VPS has just released their latest version of its ground-breaking initiative to help sites prepare and be secured before trespassers set up illegal encampments.
According to the latest government statistics[1], the number of travellers' caravans In England has almost tripled from 8,000 to 23,000 between 1979 and 2020. When several caravans settle in unauthorised encampments, it can be a costly exercise to move them on and clean-up after they have departed - costs that are estimated to reach over £100m annually for councils and private landowners combined.
The VPS Trespasser Tracking Advanced Knowledge (T-Trak) initiative helps landowners and property managers to avoid the expense of temporary encampments, squatters, or illegal gatherings such as illegal raves.
Data for all attempted security breaches on the 30,000 UK premises that VPS looks after, is analysed, combined with additional information sources, and then collated. The results provide advanced intel as and when the encampments move on, enabling VPS to map the next likely ‘hotspots', and to warn their customers of potential unauthorised encampments and trespassers arising in their region.
Release of T-Trak2.0 has created an even more powerful, targeted version that provides customers with a site-specific Urgent Intelligence Report identifying a risk analysis for their venue. Deeper data mining, together with additional VPS resources including eviction and bailiff services, manned guarding, property inspectors, and alarm responses, provides real time reporting of incidents and locations of unauthorised activity across the UK and Ireland.
VPS review all properties managed within the immediate area of concern, and then checks the properties nearby, and provides a three-tiered profile to determine the level of risk of intrusion. It documents the location of the threat, the travel time to VPS customers' properties, the level of risk, and whether specific circumstances apply such as large open spaces, copper on site, fly-tipping opportunities or recently refurbished building and materials.
In a recent example, an encampment was discovered in Basildon, Essex, minutes away from a vacant warehouse and carpark facility managed by a multi-national real estate company. A T-Trak2.0 report was compiled, and the customer approved the recommendation for a canine-handling unit - the guard and dog arrived within two hours. Within two days, they had prevented intruders from entering the site.
"The most effective immediate response to an imminent risk is the short-term deployment of a dog-handling unit. Additional security, such as perimeter fencing, concrete barriers, alarm systems and CCTV can always be added or replace the guards later, said Jose Rosa, Head of Guarding, VPS
Typical areas targeted by unauthorised encampments are large open spaces such as carparks, next to empty warehouses where copper cabling or water tanks might be present. The car parks are sometimes turned into illegal flytipping centres and run as a commercial enterprise.
Advanced warnings mean short-term enhanced security measures can protect clients' properties at times of increased vulnerability.