Ka Hoʻoholo 59/2022 – Kākoʻo kālā no ka hoʻolako ʻana i nā lawelawe kākoʻo kūloko

Ka mea kākau a me ka hana:           ʻO George Bell, Kānāwai Hoʻokolokolo Karaima & Luna Hoʻokele

Māka pale:              Official

hōʻuluʻulu manaʻo

Na ke Komisina Makai a me Crime no Surrey ke kuleana no ka lawelawe ʻana i nā lawelawe e kākoʻo ana i ka poʻe i hōʻeha ʻia i ka hewa, hoʻomaikaʻi i ka palekana o ke kaiāulu, hoʻoponopono i ka hoʻohana ʻana i nā keiki a pale i ka hana hewa hou. Hoʻohana mākou i nā kahawai kālā like ʻole a kono mau i nā hui e noi i ke kālā hāʻawi kālā e kākoʻo i nā pahuhopu i luna.

No ka makahiki kālā 2022/23, ua hoʻohana ke Keʻena o ka Makai a me ke Komisina Crime i ka hapa o nā kālā i loaʻa mai i ka ʻāina no ke kākoʻo ʻana i nā lawelawe kūloko. Ma ka huina kālā hou he £650,000 i loaʻa no kēia kumu, a ua wehewehe kēia pepa i nā haʻawina mai kēia pūlāwai.

Nā ʻaelike kālā maʻamau

Service:          High Impact Complex Drinkers Service

Mea hoʻolako:        Public Health, Surrey County Council

ʻAe:             £50,000

The funding requested will support Surrey’s High Impact Complex Drinkers programme. The programme is based on extensive evidence-based research by Alcohol Change UK whilst developing their Blue Light principles, to assertively engage and sustain medium to long term change with those who are considered to be change or treatment resistant. Assertive outreach underpins the model, and there is also great emphasis placed on the role of partnership working between agencies that an individual may come into contact with. Rather than the individual touching on a range of different services all responding in isolation, the model looks to engage services to joint case manage the service user with no fixed-time limit to intervention and/or thresholds that impact on future engagement.

Bedroom:          Hoʻokiʻekiʻe Kauoha 2022/23


Service:          Ke kukui alanui Surrey

Mea hoʻolako:        Ke kukui alanui UK

ʻAe:             £28,792

Streetlight UK provides specialist support for women involved in prostitution and all forms of sexual violence and exploitation, including those trafficked into the sex trade, providing tangible and material pathways for women to exit prostitution. They offer a non-discriminatory, confidential 1-2-1 service, enabling women to regain control of their lives. As such, their work has a direct benefit to the communities in which they work.

Bedroom:           Hoʻokiʻekiʻe Kauoha 2022/23


Service:          OPCC Beds

Mea hoʻolako:        ʻO ka Amber Foundation

ʻAe:             £37,500

This funding will support Amber’s mission to transform lives by supporting marginalised young people to move on to sustainable and independent futures that are free from crime. They do this by providing a residential training programme focused on personal development, employability, and resettlement skills for homeless, out of work young people aged 17-30. Amber provides a temporary, safe place to live with up to 30 other young people, and they use their tailored approach that is asset-based and hands on. Based around the principles of restorative practice, their approach seeks to create positive behaviour change through a mix of active participation in the programme, wider community engagement and a focus on residents taking active responsibility for their own decisions.

Bedroom:           Hoʻokiʻekiʻe Kauoha 2022/23


Service:          Surrey TTG Housing Scheme

Mea hoʻolako:        ʻO ka Trust Forward

ʻAe:             £30,000

This funding will support housing and resettlement services, which provides support to vulnerable individuals, with a history of drug, alcohol, or other mental health issues, who are newly released from prison and who have nowhere to live. They provide a stable and permanent home for these individuals, together with additional wrap around care. This may include support to maintain tenancies, sustain recovery from addiction, access benefit claims and food banks, improve life skills, renew relationships with families, and engage with mental health and employment training. They also support vulnerable individuals in the community who are homeless, have a history of substance misuse or other mental health issues, and who would benefit from additional support to help them maintain their tenancy.

Bedroom:           Hoʻokiʻekiʻe Kauoha 2022/23

Aponoia ke Komisina Makai a Karaima

ʻAe wau i nā ʻōlelo aʻoaʻo e like me ka kikoʻī ma Kaha 2 o keia hoike.

Wahi: ʻO Lisa Townsend, Komisina Makai a me Crime no Surrey (kope pūlima ʻia i mālama ʻia ma PCC Office)

Ka lā: 07 February 2023

(All decisions must be added to the decision register)

Nā wahi e noʻonoʻo ai

kuka

ʻEkolu lālā o ka papa no nā noi hāʻawi maʻamau i ka Reducing Reoffending Fund - Lisa Herrington (OPCC), Craig Jones (OPCC), a me Amy Buffoni (Surrey Police).

Nā hopena kālā

£146,292.00 mai Precept Uplift.

loio i

'A'ohe.

ka pilikia

'A'ohe.

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ʻAʻohe manaʻo.

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