Partner Post: 5 Crime-Prevention Tips from Police for HOA Board Members
This content was republished with permission from Flock Safety.
While thinking about neighborhood safety may come naturally to you and the members of your HOA board, it can be difficult to get fellow residents to follow safety rules the board has set in place.
If you’re having trouble convincing your neighbors that security should be a priority for all residents, consider passing on tips police have provided to help neighborhoods prevent crime.
1. Surveil Your Own Home
One of the most efficient ways to keep your home safe is to get into the mind of a burglar.Casing is a term that describes the way a burglar surveils a home, looking for patterns and determining the best times to enter a home when the homeowner is away.
Although most property crimes occur between the hours of 10 am and 3 pm while homeowners are away for the day, try casing your own home both at night and during the day. Attempt to gain access to your home when all doors and windows are locked. If you've found a point of weakness around your house, it's more than likely a burglar will as well.
Make sure to let your neighbors know you'll be conducting this experiment so they don't accidentally report you to your local police.
2. Lock Up
The four most common points of entry for burglars are the front door, a window on the first floor, the back door, and the garage. Each of these entryways can be locked. Ask residents to make a habit of keeping doors and windows locked not just when they're away for the day, but also whenever they're at home. Police have seen cases where burglars have walked right into a house and gotten away with valuables when a homeowner was out in their own backyard with the front door unlocked.
Burglars know they don’t have a lot of time to gain entry into a home. If they try a few different points of entry and each of them are locked, it's likely they won't keep trying. By keeping doors and windows locked, you’re making your home less of a target for burglars.
3. Maintain a Relationship with Your Local Police Department
Many local law enforcement agencies have a department or person dedicated to their local community. Call up your local station and ask for their community liaison. Most likely, this liaison will be more than happy to come to an HOA meeting to speak with residents about safety tips.
4. Keep Up on Crime Trends
Take advantage of the relationship with your local police department to stay up-to-date on current crime trends in communities around you. Your local police will have more insight into when residents should be extra vigilant — like during the holidays when package-stealing becomes more prevalent.
5. Don't Wait
Save yourself the heartache of thinking about what could have been by acting sooner rather than later. Don't wait for crime to show up on your doorstep before taking safety precautions in your neighborhood.
Following this mindset, don't wait for someone else to speak up first if you see something that seems out of place. Police stress to residents that speaking up, even if they think the information they have is not valuable, helps police fulfill their duty to protect the community.