The Gold Coast Bulletin

Nowhere left to hide

Cameras installed across Coast in bid to cut crime

- ANDREW POTTS andrew.potts@news.com.au

GOLD Coast suburbs are becoming “surveillan­ce states” in the push to crack down on petty crime.

More than 100 new cameras will be installed before next year’s Commonweal­th Games to monitor visitors and patrons, with 14 installed in Southport alone in the past year.

Area councillor Dawn Crichlow said the council rolled out the cameras after commission­ing a criminolog­ist from Griffith University to assess how to improve safety.

“We were told it is all about improving light and I am told that we now have so many cameras here that there are not many places where you cannot be seen in central Southport,” she said.

“These days people are saying they do not feel unsafe here anymore and the cameras are a positive step in this direction.”

According to figures released in August, the council has tripled the number of cameras in the city in the past decade – from 73 in 2006 to 267.

In the 2015-16 financial year the council responded to 450 police requests for footage and recorded 6382 “incidents of note”.

Surfers Paradise has 111 cameras while Broadbeach has 75, Southport has 54 and Coolangatt­a has 27.

Cameras are also being installed in western suburbs on the back of an anecdotal rise in minor crimes.

Robina Cr Hermann Vorster this week installed a further four cameras in problem spots, including on Ron Penhaligon Way.

They join a further 30 already installed in the past year, turning the area into what he called a “surveillan­ce state”.

Cr Vorster said the move was in response to a recent spike in youth violence and property damage.

“Over the past two years we have seen a significan­t deteriorat­ion in behaviour in the area between Robina Common and Robina Tavern with youth vandalism,” he said.

“This $60,000 initiative reflects the community’s appetite to feel safe and comfortabl­e as well as tackling the very real problems of bad behaviour and drug abuse.”

 ??  ?? A surveillan­ce camera Ron Penhaligon Way, Robina.
A surveillan­ce camera Ron Penhaligon Way, Robina.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia