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Overland happy with city safety

11 Mar, 2010 11:41 PM
CONTRARY to public opinion, Ballarat remains a safe city at night, Chief Commissioner Simon Overland said in a visit to the region yesterday.

But addressing the perception the city is unsafe is as important to Victoria Police as protecting the community, he said.

"The reality is, Ballarat is a safe city but people don't feel safe and we have to address that as much as we do the actual violence that's occurring," he said.

Mr Overland was instrumental in developing the new 120-member Operations Response Unit (ORU), launched two weeks ago , a taskforce formed for deployment across the state to help local police deal

with late-night, alcohol-fuelled street crime.

He said the unit could grow to 600 members by next year and said such saturation-style policing was a significant step in helping to address public perceptions of safety.

"The interesting thing will be what the impact this saturation policing will have and what it does to the problem," he said.

"If it calms it down, how long does it calm it down for? Does it calm it down for good or for three months? Do we hit it, calm it down and then come back in two months and hit it again?

"That's the sort of level of thinking and analysis we need to do to keep disorder and crime at an acceptable level."

Mr Overland has also spent his first year in the top state police job campaigning for greater police powers, such as on-the-spot fines for drunken revellers, introduced in December.

This week, the Victorian Government extended these powers, enabling police to issue fines of nearly $500 and ban troublemakers from entertainment precincts for 72 hours.

"I know at times my members don't feel they are adequately supported by the judiciary and I at times understand their frustration," he said.

"But, ultimately, sentencing is matter for the legislature and the courts.

"The fines and banning notices are starting to have an impact. They are going up to nearly $500, which starts to make it a very expensive night out."

Mr Overland said the ORU would be used as often as required on Ballarat city streets on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, but he denied Police Association claims that the city needed 98 more officers to effectively patrol their area.

"I don't know how they have worked that figure out.

"This police service area is fully resourced, in fact it's over strength by three at the moment, so I can only allocate the numbers I have got.

"Would I like more? Of course I would.

"But it doesn't matter how many resources we have got, we know the nature of crime will move around.

"Now, with the ORU, if we have a problem we have to deal with, I have to have the flexibility to move the resources to where the problems are."

Mr Overland said a shortage of officers one day last month that led to the officer in charge of Ballarat police station, Senior Sergeant Peter McCormick, performing court security duties was not a

resourcing problem.

"It would seem to point to (not having enough members) but within Ballarat itself there are five vacancies in the station in the process of being filled and if you look across the PSA, they have more police than they are funded for by three," he said.

"If those sorts of things are happening, it's local management issues.

"If they are short to that extent, I am really interested in finding out why because it doesn't make sense with the data around their actual numbers and vacancy rates."

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comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Simon, it's public opinion that counts!!! If the public don't feel safe in Ballarat at night then they are not going to go out at night...regardless of how safe you tell them it is. Ballarat needs more police on proactive patrolling with a zero tolerance for ANY offence...not more empty police cars sitting at the front of the police station. While you can't have a cop on every corner...you'll pass a lot more corners patrolling than sitting in the station. Visits by the Operations Response Unit shouldn't be announced, just get in, get the job done and give us the stats after the op.
Posted by Jimmy, 13/03/2010 7:48:15 AM, on The Ballarat Courier
3 police to many !!!!!! Mr Brumby send you up did he Simon ? bit worried is he ? Please give him a messge STOP INSULTING OUR INTELLIGENCE AND FIND US SOME MORE COPPERS. Could we please fast forward to the next election and get rid of this usless Labor Government
Posted by No Way, 13/03/2010 10:12:39 AM, on The Ballarat Courier
Nice to see Mr Overland had time to speak to many different people while he was in Ballarat. Its good the see the Chief of Police getting out amongst the community. The burning question is why he didn't take 15 minutes to call into the Police Station to find out the answers to some of the questions he poses for himself. A 5 minute chat to the local police over a cuppa would have answered all his questions! There is a rapidly growing list of police on sick leave, maternity leave, secondments, working at D24, leave without pay, restricted duties due to illness/injury or pregnancy etc etc. None of these police are replaced when they are not available for work. Talk is Cheap Mr Overland and the rhetoric about 'local management issues' and Ballarat being overstaffed with police is wearing a little thin. A word of advice to those who refuse to acknowledge there is a problem... Never hide your head in the sand - you'll only get your a*#@ kicked!
Posted by Snubbed, 13/03/2010 1:35:18 PM, on The Ballarat Courier
Yes it is the public opinion that counts. Once a place is deemed by the majority as 'unsafe,' law abiding citizens stop using it - creating a vacuum that is quickly filled by less desirable elements. Perception therefore is self perpetuating. Who is responsible for the perception, well I think the Courier needs to wear a large part of the blame. Perhaps they should start reporting news rather than pedalling fear. I know that bad news sells papers but they must shoulder to a large extent the public sentiment and the self fulfilling prophecy they are perpetuating.
Posted by Pedalling Fear, 13/03/2010 6:56:37 PM, on The Ballarat Courier
What would you know Overland? You dont operate at ground zero and are at the political end of The Police Force now. How can anybody here take you seriously? Your not taking what we are saying seriously, so we certainly arn;t taking you seriously Mr Overland. Pehaps you should take a trip overland somewhere else and find a new career path? It would suit you rather than the current one you have. Laugh laugh laugh!!
Posted by Laughable, AGAIN!!!!!, 14/03/2010 5:16:09 AM, on The Ballarat Courier
Mr Overland hey? It's either an exageration from a reported or your political stance. I know you have to say what is best for the public to hear, but we, and I, are certainly tired from hearing from you! Are you listening to us, the public in whom you are meant to serve? I doubt it very much so, and many people should know that the higher a Policeman or womean in the force makes it the more political it becomes. Be assusred Overland, Ballarat is a Drug invested town, full of violence and crime. If only the public knew about all the crime people are to scared to admit to? If ONLY? You may perhaps or should have an idea, but it's whether you guys want to admit it of not. Wake up Ballarat! We have a problem here, and no bandaid solution is going to fix the problem as it slowly gets worse as we dont get the extra help we need here.
Posted by Who is serving who?, 14/03/2010 5:22:02 AM, on The Ballarat Courier

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