HAVE YOUR SAY – Dorset Police Council Tax Consultation

POLICING COUNCIL TAX CONSULTATION

CLICK HERE TO HAVE YOUR SAY

Dear resident

Today, I have launched a consultation to seek your views on whether to raise the Policing element of the Council Tax for 2016/17. The consultation can be found here and I would encourage you to take part to ensure your views are taken into account.

Please share this email with friends and family who live in the area – it is vital I hear from as many Dorset residents as possible.

Martyn Underhill
Dorset Police & Crime Commissioner

Published
Categorised as Crimewatch

Temporary closure of Dinahs Hollow, Melbury Abbas – 18th January 2016 for 5 days

DORSET COUNTY COUNCIL has issued a Notice under Section 14 [2] of the Road Traffic Regulations Act 1984, as amended. All vehicles will be prohibited from proceeding along Dinah’s Hollow, Melbury Abbas from the junction with B3081, Higher Blandford Road, Cann Common to the junction with West Lane, Melbury Abbas, a distance of approximately 1,000 metres. The Notice is needed in order to comply with Health and Safety Regulations, which require the provision of safe working areas and to minimise the likelihood of danger to Highway Users. It will come into operation on Monday 18 January 2016 for 5 days.

For more information please see the attached notice –

Temp Closure Notice Dinahs Hollow 180116

Dorset Police Alert – Break in at the Disabled Riding School in Wareham

Over the weekend of 2nd and 3rd January 2016 there has been a break to the disabled riding school at Holton Lee, Holton Heath, Wareham.

Offenders have stolen specialist harnesses, tack and saddles that had been recently delivered. The charity are obviously distressed as this means they are currently unable to help the sixty plus people a week that come to them.

If anyone has any information or is offered any quick release  harnesses for sale, then please contact Dorset Police on 101 quoting incident 55160001345

If you are able to assist in any other way, then please reply via this e mail and I will pass any offers of help to the charity.

Please also remember to get your equipment marked and consider your security around your horses and buildings.

Published
Categorised as Crimewatch

Dorset Police – Alleged Assault In Blandford Witness Appeal

Detectives are appealing for witnesses and anyone with information to come forward following an alleged assault in Blandford – with two men being arrested.

At around 9pm on Thursday 24 December 2015, police were called to reports of an assault in Carter Close.

A 31-year-old man of Blandford sustained a suspected broken nose.

Detective Constable Ian Davies, of Weymouth CID, said: “I am appealing to anyone who witnessed anything in the Carter Close area at around 9pm on Christmas Eve to please call me on 101.”

Two men aged 20 and 31, both of Blandford, have been arrested on suspicion of grievous bodily harm and have been released on police bail pending further enquiries until mid-January 2016.

Witnesses and anyone with information should call Dorset Police in confidence on 101 quoting incident number 24:336. Alternatively, call the free and anonymous Crimestoppers line on 0800 555 111 where mobile phone tariffs may apply.

Published
Categorised as Crimewatch

PR5339 – C13 Road closed to improve traffic management

C13logoRoad closed to improve traffic management – 18-22 Jan 2016

The C13 between Blandford and Shaftesbury will be closed at Melbury Abbas for one week to allow the replacement of barriers in Dinah’s Hollow.

Currently Dorset County Council has temporary traffic management within the hollow to move vehicles into the centre of the road, reducing the risk to road users from the possibility of a landslip from unstable slopes.

The existing water filled barriers will be replaced with more substantial concrete blocks. This follows a decision from the county council’s Cabinet, earlier this month, to delay the process of stabilising the slopes in order to investigate longer term measures for strategic traffic routes within Dorset, Wiltshire, and Bath and North Somerset.

Cllr Peter Finney, the council’s Cabinet member for environment, said:

“Although our plans for stabilising the slopes in Dinah’s Hollow have been delayed, it is important that we maintain the traffic management for the duration until we know about any future plans.

“We have already had a good meeting with our neighbouring councils and will continue to investigate all our options.”

The week long road closure, in place 24 hours a day, will start at on Monday 18 January and finish on the following Friday. During this time the highways teams will also be carrying out some safety works to the trees.

Resurfacing Boundary and West Hill will take place in the spring.

For more information about Dinah’s hollow visit www.dorsetforyou.com/dinahs-hollow

Issued By:
Fiona King, Public Relations Officer
Tel: 01305 224725
Email: f.e.king@dorsetcc.gov.uk

Communications Unit, County Hall, Dorchester DT1 1XJ
Tel 01305 224491
www.dorsetforyou.com/news

Dorset Police – Suspicious Activity

Good afternoon,

We have had a report this morning from a rural property in the Shaftesbury Rural area of suspicious vehicle at the entrance to their property on Monday evening.

The owner has reported this today as they have found a plait in the mane of one of the horses.

As North Dorset horsewatch, we have no evidence that suggests plaiting is used to mark horses for theft as we receive regular reports of plaiting but so far this year, there has only been one reported theft of horse in the whole of Dorset and that had no links to plaiting.

However, we would like to take this opportunity to remind all horse owners and rural residents to remain alert and to log details of any suspicious vehicles or people they see in the area.
These details can be called in on 101 or if a crime is in progress then 999.
You can also e mail details to your local officers through the Dorset Police website at www.dorset.police.uk

Don’t forget, you can meet the Horsewatch team tomorrow at Eccliffe Equestrian in Gillingham for mince pies and tack marking.

Thank you,
Kate 6268 and Vicki 5370

Dorset Police – Lay Observer Scheme

The Lay Observer Scheme is an opportunity for members of the public to join officers whilst out on patrol and to gain an insight into how the police and partner agencies work to protect communities from threat, risk and harm.

Dorset Police is welcoming more people to take part in the scheme. It is important for the police to understand the communities that they are serving and also for local people to see the kind of incidents police are called to as part of their day-to-day duties.

The scheme has traditionally been used by people who already work closely with the police in their line of work or people who would like a greater understanding of policing before they pursue a career in the service. However, Dorset Police would now like to extend this more widely to other members of the public.

Your chance to join us on patrol

If you are 18 years old or over and have ever wondered what a day in the life of a patrol officer is like, this is your opportunity to experience the problem solving and relationship building work which officers conduct on a daily basis, as well as witnessing response to calls, encounters with the public, and any arrests that are made.

We cannot guarantee what kinds of incidents officers with observers will attend, but you may encounter officers dealing with shop theft, victims and offenders of burglary, vehicle crime, drug warrants and people being stopped and searched.

The Stop and Search procedure may not occur on every occasion when an observer is present, but where it does, it is carried out only in specific circumstances.

The police will not Stop and Search somebody for the benefit of the lay observer. This would likely render the search unlawful and it would be completely against the intention and ethics of the Stop and Search reforms.

Our Stop-Search approach and other street encounters

In April 2015, Dorset Police signed up to the Home Office’s Best Use of Stop and Search Scheme.

The Lay Observer Scheme is open to people who wish to find out more about why and how Stop and Search works. They would also see how this differs to Stop and Account, which is when officers stop someone in a public place and asks them to account for themselves. The individual does not have to answer the officer and can walk away if they choose. The police can also stop a vehicle and ask the driver for their documents, which is different to Stop and Search.

Officers have various ways in which they conduct these kind of activities, which are known as ‘street encounters’. Police officers may Stop and Search someone if they have reasonable grounds to believe they may be able to assist with a police matter. If an individual does not cooperate, they may be arrested.

It is important for the public to be able to see that the police conduct their work around street encounters professionally.

We would particularly welcome observer applications from young people and people from Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) communities, as these groups are involved in a proportionately high number of encounters, yet often don’t take part in the observer scheme.

The Stop and Search procedure may not occur on every occasion when an observer is present, as it is only carried out in specific circumstances. The police will not Stop and Search somebody for the benefit of the observer, as this would likely make the search unlawful and would be completely against ethics of the Stop and Search reforms.

Feedback will be sought from observers about their time with officers, so that two-way learning can take place.

What do you have to do?

If you are interested in joining an officer on patrol, please click on the link at the bottom of this email and complete the application form.

Observers have to be security vetted, due to the information they may become aware of or what they may see during the observation. This can sometimes take a number of weeks. A member of staff will contact you and inform you of the outcome of the vetting and what happens next.

Scheme participants must also attend a safety briefing prior to going out on patrol. They will have to follow the instructions of the officer they’re accompanying at all times and wear a high visibility observer jacket.

Feedback will be sought from observers about their time with officers, so that two-way learning can take place.

Get involved
If you would like to join officers on a patrol, please complete an application form and return it to your local police station, addressing it to The Governance Team, Bournemouth Police Station or email it to StopSearch@Dorset.pnn.police.uk

For the form follow the link to, ​http://dorset.police.uk/docs/Lay%20Observersation%20Scheme%20Application%20Form.doc

or visit ​http://dorset.police.uk/default.aspx?page=9049 to find out more.

Let us know your thoughts on Twitter by using the hash tag ‪#YourView

Dorset Police – Horsewatch Event 19th December 2015

SATURDAY 19th DECEMBER 2015 10am to 3pm

The North Dorset Horsewatch team will be at Eccliffe Equestrian Mini Open Day in Gillingham.

Come along, meet the team, bring any tack that may require marking and have a chat about security. You can also arrange a time for us to come to you if required for larger amounts of tack marking.

We’re fairly sure there will be coffee and mince pies available and lots of fun for all the family!

Looking forward to seeing you there.

North Dorset Horsewatch
PCSO 5370 Levy and PCSO 6268 Hann

Published
Categorised as Crimewatch