The Journal

Violent crime has yet to reach peak

Reduction Unit chief says it may get worse first

- SOPHIE DOUGHTY

VIOLENCE on Tyneside may spike before it reduces as the country enters its first summer without Covid restrictio­ns.

That’s the view of the man in charge of the North East’s first specialist Violence Reduction Unit (VRU), set up to tackle the devastatin­g scourge of knife crime and violence.

Northumbri­a VRU director Steven Hume has set out the unit’s plans for the next year as he warns the area could face a post-pandemic rise in serious crime.

Mr Hume said: “It will probably get worse before it gets better, but we know that and we know which areas are at risk. We are nowhere near to cracking the problem. There are 10 key areas we need to focus our attention on, but we can’t ignore all the other areas.”

VIOLENCE on Tyneside may spike before it reduces as the country enters its first summer without Covid restrictio­ns.

That’s the view of the man in charge of the North East’s first specialist Violence Reduction Unit (VRU), set up to tackle the devastatin­g scourge of knife crime and violence.

Northumbri­a VRU director Steven Hume has set out the unit’s plans for the next year, as he warns the area could face a post-pandemic rise in serious crime.

And he has revealed how the team has now identified the 10 “hotspot” areas in Tyne and Wear and Northumber­land most at risk of violence, where resources will be targeted.

Individual­s who cause the most danger to their communitie­s have also been identified so their behaviour can be addressed.

Mr Hume said: “It will probably get worse before it gets better, but we know that and we know which areas are at risk.

“We are nowhere near to cracking the problem. The pandemic and lockdown has been a real challenge. The pandemic made us realise just how important our work was.

“There are 10 key areas we need to focus our attention on, but we can’t ignore all the other areas.”

Northumbri­a’s VRU was set up in 2019 after Kim McGuinness was elected into the role of Police and Crime Commission­er for Northumbri­a.

It aims to reduce violent crime and knife crime by taking a long-term approach to tackling the causes. The need to address the issue has become all the more urgent since serious violence rose by 27% last year as the country emerged from lockdown and pubs and clubs reopened.

The VRU has now devised plans for its fourth year, which include:

■ Using data and local intelligen­ce to interrupt violence by identifyin­g hotspot areas where action is needed;

■ Addressing the offending behaviour of those causing the most disruption in communitie­s and work with their whole families;

■ Providing community-based interventi­ons and diversiona­ry activities to reduce vulnerabil­ity and tackle offending;

■ Educating young people on the dangers and consequenc­es of violent crime to reduce their risk of becoming involved.

“The first challenge is we have got to understand what the problem is,” Mr Hume explained. “Our situation is entirely different to that of London and Manchester.

“We can’t just do things to people, we need to work with them. We need people to be part of the solution and we need to understand what it’s like to be a resident in these areas.

“We have got to understand where are the risks and how do we stop people exploiting the vulnerable.

“We have done a risk assessment across the whole of Northumbri­a to identify hotspots. “It’s not just about fortifying these areas. We need to understand how young people can help improve these places.

“We are targeting our resources on the areas that need us most. City centres are always going to be areas of interest, but there’s also a couple of areas that we didn’t expect.”

Just months after Northumbri­a’s VRU was establishe­d the UK was plunged into a strict lockdown as coronaviru­s cases soared.

And Mr Hume said this gave the unit new an unexpected challenges, which made its work more important than ever.

“When I first came into this job I would have said domestic abuse was the main problem,” said Mr Hume. “It’s still a massive issue, but while we don’t have the gang issues other areas have we do have issues of young people being exploited. “Since the pandemic we have seen people who went into the pandemic as children and have come out as young

adults. They have gone into the nighttime economy for the first time as 18 or 19-year-olds and we still don’t fully understand the impact of that.

“And from a mental health perspectiv­e, for some people who haven’t felt listened to or who were struggling it’s easier to resort to physical violence.”

By identifyin­g individual­s who are at risk of causing harm to others, the VRU aims to discover the causes of their offending so it can be addressed to protect potential victims.

“Everyone has a back story,” said Mr Hume.

“It’s about going back to the start to understand the people who are most at risk. For example, in households where people are exposed to domestic abuse they are more like to become perpetrato­rs.

“We know people who live in our more poor areas are at an increased risk of being exposed to violence and people’s interactio­ns with the police are different. We need to understand what’s behind that.

“A lot of people will say you need to lock more people up, and we do need to respond robustly to violence, we can’t look entirely down the road of early interventi­on. But we have to give people a way out of the problem.

“If we don’t do that it’s a perpetual cycle.

“We can’t just label people as problems. There’s no such thing as a bad young person, there’s just bad experience­s and bad choices.”

For the past year the VRU has run custody interventi­on programmes to engage with offenders who have had their first taste of life in prison to help them find a way to turn a corner.

“We have had some real successes from that,” said Mr Hume.

“You can look at going into custody as the same as going into A&E. You are only there because something has gone wrong. It’s about working back from that. Violence is a symptom of something else.

“I’m yet to meet someone without a back story. There are always going to be cases where it isn’t possible, but we have got to give people the best shot at changing their lives.

“When we have young people

exposed to the criminal justice system we need to find a way to say this isn’t the end for them.”

Since the VRU’s launch re-offending rates have fallen, with offences committed by young people dropping by almost 30%.

In addition, 75% of those engaging in the custody diversion project have reduced involvemen­t with the Criminal Justice System and have an action plan for the future, the unit says.

A total of 68% of young people who engaged with the VRU’s YOLO programme have not offended since exiting the interventi­on.

PCC Ms McGuinness said: “I recently announced my commitment to Fight Poverty, Fight Crime, and part of this approach is the work of the Violence Reduction Unit in preventing crime from happening by improving the lives of those most vulnerable to exploitati­on.

“Sadly, we know that large proportion­s of violence occur in areas where poverty is most prevalent – but we cannot just arrest our way out of the problem.

“That’s why the Violence Reduction Unit works with individual­s at risk of becoming a victim or before they are drawn into crime.

“Through community-based interventi­ons and dedicated workers, they aim to address the underlying causes of serious violence, educate young people and prevent individual­s from re-offending by providing diversiona­ry activities for a life without crime”.

Mr Hume added: “We know that we can’t resolve issues overnight, which is why our plan is for the longterm, working collaborat­ively with our partners so that we can continue to identify areas in most need of action, engage with communitie­s, provide diversiona­ry activities and educate young people.”

We cannot just arrest our way out of the problem PCC Kim McGuinness

 ?? ?? Quiet city-centre streets in Newcastle while the country was placed under lockdown
Quiet city-centre streets in Newcastle while the country was placed under lockdown
 ?? Simon Greener ?? Northumbri­a Violence Reduction Unit director Steven Hume
Simon Greener Northumbri­a Violence Reduction Unit director Steven Hume
 ?? ?? Northumbri­a Police and Crime Commission­er Kim McGuinness
Northumbri­a Police and Crime Commission­er Kim McGuinness

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