South Taranaki Star

Less crime, more police

- CHESTER BORROWS

You’d be excused for thinking I had a vested interest in seeing fewer police on the streets given the criminal proceeding­s in my name, but I think it is a bit sad to see an increase in numbers so well applauded for other reasons.

I can’t truly understand the need for a radical increase in police numbers when the crime statistics as far as we can rely on them, are falling. And this is a real drop in numbers of offences and not some artistic use of stats. There are more police than there has ever been and they are better equipped and remunerate­d than ever before. So if there is less crime, why do we need more police?

It is an anomaly that, at a time with low crime numbers, we have more people in prisons. Many of them are for administra­tive offences like failing to adhere to court orders that are not even indirectly violence offences. The need for increased police numbers takes account of the preventati­ve effect that more constables on the street have.

The greatest deterrent for criminal behaviour is the chance of getting caught so I am hoping that more police doesn’t just mean they just lock more people up and blow the budget at the Ministry of Correction­s. But almost more importantl­y is the placating effect of people feeling safer in their homes knowing the thin blue line is bulking up a bit, and that is just political.

I wonder about the integrity of allowing people to go on thinking crime is rife and their safety is at risk when in fact people are less likely to be burgled, assaulted, or otherwise infringed upon than in the previous 30 years. I am pleased to see the Government’s increase in police numbers of about 1100 - 880 sworn police and 245 non-sworn civilian staff have at least been allocated to deal with areas of concern like the investigat­ion of child and sexual abuse and family violence and rural and provincial policing. Getting a response to a call for assistance in the rural areas has been like pulling teeth.

Speaking to a call-centre in Auckland, Wellington or Palmerston North and having to explain the difference between a heifer and a steer is like lecturing your kids on the birds and the bees. When the default position of the police is not to attend, offer counsellin­g and to bat the complainan­t away with a rant about how busy police are when the rest of us are also busy, just doesn’t stack up and certainly doesn’t endear the public to awarding warm fuzzies. So news that there will be a non-urgent three-digit calling number is great, but when we want to see a police officer a call-centre just won’t do.

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