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Welcome to Seaford East NPT page

Meet the team

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PCSO Community Engagement Officer Lizzie Sword-Daniels

Mobile
07787685746
Telephone
101

elizabeth.sworddaniels@sussex.pnn.police.uk

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PC - Neighbourhood Policing Constable Alastair Batchelor

Mobile
07787685697
Telephone
101

alastair.batchelor@sussex.pnn.police.uk

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PC - Neighbourhood Policing Constable Stuart Hyde

Mobile
07825753558
Telephone
101

stuart.hyde@sussex.pnn.police.uk

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PCSO Noel Daniels

Mobile
07787685714
Telephone
101

noel.daniels.01@sussex.pnn.police.uk

Contact your local station

Address

Church Street, Seaford
BN25 1HG

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Local events

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Local priorities

Priority 1 - What you said: To try and identify if further signs and notices are required for council parking wardens to issue tickets to people who park on the zigzags outside Chyngton School. Panel members have also requested improved contact with Highways.
Issue raised on 20 Apr 2012

What we did: PCSO Daniels continues to work alongside are partners, he will be in contact with East Sussex Highways and hopefully will invite a representative to the next panel meeting also. What happened: Updates from Highways awaited.
Action taken on 21 Apr 2012

Priority 2 - What you said: Request for Walmer Rd to become a Speed Watch site for volunteer usage.
Issue raised on 20 Apr 2012

What happened: Continued liaison and joint work by local Police and the Roads Policing Department. Request to be sent to them asking for site analysis and feasibility for potential sites at this location.
Action taken on 21 Apr 2012

Crime Mapper

Go to Crime mapper site

Crime mapping is part of a national initiative to enable members of the public to be apprised of crime levels in their area. The Sussex Police system provides crime levels at three levels: Force-wide, Districts, Wards/beats

How to read crime mapping data

For some smaller areas, the crime rates may appear high. This is primarily due to the low resident population within these areas; crime rates are calculated by dividing the actual number of crimes by the resident population and then multiplying by 1,000. Crime levels are then calculated using standard deviation, a way of fairly measuring and comparing the spread of crime across the force from area to area.

Local teams