Llanelli Star

Deployment of 150 cameras ‘has proved to be value for money’

- Richard Youle Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE deployment of more than 150 CCTV cameras in West Wales has been “value for money” and has the support of police officers, the Dyfed-Powys police and crime commission­er has said.

Dafydd Llywelyn was speaking about a £1.3 million investment in 23 towns in Carmarthen­shire, Ceredigion, Pembrokesh­ire and Powys.

“I have not met a serving police officer that does not agree with the sentiment that CCTV is a powerful tool, and supports it 100% in their work,” he said.

The roll-out of CCTV was a key priority for the incoming commission­er in 2016.

The deployment and day-to-day use of the cameras have been assessed by the Dyfed Powys police and crime panel, which concluded that they delivered operationa­l benefits and also made the public feel safer.

But the panel also heard from members of the public who felt there was a risk of the cameras intruding into private lives.

Privacy impact assessment­s have to be carried out for each camera installati­on, and then reviewed regularly.

Mr Llywelyn said crime pattern analysis was the basis of communitie­s being selected for CCTV cameras, and that the force followed guidance – for example, not extending their use into residentia­l areas, or parks.

There was, he said, “a fine balance between justificat­ion and proportion­ality”.

The commission­er added that cameras could be deployed “discreetly” for specific operationa­l purposes, such as by a property where drug-dealing was taking place, but

that a surveillan­ce commission­er would monitor this.

A crime panel report said the force-wide CCTV cameras monitored an average of 414 incidents a month and were used a further 67 times to help find missing people.

The system, it said, did not make use of facial recognitio­n technology. Footage from the cameras since their deployment has included a grievous bodily harm case outside The Met Bar, Llanelli, where a victim was knocked unconsciou­s with a single punch in 2018.

The suspect pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 20 months in prison.

CCTV operators have also helped disrupt drugdealin­g in Llanelli, prevent anti-social behaviour at a multi-storey car park in Haverfordw­est, and identified what were termed “profession­al beggars” in town centres.

The report said crime within 100 metres of the cameras had reduced by just over a third on average.

It also said that operators have monitored protests by Black Lives Matter, Extinction Rebellion and Penally migrant camp demonstrat­ors.

There was no reference to any potential displaceme­nt of crime as a result of the deployment of cameras, but Mr Llywelyn raised it during the meeting.

Displaceme­nt was, he said, something he and

Dyfed-Powys Police were mindful of.

“But at the moment it’s too much in its infancy to assess whether any of that is really taking place,” he said.

Mr Llywelyn said the cameras would need to be maintained and replaced after 10 to 15 years, and that he wanted to see other organisati­ons, like county councils, partner up with the police to benefit from their use.

Panel members asked if cameras could be deployed in rural areas, and whether a sinking fund for their eventual replacemen­t had been set up.

Councillor and former magistrate Ken Howell said CCTV cameras were also of benefit to the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS).

Reflecting on his time as a justice of the peace, he said: “I felt at the time that the CPS should be contributi­ng to the cost.”

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 ??  ?? West Wales’s new 150-plus CCTV cameras have proved ‘value for money’, according to Dyfed-Powys police and crime commission­er Dafydd Llywelyn, right.
West Wales’s new 150-plus CCTV cameras have proved ‘value for money’, according to Dyfed-Powys police and crime commission­er Dafydd Llywelyn, right.

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