Top Banner
Consultation, Customer Insight & Community Safety Louise Meats, Leigh Roberts 26 th March 2015
22
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Consultation, Customer Insight &

Community Safety

Louise Meats, Leigh Roberts26th March 2015

Page 2: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Who are we?Hopefully, most of you know…

• The County Council’s central research & information section. • We provide a wide variety of information on the people and economy of

Cambridgeshire in order to help plan services for the county.• Our work is divided up into a number of specific research areas including:

– Informing policy and service development• Population and demographic areas• School pupil forecasting• Economic and labour market analysis• Crime & community safety research• Housing research• Health data• Deprivation research• Census and Quality of Life information

– Consultations & surveys– Data dissemination

Page 3: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

LARF (Local Area Research Fortnight)

• Mon 16th: Who we are, Cambridgeshire Insight and Open Data

• Thurs 19th: Demography and Pupil Forecasting• Mon 23th: Economy and Housing• Thurs 26th: Consultations, Customer Insight,

and Community Safety

• 16-27 March Lunchtime drop-ins, Room 015

Page 4: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Consultation:“It’s good to talk”

• Why do we do it?– As a Council

• It’s our legal duty!• Evaluate and set performance standards• Indicate how well a service contributes to a policy area• Assist with determining service levels• Identify cost savings• Enable services to make informed choices• Trigger further investigation into any issues• Improve the take-up of services• User satisfaction can be monitored and improved over time

– Within the Research Group• Helping colleagues • Ensuring consistency• Legal duties• How and why we need to consult

Page 5: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Robust response?

• All about the confidence intervals….. • We want to be sure our results are as close to

those we would get if everyone replied. (IE within 3%)

Page 6: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

What makes a good consultation?

• Preparation

• Promotion

• Presentation (/Design)

Page 7: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Consultation

• Three key messages to communicate:– Explore the need to consult.

• Don’t consult the public if you’ve already made the decisions.

– Identify an appropriate tool.• Online? Face to face? ‘Piggy-backing’ existing

meetings? Postal? Door-to-door? Etcetcetc….• Smart Survey, not SurveyMonkey.

– Publicise your consultation.• Consultations database.• Communications Team.

Page 8: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Customer Knowledge / Insight

• Getting to know your communities– Understanding need and expectations– Feeding this into the design and delivery of services

• Varying tools– Census– Social analysis tools: OAC / MOSAIC– Direct experience: Performance data, survey results,

front-line workers

Page 9: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Customer Knowledge / Insight

Page 10: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

• Open source, free tool by the ONS

• Socio-demographic data

• Uses 62 variables to define communities:

– 22 Demographic– 4 Household composition– 9 Housing– 11 Socio-economic– 16 Employment

Output Area Classifications - OAC

• 3 levels to the classification:– 8 supergroups– 24 groups– 67 sub groups

Page 11: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

• Free tool.

OAC for Cambridgeshire

Page 12: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Community Safety

• 5 Community Safety Partnerships• Police & Crime Commissioner• DAAT• Public Health• CFA

Page 13: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Working in Partnership to achieve

• Make communities safer• Fewer victims• Reduce repeat victimisation• Reduce re-offending• Help victims access support/ CPS

Page 14: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

How?

• The part of research– Knowing the victims– Understand why, where and what happened– Knowing the offenders– Understand why, where and what they need– Understand what interventions work

Page 15: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Victim Rate

MaleFemale

Comparison with South Cambs

Page 16: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Figures

• Data analysis identified 9,088 unique repeat victims, who were victimised 21,533 times (more than 1 in 5 of victim records were for a repeat victim).

• For the study, repeat victims were split into two categories, one with repeat victimisation for less than four times, 8,393 victims victimised 18,155 times; and another victimised four or more times, 695 unique victims, victimised 3,378 times.

• 1 in 5 victims are at risk of becoming repeat victims for violence or for criminal damage.

• 1 in 8 victims are at risk of becoming repeat victims for burglary and 1 in 10 are at risk for theft.

Page 17: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety
Page 18: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Repetition Period with Cumulative percentage

• 42% repeated within 3 months 62% repeated within 3 months• 60% repeated within 6 months 80% repeated within 6 months

Page 19: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

-8.0 -4.0 0.0 4.0 8.0 12.0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

1 0

1 1

1 2

1 3

1 4

1 5

1 6

1 7

1 8

1 9

2 0

2 1

2 2

2 3

2 4

2 5

2 6

2 7

2 8

2 9

3 0

3 1

3 2

3 3

3 4

3 5

3 6

3 7

3 8

3 9

4 0

4 1

4 2

4 3

4 4

4 5

4 6

4 7

4 8

4 9

5 0

5 1

No

min

al

Offending rate (6 months)

Baseline

Rate of Offending

Comparison of rate of offending in baseline and monitoring period per offender

Page 20: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

Changes in Offending

Page 21: Presentation 4   consult, c insight and comm-safety

In practice

• What changes?

– Victims Hub– Continuation of funding for effective interventions– Data sharing to rescue victims from exploitation– Prevention & education