North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin visited the Victim Support Office in St. Asaph on 22 June to learn more about its work in the community, and to meet the team working to ensure victims of crime across North Wales have somewhere to turn for support when they need it.
North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin visited Ysgol Eirias in Colwyn Bay on 21 June to learn more about how funding seized from criminals is helping to fund a project that aims to make our young people safer on the roads.
The Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner (OPCC) for North Wales has been officially accredited as a Living Wage Employer.
On Wednesday June 15, North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin was invited to appear before the Home Affairs Select Committee to discuss the police’s approach to combatting drug crime.
The North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner’s Community Awards Ceremony returned on Thursday, June 16 to celebrate the people in our communities across the region who make a difference in supporting the police and their fellow citizens.
North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin visited MonSar at their training base in Pentraeth on Tuesday June 7 to learn more about the organisation and to present their volunteers with Platinum Jubilee medals for their dedicated work on behalf of the emergency services.
A host of dedicated citizens were recognised at a special awards event at the St. George’s Hotel in Llandudno on Wednesday 1 June. The North Wales Police and North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner’s Commendation Evening recognised the long service of police support volunteers of three years or more.
Residents of North Wales are being asked to take a few minutes to tell police chiefs about their experiences of the 101 and 999 services, as well as preferences for future modes of contact.
North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin recently visited the Kinmel Bay Youth Shed to meet the team behind the Youth Shedz initiative, to learn more about the project and to see how money taken from criminals is being put to good use in the community.
North Wales Police and Crime Commissioner Andy Dunbobbin visited the Abergele Youth Shed project this week to meet the team behind it, to learn more about the project's work and to see how money taken from criminals is being put to good use in the community.