I was talking about this with my neighbour from Holland today. They have the same problem that I experienced in the UK. A reasonably affluent area close to a main road or motorway and you will be more at risk. I lived between the M1 and M40 and the police didn't have the numbers to catch people as they headed through the lanes towards the quick get away roads. We had a neighbourhood watch and when I phoned up the police to say that a house appeared to be in the process of being broken into, they said they would send someone down the next day. At one time we had a police office two miles away. It had two houses and officers, and covered most of the local villages. During the Thatcher years it was closed and the houses sold off. There was also a police station with ten officers that gave twenty four hour cover five miles away. That to was closed a couple of years later, and the service was moved to one central station twenty five miles away. I quite often sat in a police car and could listen to all of the conversations going on between the officers and the call centre. It was obvious that far too often there was no one who could respond to an ongoing event. A single police car can have equipement in it that equates to the same cost as two and a half officers for a year. That car can only be in one place, while you can have better service by employing officers. The same thing is happening here. Our police station eight miles away has been closed, and we are now covered by the one in town twenty five miles away. We are lucky that we don't have any crime, but if something did happen that required urgent attendance, we would not have it.