Under Theresa Mayââ¬â¢s plans for a ââ¬Åcommunity remedyââ¬Â, victims may choose to receive compensation, to have offenders pay for any damage to be repaired, or to see them carry out up to 10 hours of unpaid work in the community.
The range of options will be decided by the new police and crime commissioners consulting with members of the public and chief constables under plans to give victims their voice back, Jeremy Browne, the Home Office minister, said.
Other punishments could include signing an acceptable behaviour contract, drug or alcohol treatment, or mediation to resolve neighbourhood disputes.
But each force area will be free to come up with its own options for punishments which should be ââ¬Åproportionate but meaningfulââ¬Â, rather than a ââ¬Åslap on the wristââ¬Â, the consultation document said.
Some forces already use a ââ¬Åcommunity resolutionââ¬Â, a common sense approach where the offender agrees to make amends to the victim without the case going through the criminal justice system, to deal with low-level crime and anti-social behaviour.
Up to 200,000 offences were dealt with this way in 2010/11.
Mr Browne said: ââ¬ÅThis new power will mean visible justice, straight away, providing transparency to the public, who rightly want to see fair and meaningful punishments.
ââ¬ÅOur reforms will place power back in the hands of the people, giving them a proper say in how their local area is policed.ââ¬Â
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What are your thoughts on Theresa Mayââ¬â¢s plans for a ââ¬Åcommunity remedyââ¬Â?