- offenders to carry out hotspot clean-ups within 48 hours
after successful pilot
- up to £93 million invested into Community Payback to improve
the environment and revitalise our towns and cities
- latest push part of government’s plan to crackdown on
anti-social behaviour
Rapid Deployment teams - made up of offenders serving Community
Payback sentences – will be on call to swiftly deal with
notorious instances of anti-social behaviour across the country
after a successful pilot.
Members of the public are being invited to nominate projects in
their local area which will see offenders carrying out hard graft
such as picking litter from roadsides, scrubbing graffiti from
underpasses or shopfronts, and maintaining neighbourhood beauty
spots within 48 hours of cases being reported to the Probation
Service.
Community Payback ensures offenders visibly atone for their
crimes in a way that benefits the law-abiding majority and allows
the public to see justice being done in their own communities.
The scheme is now being expanded to all 12 Probation regions in
England and Wales, meaning it will continue to directly benefit
areas known to be among the worst affected by anti-social
behaviour in the country including in London, the East Midlands,
and the North West.
Lord Chancellor and Justice Secretary, KC, said:
Anti-social behaviour undermines people’s sense of pride in their
communities and makes them feel unsafe in the place they call
home. That’s why this government is taking a zero-tolerance
approach with our plan to stamp it out.
Our plan is working, with clean-up teams not only tackling the
corrosive effect of such crimes but also forcing offenders to
repay their debts to the very neighbourhoods they have harmed –
cutting reoffending and making our streets safer.
It forms part of the government’s Anti-Social Behaviour Action
Plan, which was published in March 2023, to ensure perpetrators
face swift and visible justice.
Since its launch, over 100,000 hours of extra police patrols have
helped reduce anti-social behaviour in hotspot areas and
dedicated safety officers are now more present than ever on local
transport systems to enhance public safety and help prevent
violence against women and girls.
The expansion comes as thousands of offenders will spend two
weeks giving back to give back to the communities they have
harmed in a concerted, nationwide clean-up.
Thousands of offenders on Community Payback will put in more than
12,000 hours of physical labour clearing tonnes of litter across
400 projects in support of Keep Britain Tidy’s annual campaign,
the “Great British Spring Clean”.
Prisons and Probation Minister, , said:
Community Payback forces offenders to clean up their act and pay
back society for the damage they have done on our high streets,
local areas and much-valued green spaces.
Forcing thousands of them to take part in a nationwide clean-up
restores a sense of pride in our communities and helps deter
criminals from vandalising our towns and cities.
Each year, courts hand down more than 50,000 Unpaid Work
requirements to punish offenders for crimes including theft,
criminal damage and alcohol-related offences.
We are investing up to £93 million into Community Payback which
will see offenders completing millions of Unpaid Work hours each
year to improve the environment and revitalise our towns and
cities.
The Community Payback website has been relaunched, making it far
easier for members of the public to report anti-social behaviour
and nominate potential projects in their neighbourhoods.
This will work alongside the government’s new reporting tool that
allows members of the public to quickly and easily report
incidents of anti-social behaviour when they take place.
Notes to editors
-
The Rapid Deployment pilot first went live in June 2023, in
the Probation Service regions of Greater Manchester, East of
England, Wales and the North East.
-
In April, it will be extended to all 12 Probation Service
regions. This will be a staggered rollout with two local
authorities coming onboard in each region, with the scheme
being offered to further local authorities over the coming
months. The regions are: East Midlands, East of England,
Greater Manchester, Kent, Surrey and Sussex, London, North
East, North West, South Central, South West, Wales, West
Midlands and Yorkshire and the Humber.
- The Anti-Social Behaviour Plan was published in March 2023.
It sets out how the government plans to crack down on these
offences at a local level and give communities a greater say in
how justice is served. Read more here.
- The public can nominate Community Payback
projects in their local area via our new
website which makes it easier than ever for the public to
report anti-social behaviour.
- Offenders can be sentenced to between 40 and 300 hours of
Unpaid Work depending on the severity of their crime.
- Last year marked 50 years since the launch of the first
Community Payback project after the first unpaid work placement
was ordered by a judge at Nottingham Crown Court on 2 January
1973.