City centre - closed circuit television - CCTV
Peterborough's CCTV system celebrated its 10th birthday on
Tuesday 27 March 2007 after recording more than 100,000 incidents
and playing a vital role in detaining more than 15,000 people
during the past decade
When it was first installed in March 1997, 45 cameras kept a
watchful eye on the city centre and council-run car parks. Now,
there are 129 cameras operating around the clock, seven days a
week, with coverage extended to include the city's townships, local
community shopping areas, residential and business districts, and a
host of public buildings.
Video tape has been ditched in favour of digital recording and
the eagle-eyed operators now have direct radio links with police.
Live images can be beamed to Cambridgeshire Constabulary and
operators are have established excellent two-way radio
communication links with the Police, Retail, Business and Licensing
trades, Street Wardens and Parking Attendants ensuring
appropriate responses are made to the images captured.
The system's effectiveness was demonstrated within days of
going live when CCTV operators were able to locate and direct
police to a man who was responsible for an armed robbery at a city
centre building society.
Peterborough was the first local authority CCTV system in the
country to have a police liaison officer work within its control
room. This extended to include networked computer links to enable
the officer to carry out the CCTV investigation of reported crimes
and incidents, provide control room staff with daily crime trends,
and details of wanted and missing people. In addition, it allowed
items of intelligence captured via CCTV to be directly recorded
onto the police intelligence systems.
Chief Inspector Steve Lodge said: "CCTV is a vital and
extremely successful crime prevention and crime fighting tool.
Cameras act as an effective deterrent and their ability to capture
crime in action allows us to present compelling evidence for
prosecution.
"We will continue to work closely with the council's CCTV
operators to build on the success seen over the past 10
years."
"Residents can be in no doubt that the CCTV system has made
the city's streets safer over the past 10 years," said Councillor
Graham Murphy, Cabinet member for Environment and Community Safety
at the city council.
The Peterborough Citisafe CCTV System Code of
Practice for the operation of Closed Circuit Television is
available.
