Other things were going on at the time, but with the BBC just about to interview Peter Clarke, HM Chief Inspector of Prisons following publication of his Annual Report, this from independent journalist Hardeep Matharu last month is further evidence of a growing prison crisis:-
The health and safety watchdog has been forced to reveal the findings of the inspections it has carried out in dangerous prisons as assaults against prison officers have soared.
Last month, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) told me that, as a result of increasing numbers of reported assaults on prison officers, it led an “inspection initiative at a small number of prisons at the end of 2017”, but that it could not give out any information about its key findings.
However, in response to a Freedom of Information request, it has now outlined the issues the inspections highlighted – including a focus on “firefighting”, underlying causes of violence not being prioritised in internal investigations, how filthy jails and an “unfair” Incentives and Earned Privileges Scheme can lead to violence, and the failure of placing young offenders into adult prisons in order to control levels of violence.
The HSE is the country’s independent body for work-related health, safety and illness. Its enforcement duties include dealing immediately with serious risks, ensuring employers are complying with health and safety law, and holding to account those failing in their responsibilities to do so. It can serve notices, issue cautions and prosecute employers.
According to the Government’s latest safety in custody statistics, self-harm, assaults and serious assaults – between prisoners and on prison staff – have again risen to “record highs”.
Assaults on prison staff have increased by 196% since 2010, with 8,429 incidents recorded in 2017, up 23% from the year before. There were also more than 800 serious assaults on staff in the same period.
Although the HSE said it found that causes of violence and aggression are known and understood in the prisons it inspected and that there are “policies, procedure and initiatives, both locally and nationally, to enable the management of violence and aggression”, many of the other findings I obtained under Freedom of Information raised a number of concerns.
The key findings:
- Internal prison investigations into violence that “do not focus clearly on underlying causes and lessons learned” and findings not being widely shared
- Good practice not always being recognised by staff, with the HSE noting that “it was not always clear ‘what good looks like’”
- Prisons feeling “overwhelmed by the challenges of identifying priorities and allocating resources to address these”
- A “focus on ‘firefighting’”
- Inexperienced staff “contributing to the challenges of managing violence and aggression”, with the HSE questioning whether it was the case of “the right people, in the right place at the right time with the right experience”
- Dirty prisons being “an estate-wide issue to resolve as poor environment is directly related to violence and aggression”
- Concerns around overcrowded prisons and the placing of young offenders in adult prisons as a means of controlling violence. The HSE said: “Pressures on residential accommodation can lead to an inappropriate mix of prisoners and increase the potential for violence and aggression. The integration of young offenders into the mainstream system was not reported as being successful in controlling violence amongst this group”
- The Incentive and Earned Privileges Scheme – whereby prisoners are able to earn benefits in exchange for responsible behaviour – can lead to violence and aggression as it was felt, by both prisoners and staff, “to be ineffectively applied and unfair”
- The “churn of staff and prisoners” in some prisons “not enabling supportive relationships to be developed to assist the management of violence and aggression”
- Unpredictability leading to frustration and violence, with both prisoners and staff preferring a consistent, predictable prison regime
- Delays in transferring prisoners from courts to prison leading to frustration and potential violence, with the HSE suggesting that “contracts for prisoner transport require review”
- Health and safety resources in some prisons not being used to effectively focus on risks from violence and aggression
- Controlling the risks of violence to healthcare staff was “inconsistent”, with some feeling very safe and those in other prisons feeling at “considerable risk”
- Systems for reporting incidents of violence and aggression being unnecessarily complicated, with up to 12 forms needing to be completed in some prisons
- Prisons being inconsistent at identifying the training required by staff, delivering and then monitoring its effectiveness
Despite the HSE telling me last month that it was “currently feeding back the findings from this work to senior management in HM Prison and Probation Service and private contractors”, a press officer at the Ministry of Justice said she would need to know which prisons had been inspected and the dates of the inspections before the Ministry of Justice would be able to comment on the findings.
Hardeep Matharu
The Howard League for Penal Reform has responded to Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Prisons’ report on Wandsworth prison, published today (Friday 13 July).
ReplyDeleteWandsworth, in south London, is the most overcrowded prison in England and Wales. Figures on the Howard League website show that, although the prison is designed to accommodate 841 men, it was being asked to look after 1,365 at the end of May.
But the number of prisoners has been falling. At the end of September 2017, Wandsworth was holding 1,570 men. The number had dropped to 1,428 by the time inspectors arrived in February this year, and it has continued to fall since.
Inspectors found the prison to be filled with many men with drug or mental health problems who were receiving poor training and education. Their report highlights the need for cultural change inside the prison, drawing attention to “an obvious gap between the intentions of senior managers and what was actually happening on the wings”.
Almost half of the men were locked in their cells during the working day. Forty per cent of prisoners told inspectors that it was easy to get illicit drugs, and 450 referrals were made to the mental health team each month.
Six men had lost their lives through suicide since the prison’s previous inspection, conducted in February and March 2015.
Frances Crook, Chief Executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said: “Wandsworth is the most overcrowded prison in the country and, as today’s report shows, it faces significant challenges. Too often prisons are being asked to cope with the fall-out from other services like mental health and the lack of housing that has led to custodial remands and short sentences for trivial but repeat offences.
“But we are beginning to see some steps in the right direction – the number of prisoners has fallen by more than 200 in eight months. Having fewer prisoners and more staff provides breathing space and presents an opportunity to change the culture inside the prison.
“It is vital that this trend continues. Further action to ease pressure on our overcrowded prison system would save lives, protect staff and prevent more people being swept into deeper currents of crime.”
I am not aware, in any sense, when you work in a prison or are detained in one, that entry forfeits any rights to your health & safety.
ReplyDeleteThe Wandsworth report highlights the need for 'cultural change' – senior managers can't get their policies actioned on the wings. The inspectorate witnessed prison staff gathered in a wing office blithely ignoring prisoner alarm bells. It seems cultural change is a euphemism for a screw's prison. We hear much about assaults on staff, but far less about the reverse, though the former are meticulously recorded whilst use of force by staff is poorly recorded assuming staff bother to record it at all.
ReplyDeleteI doubt that the prison system will get any better whilst we have a government that is so ideolically driven.
ReplyDeleteAll we ever hear is "we've learned lessons" and then it's business as usual, common sense trumped by ideology.
I know I'm straying, but all the lessons that were learned from the Carillion collapse and abject failures of government outsourcing policy, but ideology wins the day again.
I find it unbelievable.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.independent.co.uk/news/business/comment/carillion-capita-interserve-outsourcing-scandal-work-pensions-committee-sir-bernard-jenkin-school-a8443641.html%3famp#ampshare=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/comment/carillion-capita-interserve-outsourcing-scandal-work-pensions-committee-sir-bernard-jenkin-school-a8443641.html
'Getafix
https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/more-third-birmingham-prison-inmates-14900404
ReplyDeleteManc Eve News:
ReplyDeleteAn inmate has died while in custody at a Salford prison.
The prisoner was on remand at HMP Forest Bank when he died suddenly on Sunday (July 8).
It is understood that the 50-year-old suffered a medical episode shortly before passing away.
He was on remand at the prison, in Pendlebury, Salford , ahead of a court hearing at the time of his death.
The independent Prisons and Probation Ombudsman has launched an investigation into the death.
Bosses at Sodexo Justice Services, the private firm which runs the prison, said the inmate’s next of kin has been informed.
A spokesperson for HMP Forest Bank said: “We can confirm there was a death in custody at HMP Forest bank on Sunday (8 July). The next of kin was informed.
“Deaths in custody are a tragedy and our thoughts are with the family. As with all deaths in custody, there will be an investigation by the independent Prisons and Probation Ombudsman and therefore we are unable to comment further at this stage.”
Forest Bank, which is located off Agecroft Road in Pendlebury, houses around 1,500 men. Some are serving sentences while others are on remand ahead of court hearings.
It is understood that the 50-year-old suffered a medical episode shortly before passing away at Forest Bank (Image: Andy Lambert)
The death on Sunday is the latest in a string of incidents at the prison over the last few months.
In January a prisoner had to be rushed to hospital after reportedly setting himself on fire.
The 37-year-old was left in a critical condition after the incident which happened at a time when it was claimed prisoners were confined to their cells on ‘lockdown’ because of staff shortages.
During a separate incident, also in January, shocking footage emerged which showed a prisoner being brutally attacked in his cell.
The video showed a gang of inmates kicking and punching their fellow prisoner to the face, head and body.
Footage, which was shared on social media, was referred to Greater Manchester Police.
Then in June a prison officer was arrested on suspicion of rape after an allegation that a woman was raped at the prison.
The 25-year-old man was later released under investigation.
Estimated cost of policing 48hrs for the Orange Tyrd's visit?
ReplyDelete£10M of UK taxpayer funds.
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!