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Local Community Safety Partnership

The Local Community Safety Partnership (LCSP) is a new government initiative which brings together community members, the voluntary and community sector, statutory services, and local councillors to work together in identifying and tackling community safety issues locally.

The closing date for receipt of applications is 15th July 2024.

The Government has approved a new whole of system approach to community safety, introduced by the Department of Justice. It has developed the new community safety policy based on a key principle identified in the 2018 report by the Commission on the Future of Policing; that policing is not the responsibility of the police alone and involves other agencies of Government such as health and social services.

The concept of community safety is about people being safe and feeling safe in their own community to be delivered through Local Community Safety Partnerships and supported through a national governance structure. This will build on the work undertaken through Joint Policing Committees and supplement it by ensuring that all other relevant stakeholders necessary to constitute a more holistic forum for discussion and decisions on community priorities are present. Consequently, the Partnerships will have a wider membership than the JPCs and will include residents, local councillors, community representatives, business and education representatives along with a range of public services including the HSE, Tusla, An Garda Síochána and the local authority.

The partnership approach is built on two premises:

  1. That every community is different and has different problems and issues.
  2. That responding to those problems and issues requires a range of inputs from across Government, local services, voluntary sector and the community itself.

The response to the issues identified above requires the following elements:

  • Community engagement in identifying what the needs of the community are.
  • Commitment and buy-in from State, local and voluntary service providers to work together to address those needs.

The local Community Safety Partnerships will seek to foster sustained community involvement in identifying needs and co-designing solutions, and sustained commitment from services in working together to address those needs. Local Community Safety Partnerships align with similar approaches in related policy areas such as the Sláintecare Healthy Communities initiative and the existing Local Community Development Committees.

Regulations for the Membership of LCSP’s by the Minister for Justice, will require a maximum of thirty members and will include representatives from communities, service providers and other stakeholders. LCSP meetings are to be held at least once per quarter, with an additional one closed and one open meeting per year. Twenty of the thirty members will be specified in regulation and will include seven Elected Members. The remaining ten places will be appointed by the Chair in consultation with the rest of the partnership, who will consider local demographics and other factors that will help in deciding who else is needed in each specific locality.

Expressions of Interest Invited

Clare County Council invites expressions of interest for consideration for appointment as Chairperson of a new Local Community Safety Partnerships which is be established in each Local Authority area in line with the Policing, Security and Community Safety Act 2024.

Expressions of Interest Chairperson to the new Local Community Safety Partnerships for County Clare

Page last reviewed: 26/06/24

Content managed by: Rural and Community

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Contact

Local Community Safety Partnerships - Administrator
Rural and Community Development
Clare County Council
Áras Contae an Chláir
New Road
Ennis
Co. Clare
V95 DXP2
087 4777658
(065) 6846240
Opening hours
Monday - Friday: 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. with offices open through lunch. 
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