CRIME cameras in Ferryhill are proving to be value for money.

Members of Ferryhill Town Council requested statistics to assess the effectiveness of the town's CCTV cameras, which show that the cameras captured 193 incidents of anti-social behaviour in the year up to April.

There were 34 examples of criminal behaviour caught on tape and a further 107 'incidents of note' recorded in the statistics which were discussed at a council meeting this week.

Executive officer Jamie Corrigan said: "The figures are impressive and the members were particularly pleased to hear about one incident which was relayed to them.

"Someone was convicted in court recently for a burglary at Ferryhill and they were actually seen carrying the stolen property through Dean Bank Park."

Members are often questioned about the value of having cameras in the town and doubts have been raised about their usefulness.

Mr Corrigan said: "It's a major talking point in Ferryhill. We did ask for reports on the performance of the cameras because we pay for the upkeep of them. In total they cost the town council in the range of £15,000 a year to maintain, so we wanted to see the proof of the pudding."

There are seven cameras in the town, four in Dean Bank Park, one in the market place, another near the Black Bull pub in the town centre and the newest at King George V playing field.

A spokesman for Sedgefield Borough Council said the cameras were proving a useful deterrent and not just in Ferryhill.

He said: "CCTV picks up incidents that could easily go undetected and there is a deterrent side to the cameras in that it gives people confidence to walk the street knowing they're being recorded.

"CCTV cameras help make Ferryhill, and Sedgefield borough as a whole, a safer place in which to live and work."

The spokesman said that one of the most frequent complaints is that cameras appear to be static, but this is not always the case.

He added: "Every camera movement is recorded and in one recent four-hour check, one of our cameras had 1,784 movements all of which were recorded.