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The Crime and Policing Bill completed its Second Reading in the House of Lords and will now progress on to the Committee Stage.

In response, Lucy Whing (right), crime policy adviser at the British Retail Consortium (BRC), has responded today, and said: “We’re glad to be one step closer to the implementation of the Crime and Policing Bill. As the Government takes action to address retail crime, retailers hope this bill will play a vital role in protecting retail workers from harm and tackling the surge in theft.

“The bill will remove the £200 threshold for ‘low level’ theft, which will send a clear signal that all shoplifting is unacceptable and will not be tolerated.

”It will also introduce a standalone offence for assaulting a retail worker, which will increase sentencing and improve the visibility of violence against retail workers so that police can allocate the necessary resources to tackle this challenge.”

Whing added that although the direction of the ill was encouraging, more still needed to be done to ensure all workers are covered. 

“The bill must go further. All people working in customer facing roles in the industry deserve equal protection, as is the case in Scotland, Whing said. “It remains unclear if the offence will cover delivery drivers, despite new figures from Usdaw revealing that more than three quarters have been a victim of abuse and over one in ten have been assaulted during the last twelve months.

“We call on the Government to ensure that the final Act ensures the extension of protections to delivery drivers.”