BOP councils to get $1M for crime prevention

A number of stores in the Bay of Plenty have been targeted this year.

Bay of Plenty councils will get a share of $4 million as part of a multi million dollar package to tackle retail crime and reoffending.

The money will be used towards crime prevention programmes in the region.

According to figures released by the government, there have been a total of 51 ram raids in the Bay of Plenty region - four in January, three in February, seven in March, four in April, three in May, one in June, 12 in July, 12 in August, two in September and three in October.

Nothing has been recorded for November.

Of those above, five remain under active investigation.

There have also been 73 prosecutions and 13 youth referrals.

'While youth crime is now much lower than in the past, the risks and harm from ram raids and other retail crime is concerning communities and creating victims,” says Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

'Shop owners and workers feel targeted. That's unacceptable.

'Police are having a noticeable impact on offending rates, with ram raids during November down by 83 per cent compared with August – 13 so far this month against a high of 75 in August. But we need to lock that progress in and sustain it.

'The initiatives we're announcing today make this the most significant crime prevention financial package in recent memory.

'It backs up Police actions, through funding to support crime prevention initiatives, such as better street lighting and cameras and by investing in more fog cannons.”

Fog cannon subsidy scheme

The Government will establish a new fog cannon subsidy scheme open to all small shops and dairies in New Zealand who want a fog cannon installed.

'Funding of $4000 will be available for each shop who will be able to have the fog cannon installed through an approved supplier, meaning they can access them directly without an onerous process. Additional details will be released shortly,” says Ardern.

Police Minister Chris Hipkins says this will be the first time the fog cannon and ram raid funds have operated at the same time.

'Despite global supply chain issues, Police has been successful in ordering an extra 455 fog cannons, which are expected to arrive before Christmas. This adds to the 270 fog cannons that are currently in the country and have been allocated to affected shops,” says Hipkins.

'More challenging will be the time it takes to install them. The 1000 fog cannons that are already installed took four years, and despite Police doubling the number of local contractors that will do the work to six, it's expected it will take till the second quarter of next year for the number of installations to start to ramp up.”

An example of a fog cannon in use.

The fog cannon fund was set up in 2017 after aggravated robberies of commercial premises had doubled from 2015 – from 599 to 1170.

'It was expanded in 2018 and 2019, and 1000 fog cannon were installed by the end of 2021.

Local crime prevention boost

'New funding of $4 million will be made available to local council to assist with crime prevention measures. This will be made up of $2 million for Auckland Council, $1 million for Hamilton Council and $1 million for the councils in the Bay of Plenty to match on a dollar for dollar basis by Councils for local crime prevention measures.

'These partnerships are likely to be focused on Crime Prevention through Environmental Design (CPTED) measures in geographic areas where small retailers are commonly targeted, such as street lighting, CCTV cameras and planters.

'Conversations have been had already between Police and government officials and Auckland Council, Hamilton Council and Bay of Plenty Councils to identify opportunities that can get started soon.

'We're also announcing today that we will make funding available for all small shops and diaries to install fog cannons, adding to the 1000 that have already been installed as part of the fog cannon initiative.

Extension of the Retail Crime Prevention Fund

'The $6 million Retail Crime Prevention Fund was set up for small shops and dairies in early 2022 as offending shifted to ram raiding. Today, we're expanding eligibility to aggravated robbery committed over the last year.

'Police are making progress on the number of stores accessing the fund. More than 100 shops now have installations approved, with 431 security measures allocated and underway. This includes 93 fog cannons, 78 security sirens, 57 alarms, 63 CCTV systems, 43 bollards and 36 roller doors.

'We'll also continue our work with repeat offenders and their families.”

6 comments

Yeah Right

Posted on 29-11-2022 07:18 | By Thats Nice

"youth crime is now much lower than in the past" - Bollocks. What a load of lies. Let's put the band aids on, that'll fix the problem - NOT!!. How about putting in place some REAL repercussions?


They don't get it

Posted on 29-11-2022 08:42 | By Slim Shady

Labour just don't get it. Their warped ideology does not believe in any sort of punishment as a deterrent. They claim that all this is 'evidence based' or 'fact', as though they have a monopoly on the facts and they have all the answers. Obviously it's rubbish because it's their ideology that has caused all the problems we face. And they will twist the statistics and cherry pick facts like all politicians have done since the year dot. They keep pushing this 'we are the single source of truth' terminology. It's all very Putin like.


@Slim Shady

Posted on 29-11-2022 13:01 | By morepork

I think there is much truth in your post and this government has lost a great deal of credibility by its opaque behaviour and downright wrong information in the past. The authoritarian stance is part of the move from Democracy to Tikanga ("Do what the Boss says...") and is a reflection of the underlying values, as you noted. They are careering down a road back to the 19th century and we are being dragged down it with them. They must be stopped, and the coming general election may be the ONLY chance to do so.


$1million.

Posted on 29-11-2022 13:11 | By morepork

Great! I bet the ink is still wet on the banknotes... Same old, same old... throw money at it, when what it needs is ACTION. They have no trouble passing Laws in secret that suit them, (like 3 waters as just ONE example...), why should fixing the Law regarding youth offending be so difficult?


Just crazy.......

Posted on 29-11-2022 18:24 | By groutby

...the thought that simply throwing money at situations such as this is one of the reasons this country is in the appalling way it is. The first this government always says is....'we have put xxx millions of dollars toward' (whatever)..and if it is given (and usually is) to a government organisation the result is...well, more 'bums on seats and office upgrades to have a meeting about how to tackle such a problem...' with no ACTUAL tangible result. If we are to continue to throw away taxpayer money how about setting these organisations a clearly defined and very publicly available goal to achieve?...just like in private industry?...we are seriously 'over' little or no outcomes for a lot of cash given to keep the new office chairs warm!...no achievement = penalties and no jobs...how'd that go?


@Groutby

Posted on 30-11-2022 13:52 | By morepork

Right on the button, and Amen!


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