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Welcome to Crowborough (St John) NPT page

Meet the team

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PCSO Tamara Bennett

Mobile
07787 685739
Telephone
101

tamara.bennett@sussex.pnn.police.uk

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PCSO Chi Yau

Mobile
07787 685742
Telephone
101

chi.yau@sussex.pnn.police.uk

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PC Richard Waters

Mobile
07787685729
Telephone
101

richard.waters@sussex.pnn.police.uk

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 @wealdenpol

Mobile
Telephone
101

@wealdenpol

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 Sussex Police Wealden District

Mobile
Telephone
101

Sussex Police Wealden District

Contact your local station

Address

Crowborough Hill, Crowborough, East Sussex
TN6 2DA

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Local events

Street Meeting

Type
meeting
Date/Time
30 May 2012, 7:00PM
Location
Ashleigh Gardens, Crowborough,

PCSO Tam Bennett will be at Ashleigh Gardens This is an informal chance for local residents to come and meet their local community officer, and raise any concerns they have. Local town and district Councillors will also be invited to attend.

Crowborough Summer Fun Day

Type
meeting
Date/Time
2 Jun 2012, 9:00AM
Location
High Street, Crowborough,

Summer Fun Day. Crowborough Neighbourhood Policing Team will have a stall at the event. We look forward to seeing you on the day.

Come and meet us

Type
meeting
Date/Time
2 Aug 2012, 7:00PM
Location
Waitriose Coffee Shop, Croft Road.,

PCSO Tamara Bennett who represents Crowborough St John's ward will be hosting a Neighbourhood Panel meeting on the 2nd August 2012.

Local priorities

Speeding: What you said: Speeding in Ghyll Road.
Issue raised on 3 May 2012

What we did: Request will be made to install SDR Radar device to assess the traffic speed in Ghyll Road What happened: Panel will be updated with results. Neighbourhood News: If you have concerns regards speeding traffic locally and you wish to get actively involved. Please contact me to discuss Community Speedwatch in more detail. This initiative requires six people to attend a training session. After training has been completed the speed device can be booked out from Crowborough Police Station to conduct Community Speedwatch sessions. Op Crackdown is being circulated to panel members and people signed up to community messaging to promote reporting anti social driving.
Action taken on 8 May 2012

Parking What you said: Parking in the London Road area to continue to be monitored. Due to inconsiderate and illegal parking, particularily on the junction of St John's Road.
Issue raised on 3 May 2012

What we did: We have worked with other agencies to resolve identified parking issues. Sussex Police and ESCC conducted a joint site visit. Crowborough Town Council have erected a sign to show parking in Pilmer Road Car Park. Enforcement by way of fixed penalty notice has been conducted. Use of CCTV at the location was looked at, however it was found not to be a viable option. A multi-agency approach has taken place and Pcso presence in the area continues. Panel members are updated with police activity at the location at the Neighbourhood Panel meeting.
Action taken on 8 May 2012

Neighbourhood Watch What you said: To continue to increase the number of Neighbourhood Watch members in the local area.
Issue raised on 3 May 2012

What we did: Actively recruit new NHW members at street meetings, by way of leaflet distribution, whilst on daily patrol and at community meetings. What Happened: New NHW coordinators have been recruited. New NHW schemes have been set up and more schemes are currently in the process of being initiated. A number of residents who have attended street meetings have signed up to community messaging. Panel members are updated with progress at the Neighbourhood Panel meeting Neighbourhood News: If you are interested in being involved in NHW please contact me for details. Being a coordinator for your road does not entail too much time or effort. NHW is mostly run by cascading emails to your neighbours. I can offer support and information. So why not give it a go and contribute to a worthwhile community initiative
Action taken on 8 May 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