerships, helping NCPC reach over 100 million Americans with McGruff’s • prevention messages. McGruff made many appearances in 2010 and 2011 throughout • the country on CSC events and private events. • NCPC websites reached over 1.4 million Americans in 2010 • Over 400 organization representing thousands of constituents are members of the • Crime Prevention Coalition of America • NCPA represents more than 1,600 police and crime prevention practitioners. • Our new national certification program has certified over 40 crime prevention • practioners in one year. • October is Crime Prevention Month – Celebrate Safe Communities Initiative
Celebrate Safe Communities • CSC is crime prevention done the right way– local people working with local law enforcement to address local issues • It began in 2008 with the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) and National Sheriffs’ Association (NSA) to promote and support crime prevention at the local level • In 3 years, it reached over 500,000 participants in 40 states • Interested participants can register at www.celebratesafecommunities.org • It provides free tools and resources to registered sites • A site can be a local law enforcement agency, a neighborhood watch group, or any local group planning a public safety event • This podcast tells more, www.bja.gov/publications/podcasts/podcast-noscript.html
Identify and Respond To Emerging Crime Trends • School Safety – Be Safe and Sound in Schools • Identity Theft Prevention Campaign • Senior Telemarketing Fraud Prevention Campaign • Cyberbullying Prevention Campaign • Circle of Respect • “Samantha’s Choice” video • Circle of Respect Book Club • Rapid Response PSAs (English and Spanish and print and radio education tools) • Intellectual Property Theft campaign
National Networking Strategies • National Crime Prevention Specialist Certification • An opportunity to network and apply • Many states, such as Florida or New York, have state programs • National certification helps professionalize the field • Two Levels • Level I Certification • 500 points required for certification • Completed a 24-hour basic or introductory crime prevention course • Level II Certification • 1,000 points required for certification • Completed a 40-hour basic or introductory crime prevention training course and an approved instructor development training course Both require membership in the NCPA For more information, contact Tami Wyrick at 202-261-4153 or ncpa@ncpa.org.
National Networking Strategies • National Crime Prevention Association • Provide for the development of crime prevention practitioners • Networking • Training • Conference opportunities • Benefits • Training at the regional and national levels • Ability to network across states • Access to publications and resources • Certification, discounted training, CEU credit • Crime prevention materials and training for campus, private security, military, and hospital security
Celebrate Safe Communities • Sponsorship • National Sponsor • Sponsor Weekly Theme - Crime Prevention Month • Community engagement—youth, seniors, and businesses • Neighborhood and Home Safety • Personal Safety • Cyber Safety • Local Sponsor/Organizer/Supporter • www.celebratesafecommunities.org • (An example: Applebee’s Kids Menu Program in 2005)
Training • Training and Technical Assistance • Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design – basic, advanced, abandoned properties and foreclosed homes, and schools • Gang violence prevention • Campus crime prevention – basic and advanced • Basic and advanced crime prevention • Fee for Service • How many of you get crime reports from your local law enforcement agency or are part of a business watch group? • How Many of You Use CPTED?
Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) • Natural Access Control • Natural Surveillance • Territorial Reinforcement • And Maintenance • NCPC’s CPTED training • is a best practice
Crime Prevention Networks • A national crime prevention network provides training opportunities, resources, and networking possibilities • Sponsor/partner for national, state or local safety sponsorship helps create relationships and an image of caring, and also provides access to information and new possibilities (i.e., crime reports) • Training (joint/shared) brings internal and external benefits (customer service; reductions in theft or workplace crime and violence; no “broken windows”)
Contact Information National Crime Prevention Council 2001 Jefferson Davis Highway Suite 901 Arlington, VA 22202 www.ncpc.org Marsha Hott Director of Community Outreach mhott@ncpc.org 202-261-4167 Next: State And Local Network