North Wales police threaten ban over calls about bins and noisy kids
North Wales Police (NWP) is considering contact bans for individuals who repeatedly report non-criminal matters, such as neighbor disputes over bins or children playing, to prevent the wasting of police resources. NWP stated that these trivial calls create a large demand on the force, diverting attention from serious crime.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedNorth Wales Police (NWP) is considering contact bans for individuals who repeatedly report non-criminal matters, such as neighbor disputes over bins or children playing, to prevent the wasting of police resources. NWP stated that these trivial calls create a large demand on the force, diverting attention from serious crime. While other UK police forces have reported similar issues with inappropriate calls, NWP's potential contact ban is believed to be a first. Victim Support has raised concerns that this approach could discourage victims of antisocial behavior from reporting incidents, fearing they will get into trouble for contacting the police about incidents they deem to be ‘trivial’. NWP Chief Constable Amanda Blakeman stated that the force will always address ASB of a criminal nature, although certain complaints are dealt with by local authorities.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedOver 3.4m officer hours could be saved if police forces move to more cost-efficient 'model process tools' for dealing with antisocial behaviour and burglaries.
Trivial calls account for just 15% of 999 calls nationwide, according to the Met.
North Wales police have responded to four antisocial behaviour callouts in 24 hours for disputes such as 'neighbours who don't put their bins away'.
Contact bans could send the message that 'victims' experiences don't matter', according to Victim Support.