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Police to make presence felt in blitz on underage drinkers

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Published Date: 05 December 2008
POLICE are to scour bus stops for underage youngsters carrying alcohol as part of a blitz on anti-social behaviour over the festive season.
The "Christmas Presence" will see officers carrying out early-evening "gateway checks" at bus stops outside the city centre to stop youths bringing alcohol into town.

Police chiefs are also planning extra patrols on Friday and Saturday nights thr
oughout December and council chiefs have assigned a youth worker to support officers.

Meanwhile, environmental wardens will also be carrying out night patrols, targeting late night revellers dropping take-away food cartons.

The transport marshals scheme, where stewards control the taxi ranks, has also been extended.

Superintendent Mark Williams said today: "We will be giving a particular focus to tackling anti-social behaviour and violent crime.

"With that in mind there will be a more visible policing presence on the streets and they will be supported by council staff.

"I would ask the public to work with us to support those efforts so everyone can enjoy themselves safely in the Capital this Christmas."

He added: "It's testimony to the joint planning we have undertaken that so many organisations are involved and so many staff will be on duty."

Police patrols will target off-licences and shops selling alcohol in order to prevent any underage sales, while the council's mobile CCTV unit will be targeting hotspots.

Officers and council licensing officials will also carry out evening patrols of pubs and nightclubs with advice and support being provided to staff on preventing over-consumption of alcohol.

The transport marshals will be on duty at taxi ranks on Lothian Road at Rutland Place and the Sheraton Hotel, Waverley Bridge, and on the High Street at the Radisson Hotel.

George Street at the Dome and the top of Leith Walk at Baxter's Place will also have safety stewards in place.

Councillor Paul Edie, the city's community safety leader said: "We want to ensure that shoppers, residents, visitors and revellers enjoy the time they spend in Edinburgh over the festive period.

"Working with partners means our efforts are more concentrated and better results are achieved.

"I would like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a safe and merry Christmas."

The Christmas Presence initiative also involves the British Transport Police, who will be carrying out extra patrols on trains running in and out of the Capital in December.





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  • Last Updated: 05 December 2008 10:52 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Antisocial Behaviour
 
1

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 05/12/2008 12:09:43
Is all this draconian enforcement really a good idea? I don't think so. The rod of iron certainly stopped 16 year-olds from drinking in pubs but in return, we got even younger kids drinking unsupervised in public.

Christ knows where its all going to end if someone doesn't see sense soon. Crack-downs don't work. Unless you can put a copper at every bus-stop in the city it can't possibly work. All they are going to do by this is force kids to be more resourceful about dodging the law. Do they really want to do that?

Back off with the enforcement and return to common sense by means of education and positive propaganda.
2

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 05/12/2008 12:15:26
If they continue along these lines, they are going to cause a whole load of new problems. Over zealous enforcement of pub age limits gave us kids drinking in parks. What is "cracking down" in this way going to give us? Burglaries? Kids drinking in stairwells?

The jack-boot campaign has not worked. It is time to change tactics. A good move would be to encourage people to take responsibility for their actions.
3

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 05/12/2008 12:16:07
Sorry.

Thought I'd lost the first post...
4

alex paterson,

edinburgh 05/12/2008 12:17:47
What a load of rubbish,i dont agree with under age drinking,but the Polis should be catching real criminals.
5

Pai Mei,

05/12/2008 12:30:46
Excellent news, a crackdown is exactly whats needed to bring people back into line. The rubbish left by take away containers is disgraceful and youths go mental on booze.
6

Cod,

05/12/2008 12:41:55
That's nothing.

I saw a giraffe in RS McColl's this morning buying five packets of Rizla.
7

elayne,

05/12/2008 12:46:07
are the police going to walk round the estates because that is where MOST of the under age drinking goes on,or in parks etc, the town centre is just tip of the iceberg,most underage drinking goes on in peoples houses,at partys etc where there is little/no supervision and the drink flows
8

Pai Mei,

05/12/2008 12:55:42
The only way this problem can be solved is to arm the police with Bazooka's and Uzi 9mm's and have gangs of them drive around hanging off the back of pickups lookiong for trouble makers.

This is my proposal.
9

Bill MacD,

05/12/2008 13:48:25
The problem isn't booze. The problem is that so many young people have such empty lives that they have to fill the lack of meaning or purpose with booze. But it's far easier to initiate 'action' on things like underage drinking, than to tackle deprivation, the empty values of consumerism, and education that teaches only acacemic or workplace skills with no grounding philosophy.

Politicians need to start being driven more by quality of life issues, including factors such as community and self-actualisation which every psychological study ever conducted shows are the sort of thing that actually breed social cohesion and contentment, And they should pay far less attention to so-called standard of living, which equates only to consuming artificial wants driven by advertisers whose craft is entirely based on artifically stimulating feelings of inadequacy and dissatisfaction. Stop pandering to money-driven paymasters, and look after public needs instead!
10

Jenny MacArthur's Humvee,

05/12/2008 14:00:33
I mind the Christmas dance when I was a schoolboy - a kilt, a bag of speed and a bottle of Merrydown, you can't beat it.
11

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

05/12/2008 14:04:36
I think Chitty Chitty Bang Bang had the answer: round them up in childcatcher vans and keep them prisoner in caves.
12

tam562,

penicuik 05/12/2008 14:22:51
#4 its wee neds that drink that cause problems oh by the way whats a real criminal
13

blackley,

Edinburgh 05/12/2008 15:12:56
And the band played.....
14

elayne,

05/12/2008 16:03:39
#10 merrydown,its only slightly classier than "sanatogen"tonic wine!
15

Jenny MacArthur's Humvee,

05/12/2008 19:54:04
What does a bird from Niddrie use for protection during sex? A bus shelter

#14 you're not wrong!!!!
16

elayne,

05/12/2008 21:14:07
what happened to merrydown??its been overtaken by that white lightning p*sh,the cider thats never saw an apple in its puff,pure rocket fuel
17

is it me?,

Edinburgh 05/12/2008 22:29:26
So they're going to stop them bringing drink into Edinburgh?
Aye, that'll work. Like you can't buy drink 24/7 in Edinburgh?
18

is it me?,

Edinburgh 05/12/2008 22:34:05
While the Bobbies are all out checking kids at bus stops, the corner shops will be raking it in. Christ, what's wrong with these people ?
19

L. Dawson,

Edinburgh 04/01/2009 21:13:14
Sounds like a good idea,
maybe the police can jump on and off the ocasional bus any friday-to-sunday night from 7pm on wards too. I was on a bus in november where a group of 6+ pissed teens beat the cr*p out of a guy for turning around when one of them swore at the girl next to him.
They will do what they want as long as they know they will get away with it.

As ' Bill MacD' pointed out there is more to it than just booze but that doesnt mean the police should turn a blind eye to booze.

who is more likely to get in a fight with a stranger the crowd of pissed neds or the crowd of non pissed neds?

 

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