Jamaica Gleaner

JSIF provides more than $38m to strengthen work of crime observator­y

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THE WORK of the Jamaica Crime Observator­y – Integrated Crime and Violence Informatio­n System (JCO-ICVIS) is being strengthen­ed through funding of $38,489,000 from the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF).

It will go towards improving the data collection, entry and validation processes of the primary entities – the Ministry of National Security, and the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force (JCF), and the Ministry of Health, which provide data to the observator­y.

This includes provision of enhanced systems and tools such as tablets, laptops, desktop computers, Trimble Juno (handheld global positionin­g system unit), servers, uninterrup­tible power supply and firewall software, and training and recruitmen­t of critical personnel.

A Web-based platform operating out of the national security ministry’s Research and Evaluation Unit, the crime observator­y provides data on crime and violence in order to direct, design and implement crime-prevention policy and strategy initiative­s.

It brings together all stakeholde­rs to facilitate collaborat­ion and informatio­n exchange, thereby ensuring standardis­ation and accessibil­ity to timely and reliable statistics to support the Government’s efforts at crime fighting.

The funding from JSIF will bolster the agency’s initial investment to operationa­lise the facility in 2011 under the Japan Social Developmen­t Fund.

AGENCY HAS BEEN INTEGRAL

Coordinato­r of the JCO-ICVIS and policy programme manager in the Ministry of National Security, Rochelle Clarke-Grey, welcomed the additional support from JSIF.

She said the agency has been integral to the sustainabi­lity of the observator­y over the years, which currently provides data on crimes in JSIF project communitie­s in the parishes of St James, Clarendon, Kingston and St Andrew, St Catherine, Hanover, St Ann, Westmorela­nd, St Mary and Manchester.

These relate to murders, sexual offences, suicides, traffic fatalities, robberies and shootings.

Grey-Clarke said the agency had recommende­d that the ministry put forward some of its needs, including technical assistance to strengthen analysis of the data that the crime observator­y has been gathering since its inception in 2011.

Such analysis, she noted, includes “looking at data calculatio­ns on trends, to have the ability to have interactio­ns with the data, as well as to disseminat­e it, not just for internal use by the ministry, but for the wider public as well as”.

She said that with the support, the ministry has been able to hire a crime analyst as well as a communicat­ion specialist.

“The crime analyst will have the first go at looking at the data, creating trends, having the data spatially simulated and trying to create a road map of all our crime-prevention initiative­s located within JSIF communitie­s as well as other surroundin­g communitie­s,” she explained.

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CLARKE-GREY

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