
Cannock Chase Council is proud of its strong working relations that it has developed with other local agencies across the District of Cannock Chase.
The Council, together with partner agencies forms the Chase Community Satafety Partnership, the District’s Local Strategic Partnership (LSP).
Community Safety Hub
The Council’s Partnership team is responsible for ensuring that the Council fulfils its duties and roles in the Local Strategic Partnership (LSP), both as a partner and responsible authority. The team is also responsible for coordinating partnership working across Cannock Chase District.
The main role of the Partnership team is the Community Safety Hub (CSH) which currently takes place virtually via Microsoft Teams every Tuesday at 10am.
The CSH is a multi-agency meeting that has a tasking and coordinating role. It aims to improve community safety across the District by identifying and addressing crime, disorder and vulnerability issues.
The CSH tackles community safety issues that require multi-agency attention which are more difficult to address through traditional working methods. Real time intelligence is used to identify issues and problem-solving approaches are discussed and applied using partner agencies expertise and resources.
The CSH fulfils all four of the Police and Crime Commissioner’s (PCC) key priorities:
- Early Intervention - tackling the root causes before they become a problem.
- Supporting Victims and Witnesses - making it easier for victims and witnesses to get the support they need locally.
- Managing Offenders - preventing offending in the first place and reducing the likelihood of re-offending.
- Increasing Public Confidence - making sure everything that happens in partnership contributes to individuals and communities feeling safer and reassured.
Referrals to the CSH are taken from all partner agencies including police, fire, public health, charities, local authorities etc . Referrals can include domestic abuse, anti-social behaviour, offender management, child sexual exploitation, mental health issues, licensing issues, planned evictions, community triggers, drugs and substance misuse etc.
To find out more about the Communty Safety Hub download a copy of the Terms and Conditions below.
Domestic Homicide Reviews
Community Safety Partnerships are statutorily responsible under section 9 of the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act (2004) for undertaking domestic homicide reviews where the death of a person aged 16 or over has, or appears to have, resulted from violence, abuse or neglect by a relative, household member or someone he or she has been in an intimate relationship with.
A review panel, led by an independent chair and consisting of representatives from statutory and voluntary agencies is commissioned to undertake the domestic homicide review. The panel reviews each agency's involvement in the case and makes recommendations to improve responses in the future. The panel will also consider information from the victim's family, friends and work colleagues.
Domestic homicide reviews are not enquiries into how someone died or who is to blame, nor do they form part of a disciplinary process. They do not replace, but are in addition to, an inquest and any other form of enquiry into a homicide.
The purpose of domestic homicide reviews is to consider the circumstances that led to the death and to identify where responses to the situation could be improved in the future. Lessons learned from the reviews will help agencies to improve their response to domestic abuse and to work better together to prevent such tragedies from occurring again.
Overview Reports and Executive Summaries of domestic homicide reviews published by Cannock Chase Council’s Community Safety Partnership can be found below.
August 2022
Community Safety Delivery Plan 2022/23
Community Safety Strategic Assessment 2022
Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent Domestic Abuse Strategy 2021 - 2024
Last Updated: 07/09/2022