Half a million dollars each year may be funnelled into ensuring community safety in Rotorua.
Rotorua Lakes Council will also consider extending CCTV coverage, and investigating artificial intelligence monitoring and community reporting apps.
The ideas come as part of the council's draft community safety plan, which will be discussed at a meeting of its Strategy, Policy and Finance committee on today.
The committee will consider whether to recommend to the council, which next meets on March 25, to approve the plan for public engagement.
'There is an increasing perception amongst residents and visitors alike that Rotorua's public spaces are not safe,” a report for the meeting prepared by council strategy development manager Rosemary Viskovic states.
'Over the last several years there have been increasing concerns regarding an increase in anti-social behaviour in public places … affecting people's sense of safety.
In the report, Viskovic says increasing housing insecurity and the use of temporary non-residential properties for prolonged periods had also contributed to a reduced sense of safety in some places, adding a late 2020 crime statistics report stated the Rotorua Territorial Authority area was rated the worst among 66.
The council had bumped up City Guardian and security patrols in the city over summer, as well as mobile patrols on Fenton St and other 'hot-spots”, and extended periods of CCTV live monitoring.
Last month, the council had also established a temporary alcohol ban in some areas on the periphery of the inner-city.
In her report, Viskovic says elected members had been 'instrumental” in developing the draft community safety plan through Long-term Plan workshops held in December and February, and the plan was organised around four 'themes”: intelligence, response, prevention and collaboration.
'A range of council operations which relate to community safety are funded as usual business. The Long-term Plan consultation is proposing additional funding of $500,000 per annum towards new initiatives.”
Viskovic's report says detailed project planning would work within those budget constraints.
The one-page draft plan revealed the council's proposed plan to combat the community safety in the district, including extending CCTV coverage to the entire CBD and Fenton St and other locations, including suburban areas, and staffing extended monitoring. It also proposed to investigate AI monitoring.
The plan proposed to encourage community reporting, including the use of apps to do so, and increasing the mobility of City Guardians, as well as reviewing the impact of alcohol and drugs on public spaces.
At today's meeting the committee will also consider whether to recommend to the council to note a 2021 representation review process.
The representation review is required by law every six years and will determine arrangements for the basis of election - be it councillors at large, wards or a mix of both, and the establishment of community boards.
Local authorities, such as the council, can also consider the electoral system used - first past the post or single transferable vote, and the establishment of Māori wards.
The committee will also consider whether to approve a 30-year infrastructure strategy for inclusion into the 2021 Long-term Plan consultation process.
Bay of Plenty Regional Council chairman Doug Leeder and chief executive Fiona McTavish are also expected to present to the committee on the regional council's Long-term Plan public consultation.
The council's proposed plan for community safety
Intelligence
- Assess public spaces of concern
- CCTV - network plan to extend coverage to entire CBD and Fenton St and staff extended monitoring
- CCTV - investigate AI monitoring, extend coverage to suburban and other parts of district, link with private security and providers
- Connect City Guardians team with police, private security and Māori wardens
- Investigate community reporting and methods, such as apps
Response
- Address issues identified with rapid interventions
- City Guardian team respond to intel, increase mobility of team, boost with contract security at peak need times
- Increase community safety patrols in suburban patrols and liaise with other groups such as Neighbourhood Support and Māori Wardens
-Regulatory team target effort on reducing alcohol and drug harm, with help from the police, Toi Te Ora Public Health and the District Licensing Committee
Prevention
- Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design principles in public space design
- Review impact of alcohol and drugs in public spaces and operation of bylaws
- Plan and implement activating public spaces with pro-social events
- Plan and implement activities with families living in motels to enhance inclusion, participation and pro-social behaviour
Collaboration
- Identify community safety partners and align efforts
- Community awareness and participation in prevention, including encouraging reporting and funding community safety initiatives
- Safe public transport, supporting youth justice models and advocating for community policing resources
The development of community hubs was also an idea in the plan.
-Source: Rotorua Lakes Council.




7 comments
Tom Ranger
Posted on 11-03-2021 10:12 | By Tom Ranger
This buddy buddy link between major hoteliers and politicians whom introduced this tax-payer funded scam should be destroyed. The politicians exposed for the fraud on the taxpayer. The motels contracts torn up. Funds diverted to building new govt owned social housing. Millions upon millions wasted here every week!...and this is the result!!!
Head in the sand approach
Posted on 11-03-2021 11:20 | By Let's get real
Do ratepayers really want crime monitored or do they NEED crime to be dealt with... appropriately. We have a "Be kind" government, who wants to shy away from consequences for criminal behaviour and reduce the prison population. For many, the very thought of time in prison could dissuade them from crime. But it's now a holiday camp, run by the gangs and their civil rights lawyers and the hand-wringing apologists. Consequences can combat crime.... Ask some of the Arab states.
Tom Ranger
Posted on 11-03-2021 12:05 | By Tom Ranger
@ Lets get real. Agreed. Punishment is one way. Prevention is the other. There are reasons why gangs exist. Let's address the issue of why our youth are attracted to gang-life.
Government should pay
Posted on 11-03-2021 18:18 | By Johnney
You pay tax to keep government services running. You pay rates to keep local services running. Rates are a form of tax. You pay 15% gst on rates (tax). Maybe the government should return all gst collected to each council. This will help pay for the security.
@Tom Ranger
Posted on 12-03-2021 09:41 | By Let's get real
Kids are attracted to gangs because we give away too much free money. Ask Cindy which group is going to get the next handful of cash from the public purse.... You'd better ask her yourself, because she won't answer the media now. She doesn't know how to justify the actions of her government unless it's covid related.
Tom Ranger
Posted on 12-03-2021 10:10 | By Tom Ranger
@Johnney. Well...put it like that and it's a charge of GST on a tax. Just like our petrol taxes where we are paying GST on tax. Commerce commission should be coming down on all of these situations/organizations hard. But will they? No. Never trust a politician/govt. It's a corrupt system. We normal folk all end up paying for it.
Tom Ranger
Posted on 12-03-2021 13:08 | By Tom Ranger
There is substantial truth to what you say here Let's get real. Enabling people to stay home all day creates idle people/youth...and what do they do? Drink/smoke and/or walk the streets. Then...Oh look! Something to entertain ourselves with and support our habits until my "PAY" comes from WINZ. They literally say it's their pay!?!? Like being jobless is a job. They believe it's govt paying. But it's us! Previously people would drag their kids to their worksite and teach them how to work. Now OSH and over-regulation prevents us teaching our kids our trades. Further instilling intergenerational poverty.
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