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Police performance under the spotlight as communities compare forces

Members of the public can look up performance categories including crime rates, quality of service and victim satisfaction and compare all 43 police forces in England and Wales. Find out more by accessing Police.uk.

For the first time, communities are also able to access street-by-street information on public disorder and possession of weapons, shoplifting and criminal damage as well as arson, theft, and drug crime.

Information on offence rates was uploaded to the website this morning as part of the Government’s stated commitment to improve transparency across the criminal justice system.

Communities will be able to look up levels of crime and anti-social behaviour in their area and use it to hold their local police – and, in time, their elected Police and Crime Commissioner – to account.

Speaking about the move Nick Herbert – minister for policing and criminal justice at the Home Office – said: “Our crime mapping website has attracted phenomenal interest since its launch earlier this year, with more than 430 million hits to date. We want to build on this success and deliver a more transparent and accountable criminal justice system.”

The minister continued: “The addition of further crime categories and easy access to police force performance data will give people the information and power they need to hold their local forces to account and ensure that crime in their area is driven down.”

In conclusion, Herbert explained: “Ahead of the introduction of elected Police and Crime Commissioners, crime mapping is just one way in which the Government is empowering communities and strengthening the link between the police and the public.”

Further improvements to the website

The Government is also working on a number of further improvements to the site, includin

At present, crimes are mapped to an anonymous point (called a ‘snap-point’) on a street with 12 or more postal addresses. The Government wishes to reduce this threshold and publish crime information for key locations such as football stadiums, parks and supermarkets so the public has access to an even greater level of information about crime and anti-social behaviour.

Comparable crime and policing information is accessible through police.uk (as well as www.hmic.gov.uk)

The Home Office, HMIC and the NPIA have been working to integrate force-level crime data with police.uk. The public can now access a graph to show ‘all crime and anti-social behaviour’ in the force over time, along with a short commentary by HMIC to help them understand crime trends.

The interactive map on police.uk allows the public to access information on 11 categories of crime broken down to street level in England and Wales. The categories are: public disorder and the possession of weapons, shoplifting, criminal damage and arson, other theft, drugs, burglary, robbery, vehicle crime, violence, other crime and anti-social behaviour (a total of all of these combined is also included).

The website www.police.uk is under constant development to make crime, justice and policing more transparent. The Home Office has appointed ‘trailblazer’ police force areas to develop innovative ways to deliver greater transparency:

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