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The Dorset Community Safety Partnership (CSP) aims to:
It also acts as Dorset’s Local Domestic Abuse Partnership Board required under the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 and leads partners’ response to meeting their duties relating to serious violence under the Police, Crime, Courts and Sentencing Act 2022.
Find out more about the CSP here: Dorset Community Safety Partnership
CSPs are required to have three-year Community Safety Plans that are refreshed annually.
This is the latest refresh of the 2023-26 Plan and sets out partners’ priorities based on the most recent assessment of community safety issues.
The Plan is complimented by the Dorset Domestic Abuse Strategy and Dorset Serious Violence Strategy.
The Plan sets out activity to address priorities in broad terms.
Further details regarding delivery and performance are contained in partners’ various work plans which are developed, assessed and revised over the course of each year.
Crime in the Dorset CSP area is low compared to many other places in the Country.
During the five years from 2018, the crime rate for Dorset (per 1,000 population) was approximately half that seen nationally.
The number of recorded crimes in Dorset has also steadily decreased since 2018 by 6%.
Crime in Dorset follows an annual cycle, which peaks each year in July/August and reaches its lowest in January/February, though exceptions were seen during 2020 when the Covid-19 related lockdowns were in place.
Crime levels in Dorset vary according to location.
Partners use the findings of consultation and engagement exercises to help inform their understanding and work to tackle community safety issues.
A public consultation was undertaken with residents specifically for the CSP in early 2023.
This included members of the Council’s People Panel (a group of residents who volunteered to give responses on a range of questions relating to living in Dorset) who were asked a series of questions on what they thought about crime in their local community.
90 surveys were completed.
However, the majority of these (94%) were submitted by Dorset residents aged 55 or over, a factor which should be considered when interpreting the data.
Consultees were asked which crime categories they thought were a problem where they live. The four categories which registered the highest concern were:
The 3 categories of least concern were:
Panel members were also asked if crime was an issue where they live and if they had been a victim of crime and / or anti-social behaviour in the last 12 months.
The data illustrated slightly increasing concern with crime in their areas during the previous three years and 3% of the Peoples’ Panel respondents stated that crime is a big issue in their lives.
The proportion of respondents who had experienced crime in the past year had almost doubled since the last survey (up from 8.5% to 14.8%).
In contrast to crime, the proportion of respondents stating that they had had experience of anti-social behaviour during the past twelve months had declined.
This trend was a continuation of that seen between 2021 and 2022.
The resident survey conducted by Dorset Council in the winter of 2021/22 included questions on how safe residents felt in their local area. 2,659 surveys were completed. Perceptions regarding community safety were:
Further research and consultation exercises, including with children and young people, will be undertaken over the course of the next few years, the outcomes of which will be used to inform future revisions of this plan.
In advance of this work, an audit of existing consultation processes and data will be conducted across partner agencies, followed by a gap analysis of its findings.
The results of this will be used to determine a partnership-wide consultation and engagement programme which will be delivered through subsequent partnership plans.
Partners carry out an annual Partnership Strategic Assessment (PSA) using information and data from a variety of sources to assess crime and disorder issues in the area.
The assessment is used to set and review partners’ priorities. When setting and reviewing priorities consideration is also given to the local Policing objectives in the area.
Priorities are reviewed regularly.
The following priorities were agreed by partners for the 2023-26 Plan and remain in place during 2024/25:
They are complimented by the following cross cutting issues:
There is a strong correlation between the CSP’s priorities and those set out in the Dorset Police and Crime Commissioner’s (PCC’s) Police and Crime Plan 2021/29 which commits to tackling, amongst other issues, rural crime, violent crime and anti-social behaviour.
Reducing re-offending remains a cross cutting area of work for partners.
Details are set out in the Pan-Dorset Reducing Reoffending Strategy 2024 to 2027.
In accordance with recent legislation, there are separate partnership arrangements, plans and strategies for dealing with substance misuse through the pan-Dorset Combating Drugs Partnership.
Although CSP’s are legally required to undertake annual needs assessments to set their priorities, in recent years new legislation has been placed on specific partners directing them to tackle domestic abuse and serious violence.
In Dorset, partners have chosen to use the CSP as their partnership mechanism to meet these duties and ensured their Domestic Abuse and Serious Violence Strategies compliment this Plan.
Partnership work to tackle community safety issues takes many forms.
Some partnership activities and service arrangements have been in place for several years and have become business as usual.
Well established multi-agency partnership arrangements, including local Partnership Co-ordinating Groups, are in place to tackle shorter term, area specific issues.
Below is a description of broad partnership activity against priorities.
This is supported by partners’ various work plans which are developed, assessed and revised over the course of each year.
Partners use performance information and data coupled with an assessment of progress against their agreed actions at each meeting, to determine whether they are delivering against their priorities.
Partners intend to gather a wide range of information and data to complement Police statistics and develop a comprehensive understanding of community safety issues.
The Dorset CSP is the statutory Community Safety Partnership for the local area.
In addition, the CSP fulfils the functions of the Local Domestic Abuse Partnership Board as required under the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 and coordinates partners’ response to meeting their statutory duties relating to serious violence under the Police, Crime, Courts and Sentencing Act 2022.
It brings together senior officers and elected members from:
Many other partners such as:
are also members of the CSP.
At a local level, there are locality based community safety groups that come together to identify solutions to local issues.
These groups feed into the Dorset CSP.
This plan was last reviewed in 2024.
The next expected review date is 2025.