top of page

Back to:

Home        Incidents  

Operation Beech police patrols resume after Halloween pause

Police patrols aimed at curbing student noise resume this week, starting on Tuesday for Guy Fawkes Night and continuing on Friday and Saturday (Nov 8 and 9).

'Operation Beech' was paused last week during Halloween and the weekend because of other police commitments. The operation is paid for by the University of Bristol.

Residents have welcomed the patrols, which can be contacted by text (see info panel) when noisy student parties cause disturbance.

Halloween passed off without too many complaints. The university had earlier distributed a letter warning about “the pitfalls of believing a house party would be a good choice for a social event.”

From end-September to Oct 19, Operation Beech received 22 complaints of parties or noise involving UoB students, according to PC Sian Harris, the campus police officer. Another three cases were found not to involve students and in two others those involved had left before officers arrived.

The patrols have generally had good reviews from residents.

One says she and her husband texted Beech after a loud party started up in Archfield Road, Cotham. Officers arrived at 11-15pm and talked to the students. The music was turned down—only to go back up again after the officers left. The residents texted again and the officers returned just after midnight.

This time, she says, “the music was turned off for good and the big crowd of students apparently went off to a club. Such a relief. The Beech patrol is highly effective and responsive." (Incident report.)

Other residents have sent in similar reports (see Incidents page).

Operation Beech will operate in designated areas (see info box) on the dates shown, although officers can always be pulled away to deal with emergencies.

(For updates and a bigger map, see here.)

Coverage in future months will be more selective, and dates will be announced nearer the time. Check the link above for any updates.

My own advice (unofficial) for using Beech:

  • Text, don't call. Keep it short and begin with the address (street name, house number) or location:

“99 Anyplace Rd: large house party, loud bass, grateful if you can intervene, John”

“Hampton Rd, near petrol station: large, noisy group, approx 15 people, gathered on street, please can you speak to them, Julia”

  • Be polite, and patient. At times, the officers may be quite busy and may have to prioritise certain incidents.

  • Don't wait until UoB's 10pm (midweek) or midnight (weekend) party guideline has been breached. The officers are on duty only until 2am, so there may be a problem if requests bunch up after midnight.

Even if you contact Beech, I advise that you also file a complaint email to the university in the normal manner. (See my 'response' pages here if you need help.) If you want to include feedback about the Beech experience in your complaint email, that might be helpful to UoB and the police. (Please copy me in.)

Tags:

80 views

Free Newsletter

Want to stay up to date? It's easy—just take a few seconds to sign up to my email list.  I send out a periodic e-bulletin summarising recent news. I may also send brief alerts if there's an important development.

 

There are about 370 subscribers as of October 2023. Join them—and encourage me to keep going!  

Comments? Questions? Want to report noise?

Let me know what you think!. Please email thenoisepages@gmail.com.

I will get back to you as soon as possible. If you'd like to send me a comment for publication, make it clear you'd like me to post it.

bottom of page