Stoke South Safer Neighbourhood Panel

Panel shines the spotlight on policing in Stoke South

A new independent panel that sees local people examine and shape the work of policing in the south of Stoke-on-Trent has met for the first time.

he Safer Neighbourhood Panels were launched under plans by Staffordshire’s Police and Crime Commissioner, Matthew Ellis, to shine the spotlight on local policing and make Staffordshire’s Police Service the most open, transparent and ethical in the UK.

he new panels examine, challenge and influence the work of police at a local level and hold Local Policing Team Commanders to account as well as looking at wider criminal justice and community safety issues in their area.

The panel for the Stoke-on-Trent South Local Policing Team met on Tuesday 8 December at Longton Community Fire Station.

Local residents and councillors sit on the panels with magistrates bringing additional expertise. Panels influence local policing and community safety, scrutinise the work done by police in their area, give feedback to communities and examine the impact of community resolutions and restorative justice.

Mr Ellis said: “Safer Neighbourhood Panels which are being established in more and more areas will be carrying out vital work. They will be providing challenge where challenge is needed looking at local policing is operating and impacts the communities where panel members live.

“The new spotlight on local policing performance that Safer Neighbourhood Panels will bring is invaluable in adding to the rigour my office brings to overseeing policing.

“But it’s more than that. I make no apology for believing that truly local policing, and the public playing a part in influencing that policing, is vital. That’s why visible, neighbourhood policing is increasing over coming months and we’re establishing these new panels.”

The Stoke-on-Trent South panel followed initial meetings by panels for the Stoke-on-Trent North and the Central Local Policing Teams last month.

Councillor Randy Conteh, Stoke-on-Trent City Council’s cabinet member for housing, communities and safer city, said: “Having been a previous member of Staffordshire Police Authority for eight years, I welcome the new Safer Neighbourhood Panels as an additional opportunity for our community representatives and partners to scrutinise the performance of our local police.

“As Stoke-on-Trent City Council’s current representative on the Police and Crime Panel, I have spoken to some of our local members and have offered ongoing advice and support.”

The panels follow the success of the county-wide Ethics, Transparency and Audit Panel (ETAP) which was established by the PCC in 2013. The ETAP is made up of trained members of the public and monitors different aspects of performance and standards in policing across Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent. ETAP has received national recognition for its work on the police use of Taser, stop and search and crime recording in Staffordshire.

District, boroughs and Stoke-on-Trent City councils are being offered funding by the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner (OPCC) to administer the new Safer Neighbourhood Panels on behalf of the PCC. Panels began meeting in South Staffordshire, Staffordshire Moorlands and Cannock earlier this year with others launching recently in Lichfield, Stafford and Newcastle-under-Lyme.

Mr Ellis added: “There’s a trilogy here which I set out back in 2013. Firstly, effective ‘very local’ oversight by the public of policing.

“Secondly, substantial increases in funding to local councils to help keep their areas safer as well as £2 million extra for community groups to bid through the People Power Fund and Proceeds of Crime Fund supporting simple ideas making areas and people safer.

“Thirdly, helping Staffordshire’s communities to help police in keeping us all safer by promoting and funding services like Crimestoppers and the reinvigorated Neighbourhood Watch with more user friendly real time info, brand new investment and more support from the Staffordshire Police in co-ordinating the work.”

For more information on Safer Neighbourhood Panels and ETAP click here

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