'Hotspot policing' for North East as PM cracks down on anti-social behaviour
Northumbria and Durham forces are chosen to get more police patrols.
Northumbria and Durham Police force areas are two of 16 to trial having enforced police patrols, as part of the Prime Minister's plan to "stamp out" anti-social behaviour "once and for all".
Rishi Sunak will use a home counties visit on Monday to announce the UK Government's ÂŁ160 million anti-social behaviour action plan.
In proposals heavily briefed beforehand, it will include trials of swifter justice measures and increased policing in areas of England and Wales deemed to have high amounts of low-level crime.
Laughing gas will be banned, drug testing of criminals will become more prevalent, on-the-spot fines for graffiti and fly-tipping will be increased and more money will be ploughed into youth centres as part of a bid to eradicate behaviours spoiling Britain's neighbourhoods.
Mr Sunak said: "Anti-social behaviour undermines the basic right of people to feel safe in the place they call home.
"The public have rightly had enough - which is why I am determined to restore people's confidence that those responsible will be quickly and visibly punished.
"This action plan maps out how we will tackle this issue with the urgency it deserves and stamp out these crimes once and for all - so that wherever you live, you can feel safe in, and proud of your community."
Under so-called Immediate Justice proposals, the aim is for perpetrators behind anti-social activity to carry out repair and clean-up works within 48 hours of being handed community orders.
Offenders will be made to wear high-vis vests or jumpsuits and work under supervision while picking up litter, removing graffiti and washing police cars as punishment for their actions.
Victims of anti-social behaviour will be given a say in how criminals are disciplined to ensure justice is visible and fits the crime, according to the Department for Levelling-Up, Housing and Communities.
In what is being called Hotspot Policing, some areas will trial having enforced police patrols.
Officials said those areas will see an increase in police presence, alongside other uniformed authority figures such as wardens, in problem areas including on public transport, high streets and in parks.
In total, 16 areas will conduct trials of either Immediate Justice or Hotspot Policing, with four police and crime commissioner jurisdictions - Northumbria, Cleveland, Derbyshire and Durham - trying out both.
The intention is to roll out the measures across England and Wales from 2024.
Under what the Government is calling a zero-tolerance approach, laughing gas will also be banned.
Levelling-Up Secretary Michael Gove confirmed the move on Sunday, arguing that the "scourge" of nitrous oxide was turning public spaces into "drug-taking arenas" and helping to fuel anti-social behaviour.
The drug is typically released into balloons from small silver canisters and then inhaled.
Current legislation already prohibits the knowing or reckless supply of nitrous oxide for inhalation, but Mr Gove suggested it was likely to be included under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
The move comes despite an assessment by the independent Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) concluding earlier this month that the "health and social harms of nitrous oxide are not commensurate" with control under the 1971 law.
In a statement, Mr Gove said anti-social behaviour was a "stain on too many communities across the country".
He said: "We will deliver tougher, quicker and more visible justice to prevent thuggish behaviour in town centres and we will ensure young people have the opportunities and activities available to them to succeed - all backed by new investment."
Mr Gove announced on Sunday that the plan was being backed by Ă‚ÂŁ160 million of funding.
He also told broadcasters that the clampdown on anti-social activity would include increased drug testing for those caught engaging in crime and anti-social activity.
His department said that currently only suspected criminals who have committed certain offences can be tested in police detention without additional requirements.
Ministers are pledging to expand the range of trigger offences to include crimes linked to violence against women and girls, serious violence and anti-social behaviour.
Home Secretary Suella Braverman said: "It has always been my priority to give police the powers they need to deliver a common-sense approach to cutting crime, which puts the law-abiding majority first, and that's what this action plan delivers."
Other measures to be announced by Mr Sunak include:
- A reporting tool for the public to log anti-social behaviour and receive updates on any action to tackle it.
- Increased fines for graffiti and littering, rising to up to Ă‚ÂŁ500, and up to Ă‚ÂŁ1,000 for fly-tipping.
- Landlords and housing associations being given more powers to evict unruly tenants who create persistent noise.
- Reopening empty shops by giving councils new powers to quickly take control and sell off empty buildings.
- Setting up an anti-social behaviour taskforce jointly led by the Home Secretary and Levelling Up Secretary.
- An additional one million hours of youth services in areas with the highest rates of anti-social behaviour to increase early anti-offending measures.
- Tackling the practice of "cuckooing" or home invasion by considering the scope of a potential new criminal offence.
The levelling-up department said ÂŁ5 million would be invested in making parks and green spaces safer with new CCTV, as well as providing money to repair equipment, playgrounds and plant more trees and flowers.