Whitefront
Well-Known Member
"Immediate attention" and "police response " is key. The average time for the police to respond to a burglary in 2022/3 in England was nine hours and eight minutes.
"Immediate attention" and "police response " is key. The average time for the police to respond to a burglary in 2022/3 in England was nine hours and eight minutes.
Probably. But unless the police turn up within, say, 10 minutes, they are not going to catch the burglars in time. And the chance of this happening (certainly, in most of rural Britain) is vanishingly small. The burglars know this, so alarms are of limited deterrent value. Even so-called monitored alarms generally require a civilian call centre to contact the police in the same way - and with much the same results - that you or I can.While not defending the police who nowadays appear to have burglaries way further down the priorities list than I’d like, I’m assuming that this average time includes reports of burglaries that are discovered after the fact? And therefore wouldn’t require an emergency response as such?
Probably. But unless the police turn up within, say, 10 minutes, they are not going to catch the burglars in time. And the chance of this happening (certainly, in most of rural Britain) is vanishingly small. The burglars know this, so alarms are of limited deterrent value. Even so-called monitored alarms generally require a civilian call centre to contact the police in the same way - and with much the same results - that you or I can.
I have in the past been strongly advised to have a burglar alarm by a listing FEO. I am not in a high crime nor urban area of England now that I have moved to our new house in the country. Question, is there any basis in law requiring a burglar alarm if you have an FAC and possess rifles for deer management? None of the other deer folk I know have one.
True, but our regulations specify what is required of a “ monitored alarm “.Technology makes some of these things quite hard to argue against in the current ‘climate’.
While a 3rd party monitored alarm is still expensive, one that reports back to your phone can be had for less than a few hundred quid, and WiFi cameras for a lot less than fifty.
I don’t want to get into a debate about whether it should be required, but I can see a lot of FLDs may start to feel that requiring a basic alarm/camera system isn’t a huge burden to put on applicants.
While the requirement for an alarm looks to be "guidance", some forces have notional numbers of firearms relative to security. Surrey is 10 before needing an alarm and 20 before needing a monitored alarm, from what I have been told. Getting a definition of monitored is the hard part. All my security cameras report intrusion to me, but that may not be good enough.
Regards
Somerset and Avon are about the same.
Mark
Mine was 10 and over fifteen had to be monitored"Basis in law" - I don't know ... however ...
A&S required me to add a full-house, professionally installed alarm before granting a variation which took my holding over 6 firearms (rifles+shotguns)
FWIW i have a monitored alarm which defaults to the police on the activation of two devices. We have had two 'accidents' and have had a police car on the drive within five minutes. I live in a rural area, not particularly remote but we don't see police cars round here very often except when theyre on blues and twos either chasing a miscreant,, or on their way somewhere else in a hurry."Immediate attention" and "police response " is key. The average time for the police to respond to a burglary in 2022/3 in England was nine hours and eight minutes.
Can I ask which alarm company you are using please?FWIW i have a monitored alarm which defaults to the police on the activation of two devices. We have had two 'accidents' and have had a police car on the drive within five minutes. I live in a rural area, not particularly remote but we don't see police cars round here very often except when theyre on blues and twos either chasing a miscreant,, or on their way somewhere else in a hurry.
We may have been lucky, but my suspicion is that having FAC on the premises may be a factor.
That sounds good. I have never heard of a commercial monitored alarm system that "defaults" to the police, but I think I know what you mean. They require filtering and verification through a civilian handling centre first. These top level services tend to have a v expensive subscription, possibly only affordable by an RFD rather than an ordinary certificate holder. Here are the details of one of the more reputable: When Do The Police Respond To A Burglar Alarm? | Banham Note that there is no actual guarantee of a police response/time.FWIW i have a monitored alarm which defaults to the police on the activation of two devices. We have had two 'accidents' and have had a police car on the drive within five minutes. I live in a rural area, not particularly remote but we don't see police cars round here very often except when theyre on blues and twos either chasing a miscreant,, or on their way somewhere else in a hurry.
We may have been lucky, but my suspicion is that having FAC on the premises may be a factor.
What I mean is that on the first alarm we get a call from a monitoring station, if we get two devices into alarm they call us if we do not pickup for any reason then the police are called.That sounds good. I have never heard of a commercial monitored alarm system that "defaults" to the police, but I think I know what you mean. They require filtering and verification through a civilian handling centre first. These top level services tend to have a v expensive subscription, possibly only affordable by an RFD rather than an ordinary certificate holder. Here are the details of one of the more reputable: When Do The Police Respond To A Burglar Alarm? | Banham Note that there is no actual guarantee of a police response/time.
Also note that after three false alarms in one year, the contract defaults to a lower level response.
But in any case, in many rural areas, there is simply no night time police presence - whether in cars or a station - for many miles, even if they were alerted. Furthermore, as far as I can see, the police generally won't treat a reported burglary as really urgent unless the intruders are actually present in your home at the same time that you are.
We use Blue Sky Security Contact UsCan I ask which alarm company you are using please?