Title: Playyouth facilities preventing crime and disorder
1- Play/youth facilities - preventing crime and
disorder
Roger Hampshire Crime Prevention Design Advisor
2Youth Shelters and Sports Systems A good
practice guide
3Know your audience and their expectations
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7Consider the needs of youths and not just young
children is paramount when tackling crime and
community safety issues.
8Impression? The youth of today Responsible for
all the anti-social behaviour No interest in
anything What do you think you look like Bet hes
on drugs Hanging about, causing problems
Reality? Just a mate hanging about Being cool My
Dress sense What's your problem Not hurting
anyone Dont take drugs Nothing to do and no
where to hang around with mates
Your View
Perception?
9Excellent facilities, but where do they go when
they are too old for this amenity?
10The local bus shelter?
11Return to the play area
12Or a piece of land not designated as anything
13Hang about outside the shops. Why not, shops
provide all their needs, food, drink, light,
seats, excellent meeting points.
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16ExampleFailure to Understand the Crime
Disorder Potential
- Ball Games
- Disturbances
- Damage
- Theft
- Disputes
- Assaults
Outcome Serious Loss of Amenity Massive Drain
on Police Community Resources.
17Some Definitions of Anti-Social Behaviour
- Crime and Disorder Act 1998 defines ASB as
Acting in a manner that caused or was likely to
cause harassment, alarm or distress - Some Crime Disorder Reduction Partnerships
describe ASB as Behaviour that unreasonably
interferes with peoples rights to use and enjoy
property, the environment and the community
18A.S.B. in order
- Vandalism, graffiti or other deliberate damage
to property (Graffiti costs London 100m a year
Vandalism costs England 1.3b a year) - Teenagers hanging around on street corners
- Rubbish or litter lying around
- People dealing drugs
- People sleeping rough on street or other places
- Noisy neighbours
- Abandoned cars
19November 5th
- Oxford City-Local teenagers students fought
- 24 business premises had windows smashed
- Parked cars attacked - 4 overturned
- By end of night 33 persons arrested - 4 police
officers injured - Date - November 5th 1959
- There was trouble nearly every year, some blamed
television, others the Teddy Boys - 1950s was when the following phrases were
introduced - Yobs Generation Gap Problem
Families
20- What can be done what legislation is there?
21Crime and Disorder Act 1998
- Forms legal partnerships between councils
police to reduce crime and improve community
safety. ALL councils, including town and parish
must work with police to reduce crime. - Act applies to County, District, Unitary, Town
and Parish Councils and all departments have a
statutory duty to consider crime prevention
community safety in all their processes. - Main councils police must work together to
produce a safety strategy document.
22Planning
- Safer Places the Planning System Crime
Prevention 2004 Crime prevention is a material
consideration in the planning process.. - Safer Places the Planning System Crime
Prevention 2004 Provide activities for young
people such as youth shelters, youth centres,
sports pitches all helps to provide a focus for
and can prevent criminal behaviour.
23Planning
- Planning Policy Guideline 17 now includes-
Provision for children and teenagers - including
need to provide play areas, skateboard parks,
outdoor basketball hoops, and informal areas such
as teenage shelters. - Local Plans - need to include provision for
youths as well as children - Consider N.P.F.A. -
Six Acre Standard
24 Performance Assessments Audit Commission -
Environment
- District Councils - The Audit Commission on
public space looks at the councils corporate
ability by asking 4 key questions- - Q1 -Does the Council secure a high quality
environment through new build and maintenance
work? - Q2 - Does the Council help keep the locality
clean?
25 Audit Commission - Continue
- Q3 - Does the Council work with partners to
improve community safety? - Is the Crime Strategy
addressing local national issues? - Is the
partnership successful so far? - Q4 - Does the Council contribute to activities to
positively engage children and young people? -
does the council have a clear idea about the
needs of local children and young people? - What
is the council doing to secure a range of
activities for young people encourage their
positive engagement?
26- Children/Youth Facilities and Crime Prevention
Roger Hampshire Crime Prevention Design Advisor
27What do Young People Want ?Ask Them!
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29Young people
- A survey of 1000 children - 94 wanted to spend
more time out of the house - 80 of 9 - 16 year olds say they prefer being
outdoors rather than in - Fewer than 40 of Local Authorities have outdoor
play policies - Children and Young people make up 16 of the UK
Prison Population, compared to 10 in France 7
in The Netherlands - Youth - has been targeted by adults as a social
problem for at least 100 years (Prof. I
Colquhoun)
30Benefits
- Three weeks after a skate park was finished
litter and vandalism was down by 75 ? - This was actually over the previous 18 months
when liaison with the young people started
31The Three LsLiaisonLighting Location
32 33Bus shelter outside shops, used as meeting point
by young people
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36Some vandalism, but no real damage
37Same estate, bus shelter constantly damaged
note fencing on both sides of road.
38No natural surveillance by housing
39Frequently damaged
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48Finally
- The bottom line to long-term public safety must
be focused on youth. We know that youth who are
not provided with adequate nurturing, support and
structure, run greater risks of becoming involved
in the criminal justice system. We know that the
physical structure of communities contributes to
the challenges facing youthbut we know that
youth, when provided with opportunities to engage
in productive activities will do so. When they
aren't, they are more vulnerable to take another
routeif we do not give youth an alternative to
destruction or counter-productive behaviour, who
has failed whom? (Zelinka 2000)