Safer Communities

Safer Communities

UnitedFuture believes that strong local communities are the building blocks of a successful nation. For this reason we will work to ensure that New Zealand communities are safe and considerate places where one can confidently raise a family free from the threat of violence and property damage.

It is UnitedFuture policy to:

  • Ensure adequate police coverage of rural areas.
  • Establish community safety plans with police, local bodies and communities, building local knowledge and community relationships, and ensure that all households can receive information about local policing issues.
  • Re-introduce ‘beat’ cops for every neighbourhood, to raise the visibility of police and their interaction with the community they serve, as well as boosting intelligence-gathering capabilities.
  • Introduce a campaign to report all offences to emphasise that ‘No Crime is Too Small’, and resource the police to respond rapidly to these incidents and target ‘hotspots’ of crime.
  • Promote co-operation between community groups, such as Neighbourhood Support, Community Patrol groups, neighbourhood beat police and local councils. Encourage these groups to share information, develop community safety initiatives in line with the ‘No Crime Is Too Small Strategy’ and to also function as Emergency Readiness teams; providing a street level infrastructure for civil defence assistance.
  • Ensure that police target and monitor the persistent criminals in our communities, particularly gangs.
  • Review the effectiveness of traffic police, with a view to whether they should comprise a separate division.
  • Increase staffing levels at Police Communications Centres to ensure that 111 calls are responded to promptly and effectively, and consider returning them to control at the regional level to utilise local knowledge.
  • Establish a dedicated non-emergency phone line to deal with petty crime, operated at the local level.
  • Ensure that police co-ordinate closely with social service and child protection agencies in each community, including automatic referral of any criminal activity that involves children, to improve responses to domestic violence and child abuse.
  • Establish community safety plans with police, local bodies and communities, building local knowledge and community relationships, and ensure that all households can receive information about local policing issues.
  • Establish a transparent Police staffing formula that ensures a minimum presence in all areas, yet allows for extra police to be deployed where the crime rate exceeds the national average.
  • Encourage volunteer and community agencies to take a role in promoting a crime free society.
  • Increase funding for the Youth Aid section of the police.
  • Increase the length and standard of Police training and mentoring programmes to ensure that new recruits are fully prepared.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT
Hon Peter Dunne's Keynote Address to Environment Canterbury Regional Road Safety Forum

One for the road – one too many

Sudima Hotel, Memorial Drive, Christchurch
Friday 25 June 2010

Good morning.

Thank you for inviting me here today to speak at your regional road safety forum.

This is a very timely event...

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