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CDRPs and LCJBs: How to work together
Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnerships (CDRPs), or Community Safety Partnerships (CSPs) in Wales, and Local Criminal Justice Boards (LCJBs) are multi-agency groups critical to the delivery of Government commitments on preventing and reducing crime and ensuring the efficient operation of the criminal justice system. Experience has shown that where they work closely together they can help each other to achieve key targets and thus deliver better outcomes for communities and for individuals. Joint working has been difficult to achieve in practice and front-line practitioners have for some time been asking for guidance. This document aims to meet that request. It highlights those areas where CDRPs and LCJBs have common interests and suggests ways in which they might work together.
Title: CDRPs and LCJBs: How to work together
Authors: Office for Criminal Justice Reform and Home Office
Number of pages: 22
Date published: November 2005
Availability: Download full guide
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CDRPs
CDRPs were set up in 1998 as statutory bodies bringing together police, local authorities, fire and rescue and police authorities and Primary Care Trusts (Health Boards in Wales).There are 352 CDRPs in England and 22 Community Safety Partnerships in Wales.Their aim is to reduce crime, fear of crime, anti-social behaviour (as well as other behaviour adversely affecting the environment) and drug related crime. (In Wales CSPs responsibilities have been extended to combating substance misuse.) They each have specific crime reduction targets which contribute directly to the Government's overall aim to reduce crime by 15%, and more in high crime areas, by April 2008.
LCJBs
There are 42 LCJBs in England and Wales, based on police force/criminal justice areas. Membership comprises chief officers of police, Crown Prosecution Service, Court Service,Youth Offending Teams, prisons and probation.They are responsible for local delivery of a number of national targets relating to bringing offences to justice, reducing ineffective trials, improving public confidence, treatment of victims and witnesses and enforcement.
Ways to work together
CDRPsCDRPs have a statutory duty to undertake an audit of crime and disorder, anti-social behaviour (as well as other behaviour adversely affecting the environment) and misuse of drugs (substance abuse in Wales) in their area every three years. They are required to formulate and implement a strategy for combating crime and disorder, ASB and the misuse of drugs etc. They adopt a joint problem solving approach to tackling these issues. They are responsible for contributing to Government PSA targets on:
| Common interestsThere are inevitably overlaps between the two agendas and CDRPs and LCJBs can reinforce each other's work. Key areas of common interest, according to stakeholders, are:
Activity in each of these areas will – in turn – help the LCJB and CDRP achieve their individual targets. (This is not an exhaustive list and if this approach is useful will be added to it over time). | LCJBsLCJBs are responsible for joining up the CJS at the local (CJS area) level and are increasingly involved in managing change across the CJS.They are responsible for contributing to Government targets on:
They are also responsible for local delivery of other national targets in respect of:
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Community engagement
CDRPsStatutory duty to consult local communities on the findings of their three-yearly crime reduction strategy audits and reflect those results in their community safety strategies Ongoing work as part of their responsibility for reassuring the public, reducing the fear of crime and anti-social behaviour (PSA 2) Examples of community engagement work:
| Possibilities for joint workingWhen engaging communities, CDRPs and LCJBs should seek to promote each others’ work wherever possible. For example, CDRPs can help to inform communities of the work the LCJB is doing to reform the CJS and in particular pass on to communities information on how issues of local concern are being dealt with by the CJS. In return, the LCJB can help raise awareness of CDRPs’ priorities for action on local issues within the CJS CDRPs, with their access to local partners, can help the LCJB identify and tap into key local communities. CDRPs can allow the LCJB to add CJS-specific questions to questionnaires and other community engagement processes, focus groups etc. Joint financing of individual projects The LCJB can provide access to CJS-wide media and can work to communicate key community safety/fear of crime issues through their local media links The LCJB can add value by rationalising approaches to certain communities across the CJS area, e.g. information for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender communities There is also the potential for a joint approach in relation to unpaid work. Under the Community Payback initiative over 5 million hours of unpaid work have been undertaken by offenders. CDRPs and LCJBs could play an important role in enabling more local people to have a say in the type of work undertaken and in making this agenda more visible | LCJBsTo improve public confidence in the criminal justice system (PSA 2). Community engagement is one part of delivering on the PSA.The others are communications, work specifically to improve BME confidence and dedicated work on victims and witnesses - CJS agencies will all have their own programmes of work contributing to community engagement and it is important that the LCJB should co-ordinate and add value to this work rather than duplicate it Examples of community engagement work:
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Domestic Violence
The guide identifies domestic violence as an area where joint working can bring particular benefits.
CDRPsResponsibilities: - Statutory duty to conduct a three-yearly audit of crime disorder anti-social behaviour and to publish a crime reduction strategy Examples of DV work: - Develop local strategy for DV as part of CDRP work plan and in line with BVPI 225 - Develop early intervention strategy for local areas to encourage victim and 3rd party reporting - Make provision for DV victims through Supporting People programme - Provide specialist support for DV victims and their children | Possibilities for joint working- Consider joint commissioning of services (co-location of resources; identifying and bringing together existing resources) - Joint ownership for service delivery - A ‘one-stop shop’ approach which allows the victim to access the services of a broad range of agencies by approaching or referral to a single point of contact, with dual accountability - Pro-active intervention policy agreed and adhered to - Support for independent perpetrators programme to agreed national standard. Develop multi-agency risk assessment conferences (Maracas) for victims to complement the Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA) for offenders. Develop information sharing protocols. Establishment of a Domestic Abuse Sub-Group/Co-ordinator reporting to both CDRPs and LCJBs, with membership drawn from both - Designated DV sub-groups will benefit from a membership drawn from both LCJBs and CDRPs - DV co-ordinators can perform a key function in bridging the gap between LCJBs and CDRPs | LCJBsResponsibilities: - LCJBs have no specific targets in relation to DV and activity here tends to fall within their wider work to bring more offences to justice, improve levels of public confidence and provide improved support for victims of crime. The LCJB Victim and Witness Delivery Toolkit 7 suggests practical ways in which LCJBs can work in this field Examples of DV work: - Ensure that approved training (Centrex) on DV is delivered to:
- Ensure that NPS perpetrator programmes are in place - Develop a Specialist DV court - Develop specialist advice and support for victims of DV - Ensure that MAPPA processes include high risk DV perpetrators
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Last update: Wednesday, August 08, 2007


