ASB Awareness Week launches across Warwickshire

By Nadia Sayed 29th Jun 2025

Warwickshire prepares for ASB Awareness Week (image via Warwickshire County Council)
Warwickshire prepares for ASB Awareness Week (image via Warwickshire County Council)

Locally, community safety partners across Warwickshire are coming together to ensure residents and businesses feel #SafeInWarwickshire for ASB (anti-social behaviour) Awareness Week.

ASB Awareness Week, which runs from 30 June until 6 July, is a national campaign dedicated to raising awareness about ASB and encouraging communities to take action.

Throughout the week, Safer Warwickshire partners are spotlighting the work being done to tackle ASB and urging residents to report incidents that affect their quality of life.

Warwickshire Police and Crime Commissioner Philip Seccombe said: "Community safety partners have been working hard across the last year to tackle anti-social behaviour in our town centres and the results have been really positive.

"Communities are telling us they feel safer, are seeing less anti-social behaviour, and have more confidence in how we're tackling crime.

"That's a real endorsement of our targeted, evidence-based approach to patrols - and of the hardworking officers and community safety partners delivering this every day on the ground.

"I'm pleased to have been able to invest in this approach and will continue to support it as part of my long-term commitment to a safer Warwickshire for all."

From nuisance motorbike riding to abuse against shopworkers, ASB takes many forms, and everyone has a role to play in addressing it.

Warwickshire Police's Operation Undertook is actively addressing the issue of motorbikes being ridden antisocially and illegally, an issue that causes fear and frustration in many neighbourhoods.

Residents are encouraged to report what they know through Warwickshire County Council's Dob 'Em In scheme.

Reports from the public are already making a difference, whereby 225 reports were submitted between January and May this year, with 25 bikes seized (including 13 bike seizures in April alone) and five arrests.

Additionally, hotspot policing is being used to focus resources on areas where ASB is most prevalent.

Known as Op Resolve, this targeted approach over the last year in locations including Leamington, Nuneaton, Bedworth, Atherstone, Rugby, and Stratford has shown positive results.

Surveys carried out in hotspot patrol areas reveal:

  • The proportion of people in Warwickshire who feel safe walking alone after dark has risen to 54 percent, with the number saying they feel very safe more than tripling in the past year.
  • During the daytime, 95 percent of people now feel safe – up significantly from 86 percent.
  • Overall, 60 percent of those surveyed now say ASB is not a very big problem or no problem at all in the areas where hotspot patrols have taken place.

Public support is also strong, with 82 percent of residents saying they welcome the extra patrols and 77 percent expressing that visible policing makes them more likely to report ASB. 

The hotspot patrols will be continuing in revised locations across the county from July.

A campaign to celebrate neighbourhood policing and highlight everything individuals might not have known about it is going to take place over the course of July and August 2025.

Individuals can keep an eye on the Warwickshire Police social media channels or sign up to www.warwickshireconnected.com to find out how to get involved and keep up to date.

Coinciding with ASB Awareness Week is #ShopKind Week, which promotes kindness and respect towards retail workers.

Warwickshire's community safety partners are working closely with local retailers to combat abuse and anti-social behaviour in shops and licensed premises.

Retailers can access free downloadable #ShopKind resources to support their staff and customers here.

Businesses are also encouraged to visit Warwickshire Business Watch for free, impartial advice on preventing ASB and business crime.

Cllr Dale Bridgewater, Warwickshire County Council Portfolio Holder for Community Safety and Chair of the Safer Warwickshire Partnership Board, said: "Anti-social behaviour affects the wellbeing of our communities and the safety of our businesses in Warwickshire.

"National ASB Awareness Week is a good opportunity for us to highlight how local residents, retailers, and community safety partners are taking a stand against unacceptable behaviour.

"By reporting incidents and working together, we can help ensure Warwickshire remains a safe and respectful place for those that live and work in the county."

Follow 'Safe In Warwickshire' throughout the week on social media to learn more about how you can help tackle ASB and support your community, to keep Warwickshire a safe and respectful place to live, work, visit and study.

National ASB Awareness Week is a good opportunity to remind members of the public how to report anti-social behaviour:

Throughout the week, Anti-Social Behaviour, Community Safety and Tenant Engagement Teams from Warwickshire's district and borough councils will be out and about, giving people the opportunity to chat to them about how they can and are working with communities to take a stand against ASB.

Follow 'Safe In Warwickshire' on social media or check your local district and borough council's website or social media for details of events near you.

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