One might reasonably expect something out of Napo in a situation like this, but the fact is the organisation is simply not geared up to be responsive enough in a world of rolling news and fast moving political stories. They must have known the Leroy story was going to break, but all power and authority to speak for the Union is clearly vested in the General Secretary alone and he can't be in two places at once.
At this critical time in our survival as a meaningful part of the criminal justice system, the union desperately needs someone other than the GS to be available and able to speak authoritatively about professional issues or we are doomed. For goodness sake, someone get a grip!
It's been four years since the introduction of former justice secretary Chris Grayling’s so-called Transforming Rehabilitation (TR) programme to rehabilitate offenders in England and Wales which has been under heavy scrutiny since before its inception.
If it wasn’t for Napo and our members pointing out the glaringly obvious flaws in these disastrously conceived plans, then it was the successive scathing reports from other quarters which have vindicated all of our predictions that the part-privatisation of probation was never going to fulfil its brief.
It all came to a head in June when the justice select committee’s eight-month inquiry concluded with chair Conservative MP Bob Neill branding the justice reforms “a mess” which left him unconvinced it could ever deliver and demanding an immediate government review.
This most damning parliamentary review followed a pile of massively critical thematic reports from HM Inspectorate of Probation, prompting Chief Inspector Dame Glenys Stacey to conclude that “this model cannot work.”
Surely there was no way the government could seriously continue to defend Grayling’s failing master plan after it had been torn to shreds so publicly over the past few years, including by prominent members of its own party.
When Napo got wind of the fact that the Ministry of Justice would be making a major announcement about probation reform in July, it certainly raised a few eyebrows.
Could it be that our prayers had finally been answered and this government would be kicking the privateers out of probation and reunifying the service? No such luck.
Instead the government decided to double down on its plans by ending the current 21 community rehabilitation companies contracts two years early just so it could carve them up into larger pieces, because what better way to reward failing companies unable to meet their obligations, which have put public safety and the future prospects of offenders at risk, than to give them an even bigger bite of the cherry?
As a glaring example of reckless self-aggrandisement and stone-faced denial of the evidence it takes some beating.
While the plight of Britain’s prisons regularly captures the imagination of the media and the public, Napo has worked hard on the difficult task of convincing an increasing number of cross-party politicians and the wider public that the current situation in probation is just as pressing and that the failures of TR are simply stacking up problems for the future.
Prisoners serving sentences in these chaotic prisons where drug use, suicide rates and violence are at an all-time high will eventually be released into our communities and have to be managed within a part-public and part-private probation service.
A service that has seen the decimation of the staffing base — especially in community rehabilitation companies — unsafe workloads, a further chaotic privatisation of the night supervision of high-risk offenders, all of which has resulted in a massive loss of morale among the workforce.
The issue of the broken probation service and its ability to properly supervise clients from all of the risk categories is something that affects us all.
This is why Napo is proposing motion 67 at the TUC calling on wider support for our campaign from colleagues across the trade union movement. We need everyone to understand that TR is not just an issue that affects how much our members are paid, their workload or levels of training and qualifications.
It has an impact on community safety with the worst consequences leaving many bereaved and grieving families understandably seeking answers from the authorities.
Unless high-quality standards of supervision and rehabilitation can be restored to somewhere like the standards that existed prior to privatisation, then there is little hope for generations of people who have served time in prison to acquire what is necessary to be productive members of society.
If the government continues with its destructive policies, it will not be long until we see an extension of the prisons crisis spilling on to our streets, with the people who are doing their very best to paper over the cracks becoming burnt out and unable to cope.
The counter-revolution that Napo is proposing is essentially simple. Step one is for this government to understand that it has got it wrong and to open up a full public debate — rather than its current sham consultation — about the future provision of services.
Napo believes that there is now an overwhelming consensus that probation must be restored back into public ownership with full accountability before Parliament, local communities and the wider tax-paying public. There is ample scope for building a new community-based justice agency free from the clammy tentacles of a dysfunctional HMPPS.
This must involve all stakeholders with a genuine interest in enabling and driving improvements to prison and probation reform. While it is acknowledged that a Labour government has pledged to deliver on this project, we need to start laying the foundations now.
A new desistance-driven rehabilitation regime that will allow the experts to do their job with the tools they need, one that involves third-sector providers committed to making a real difference. In short, a probation service that is free from the insidious neoliberal agenda implemented by then justice secretary failing Grayling that put profit first and the interests of our communities a distant second.
Ian Lawrence is general secretary of Napo.
This from the Morning Star:-
The Tories' failing programme for probation just stacks up the problems for the future
It's been four years since the introduction of former justice secretary Chris Grayling’s so-called Transforming Rehabilitation (TR) programme to rehabilitate offenders in England and Wales which has been under heavy scrutiny since before its inception.
If it wasn’t for Napo and our members pointing out the glaringly obvious flaws in these disastrously conceived plans, then it was the successive scathing reports from other quarters which have vindicated all of our predictions that the part-privatisation of probation was never going to fulfil its brief.
It all came to a head in June when the justice select committee’s eight-month inquiry concluded with chair Conservative MP Bob Neill branding the justice reforms “a mess” which left him unconvinced it could ever deliver and demanding an immediate government review.
This most damning parliamentary review followed a pile of massively critical thematic reports from HM Inspectorate of Probation, prompting Chief Inspector Dame Glenys Stacey to conclude that “this model cannot work.”
Surely there was no way the government could seriously continue to defend Grayling’s failing master plan after it had been torn to shreds so publicly over the past few years, including by prominent members of its own party.
When Napo got wind of the fact that the Ministry of Justice would be making a major announcement about probation reform in July, it certainly raised a few eyebrows.
Could it be that our prayers had finally been answered and this government would be kicking the privateers out of probation and reunifying the service? No such luck.
Instead the government decided to double down on its plans by ending the current 21 community rehabilitation companies contracts two years early just so it could carve them up into larger pieces, because what better way to reward failing companies unable to meet their obligations, which have put public safety and the future prospects of offenders at risk, than to give them an even bigger bite of the cherry?
As a glaring example of reckless self-aggrandisement and stone-faced denial of the evidence it takes some beating.
While the plight of Britain’s prisons regularly captures the imagination of the media and the public, Napo has worked hard on the difficult task of convincing an increasing number of cross-party politicians and the wider public that the current situation in probation is just as pressing and that the failures of TR are simply stacking up problems for the future.
Prisoners serving sentences in these chaotic prisons where drug use, suicide rates and violence are at an all-time high will eventually be released into our communities and have to be managed within a part-public and part-private probation service.
A service that has seen the decimation of the staffing base — especially in community rehabilitation companies — unsafe workloads, a further chaotic privatisation of the night supervision of high-risk offenders, all of which has resulted in a massive loss of morale among the workforce.
The issue of the broken probation service and its ability to properly supervise clients from all of the risk categories is something that affects us all.
This is why Napo is proposing motion 67 at the TUC calling on wider support for our campaign from colleagues across the trade union movement. We need everyone to understand that TR is not just an issue that affects how much our members are paid, their workload or levels of training and qualifications.
It has an impact on community safety with the worst consequences leaving many bereaved and grieving families understandably seeking answers from the authorities.
Unless high-quality standards of supervision and rehabilitation can be restored to somewhere like the standards that existed prior to privatisation, then there is little hope for generations of people who have served time in prison to acquire what is necessary to be productive members of society.
If the government continues with its destructive policies, it will not be long until we see an extension of the prisons crisis spilling on to our streets, with the people who are doing their very best to paper over the cracks becoming burnt out and unable to cope.
The counter-revolution that Napo is proposing is essentially simple. Step one is for this government to understand that it has got it wrong and to open up a full public debate — rather than its current sham consultation — about the future provision of services.
Napo believes that there is now an overwhelming consensus that probation must be restored back into public ownership with full accountability before Parliament, local communities and the wider tax-paying public. There is ample scope for building a new community-based justice agency free from the clammy tentacles of a dysfunctional HMPPS.
This must involve all stakeholders with a genuine interest in enabling and driving improvements to prison and probation reform. While it is acknowledged that a Labour government has pledged to deliver on this project, we need to start laying the foundations now.
A new desistance-driven rehabilitation regime that will allow the experts to do their job with the tools they need, one that involves third-sector providers committed to making a real difference. In short, a probation service that is free from the insidious neoliberal agenda implemented by then justice secretary failing Grayling that put profit first and the interests of our communities a distant second.
Ian Lawrence is general secretary of Napo.
BBC news
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-england-birmingham-45495499#ampshare=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-birmingham-45495499
Two probation workers have been suspended after a woman was murdered by a convicted sex offender.
DeleteLeroy Campbell, 57, raped and strangled Lisa Skidmore, attempted to murder her elderly mother and then set fire to a property in Wolverhampton in 2016. A watchdog review found the probation service should have acted to protect the public from Campbell.
Prime Minister Theresa May said his crimes were "horrific" and failings "should not have happened".
Campbell killed Ms Skidmore just weeks after he told probation staff he might rape again, the review found.
Speaking during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, Mrs May said: "I understand that some action has already been taken, two members of the probation service have been suspended."
The HM Inspectorate of Probation review released on Tuesday said the public expects "the authorities will do their job properly, i.e. to take all reasonable action to keep risk to a minimum. That did not happen in this case".
The victim's brother, Jim Skidmore, said: "It's our sister and my mum's lost her daughter. This could have been anyone in the community because... the risks [were not] highlighted and [were not] acted on and Campbell could have had any female that he'd got his eye on."
Pat McFadden, Labour MP for Wolverhampton South East, said there were "catastrophic failures" in how Campbell was dealt with.
He described Ms Skidmore's death as "entirely preventable" and said she had been "let down in the most appalling way". The family has been left completely heartbroken by her loss," Mr McFadden added.
Justice Minister Rory Stewart said he had visited Ms Skidmore's family twice to personally apologise.
The report revealed Campbell, from Moseley, Birmingham, had six previous convictions for 11 offences including rape, burglary and attempting to strangle. He had been released from prison four months before the attack, but told probation workers he was thinking of raping again, and had been looking at open windows.
Instead of his remarks prompting an immediate recall to prison, Campbell was left "at large" despite a more junior probation officer consulting a senior officer over the comments, the report said.
When released, Campbell was not supervised at the highest level but at the lowest level, according to the report. This meant "evaluation and record-keeping procedures were not followed properly" which was "unacceptable, and inexplicable", inspectors added.
Mr Stewart said: "I will ensure that we change our training, assessments and staff management."
Have you, dear reader, seen a response to the SFO report yesterday from the Probation Institute?
ReplyDeletePresumably, they have a view about staff suspensions, apparently only after a Labour constituency MP raised it at Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons.
Alternatively, maybe they no longer aspire to be a professional regulatory body so do not feel inclined to comment.
Well since Ian Lawrence likes to go around saying “our members are making mistakes because of TR”, he’s probably the last person we want defending these two poor probation officers that are wrongly being blamed for an SFO !! Shame on the Probation Service for treating them in this way, not that I’m surprised !!
ReplyDeleteThe chief inspector of prisons has sent an urgent notification to the justice secretary over the state of HMP Bedford – the fourth prison to be the subject of such a notice this year.
ReplyDeleteThis is just a snapshot of where the prisons crisis is and how it's getting:
-- HMP Nottingham - urgent notice sent 17 Jan
-- HMP Exeter - 30 May
-- HMP Birmingham - 16 August
Common themes are violence, drugs, lack of purposeful activity and poor prospects for prison leavers.
Rory Steward responding to an urgent question on this today suggested that the current prison crisis was inhereted by this government, as it's a consequence of Labours doubling the prison population when they were in power.
DeleteNothing to do with Grayling and austerity then.
'Getafix
This is insane, they cut prison officers, they cut budgets, they have been in government since 2010. How the Flip can they claim this rubbish?
DeleteTime to go Rory
DeleteRory Stewart is on BBC1 TV Question Time tonight.
DeleteAre the two officers union members?. Maybe the union can't speak on their behalf. I'm surprised at how many people are not members but then call upon the union. NAPO may not be doing what people wish at this moment but they are all we have. If all workers united and joined it would be a show of force to the CRC's and the NPS. Allowing the union to represent us fully. I remember the strikes and how many people worked those days. NAPO are only as strong as the members. I have said before it is only time before someone is hung out to dry for what will be deemed negligence. Look at the recent prison officer who is before the courts for a death of someone in prison. It is only time before this happens to us.
ReplyDeleteThe Union should be speaking out against the TR reforms that have shaped this mess we call probation, irrespective of whether the two individuals suspended are Union members or not.
DeleteTheir silence will not, I'm affraid, increase membership.
No it will not but the dead heads in Napo will not understand this and probably do not really care at all. If they are members it is doubtful Napo will be any use at all.
DeleteJoin NAPO!!! Are you joking, they were complicit in getting us into this catastrophic situation. They were hand in hand with the government, who stitched us up big time. Members gave voted with their feet. I would NEVER rejoin whilst Ian Lawrence is involved. Absolute waste of space.
ReplyDeleteJoin NAPO!!! Are you joking, they were complicit in getting us into this catastrophic situation. They were hand in hand with the government, who stitched us up big time. Members gave voted with their feet. I would NEVER rejoin whilst Ian Lawrence is involved. Absolute waste of space.
ReplyDeleteIt is not him alone the bigger problems are beset in Napo from poor leadership from the officers and officials who do not have a real understanding of the workplaces.
DeleteHaving read the report in full today, ( with my feet up and a cup of tea to hand, yes, I have had enough and don’t care any more,) I am left wondering why the other agencies involved aren’t being castigated in the same way.
ReplyDeleteThe nonsense of reducing MAPPA levels because somebody is in custody is part of the problem but the police don’t come out of it smelling of roses.
ARMS is an issue in this case, another example of the work the police refused to do being dumped on us and our managers grasping it with both hands but with no additional resources.
OAsys, a huge sponge gobbling up time and energy was used to beat probation staff about the ears and finally for this rant, the probation service have decided to increase the number of SPOs nationally by 50% despite them having no staff to supervise.
Get out if you can!
Given the oversight by SPOs with their beloved MOs etc, I would hope that the they have also been suspended....
ReplyDeleteWhen I left Probation several years ago, after a decade and a half, I think I was on around £17.50 per hour as a PO. Just seen an advert for an agency PO at £29 per hour. I need an explanation why this makes sense. Someone ... anyone. A few weeks ago I noticed that the money I could get for referring a PO to an agency who then commenced had doubled. Sat here shaking my head, it doesn't make sense.
ReplyDeleteUsing agency staff allows big corporations to do all kinds of naughty things with the company pension fund, like deplete it.
DeleteNearly 30 years in and on about £20:00 an hour.
ReplyDeleteIf agencies are paying £29:00 that is what NAPO should be aspiring to in the current negotiations.
Heard a couple of weeks ago about an agency paying PSOs £25:00 an hour, I.e. 25% more than an ‘on the books’ P.O. at the top of the scale.
Complete madness but no comments from NAPO,senior managers or our own full time staff. Complacency reigns supreme.
Has a NAPO official been awarded several thousands of pounds pay increase this year or not ? Why and when please?
DeleteI haven't been on this blog for a long while, but felt rather annoyed about the article by Ian Lawrence above, so was going to write a letter to the Morning Star, but feel that we shouldn't attack each other in public when there are the Tories out there. However, on my favourite blog, it's OK to agree with Anonymous at 14.34 and say that NAPO waltzed around for 9 months chatting to ministers in parliament, wasting valuable time, then were completely ineffective in stopping TR and then had to be hauled screaming and shouting to agree to a Judicial Review, only to cut a deal the night before. And all this while, Ian Lawrence has continued to collect a large wage while doing really very little. I don't like criticising unions but my experience was not positive.
ReplyDeleteHe earns 600 pounds per day and does very little but does a lot on his expenses claims. He is now due a massive pay hike. Some in NAPO have already had incredible pay reward although when will we be asked for approval?
Deletegood to see your name again, Joanna, on this blog. You were a founding supporter and a determined soul in the early days in the fight against CG and TR. And I so agree with you re Ian L, what a limp rag. Whenever I see him on TV and parliamentary debates I squirm - he wastes those opportunities to tell it like it is and is so limp and smug and embarrassingly useless in comparison to Unison's man.
DeleteGlad to see, like me, your heart is still in the fight. Keep on keeping on.
I hear Teresa Maybot while calling for the heads of our PO colleagues in a recrimination and blame game for front line staff. Maybot is as nasty as they come when she only has to look across her desk to see the responsible killer in her cabinet and a look in the mirror will help her see truly those responsible for the policy that has led to further social murders. Monsters in the tory party.
ReplyDeleteThe whole system is broken. This week alone a prison officer jailed for 9 years, a prison teacher also jailed from a different prison. both for smuggling, and a couple more arrested.
DeleteIf people working in prisons are prepared to take money for smuggling what else are they prepared to take money for? Altering records perhaps? Loosing the odd bit of important information?
I don't suggest it's endemic, but the question should be considered, as it means possible consequences further down the line.
This is quite an interesting article I think, although I don't suggest anyone has done anything wrong at this time.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-south-yorkshire-45499335
'Getafix
Getafix you only have to read the article from 2011 regarding Interserves Ian Mulholland who was the governor of HMP Wandsworth at that time however himself and another governor of another prison were cleared of any wrong doing ( transfering vulnerable prisoners between two prisons during inspections ) as tbey apparently had no idea members of their staff were doing !!!!!
Deletehttps://www.theguardian.com/society/2009/nov/11/prisoner-transfers-managers-censured
Two charity workers have been suspended over claims they helped inmates secure moves to lower-security prisons. The women, named in reports as mother and daughter Linda Cook, 53, and Carrie Lawson, 35, worked for charity Catch22 at Category B prison HMP Doncaster.
DeleteThe charity said they were suspended after "potential irregularities around prisoner movements" were identified. Serco, which runs HMP Doncaster, said it would be "inappropriate" to comment on another organisation's employees.
Offender management charity Catch22 helps inmates with their rehabilitation and resettlement and also assists in the review process to ensure that prisoners move on to the right category prison at the right time.
A spokesman for the charity said: "We can confirm that monitoring picked up some potential irregularities around prisoner movements. "We acted immediately and an investigation is underway with all of the relevant authorities."
The Ministry of Justice said it would not be making a statement while the investigation was ongoing. South Yorkshire Police has not responded to the BBC's request for a comment.
Mother and daughter working at HMP Doncaster have been suspended for taking money to falsify prisoners records to expedite transfer, according to The Sun. Both have been named as working for Catch 22
ReplyDeletePOA GENERAL SECRETARY CALLS FOR PROTEST ACTION
ReplyDeleteThe POA General Secretary Steve Gillan has today called for all POA members in England and Wales prisons to take protest action outside their workplaces from 07.00 until instructed otherwise.
This decision follows the Chief Inspector of Prisons Peter Clarke letter to the Secretary of State issuing an Urgent Notification Notice at HMP Bedford following a catalogue of failure.
The unprecedented levels of violence, and failure of this Government and employer to provide safe prisons has been headline news for some considerable time.
The rise in violence against staff in prisons is laid firmly at the feet of Government and HMPPS, who have overseen the demise of the Prison Service over the last eight years.
Steve Gillan said, “The POA has engaged with the Employer and Ministers in an attempt to resolve issues, but they are paying lip service to the Health & Safety of my members their Human Rights, that of other workers in prisons and of course the prisoners in our care.”
“Earlier this year the POA commenced legal proceedings due to the Government’s failure to provide safe prisons. Bedford with other prisons was placed into Special Measures and commitments made to this union from Government and HMPPS. These commitments were not met and we have issued a further Pre-Action Protocol Letter as part of the Judicial Review process because of their failings to provide safe prisons.”
“We will now be demanding that the Government provide safe prisons, meet our demands to improve Personal Protective Equipment, reduce levels of violence and overcrowding as set out by Lord
This is what Probation should be doing!! We are HMPPS aren't we? Oh yeah, only ehen it suit. We will be when they pthrow us into the lions den. OMIC!!!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/news.sky.com/story/amp/thousands-of-prison-officers-to-stage-walk-out-over-unprecedented-levels-of-violence-11497137#ampshare=https://news.sky.com/story/thousands-of-prison-officers-to-stage-walk-out-over-unprecedented-levels-of-violence-11497137
DeleteThousands of prison officers are staging a walk-out in protest over the "unprecedented levels of violence" they face.
DeleteThe Prison Officers' Association (POA) said it was demanding the government improve safety in jails and reduce violence and overcrowding. It comes after the chief inspector of prisons warned about the potential for a "complete breakdown" in order and discipline at HMP Bedford.
Inmates have effectively taken control at the violent, overcrowded and vermin-infested jail, the watchdog said. The POA said there had been 116 assaults on staff at HMP Bedford in the last six months.
"The unprecedented levels of violence, and failure of this government and employer to provide safe prisons has been headline news for some considerable time," a POA spokesman said.
"The rise in violence against staff in prisons is laid firmly at the feet of government and Her Majesty's Prison and Probation Service, who have overseen the demise of the prison service over the last eight years."
The union expects at least 5,000 prison officers across England and Wales to take part in the protests, which started at 7am. Steve Gillan, general secretary at the POA, said there was a "rising epidemic" of violence and drug taking in prisons.
He told Sky News: "We can't just keep turning a blind eye to the broken limbs, the smashed eye sockets and broken jaws of our members. They're people as well.
"Everybody has a right to go to work not in fear for their health and safety."
Mr Gillan said he did not expect prisoners to riot and there was "minimum cover" in place to ensure the safety of those serving jail sentences.
Sky News home affairs correspondent Mark White said prisoners would be locked in their cells during the protests. The POA is banned from taking strike action but the union argues the protests are lawful under health and safety laws, White said.
Prisons minister Rory Stewart, who has pledged to resign if his campaign to tackle drugs and violence in jails is a failure, branded the POA "irresponsible". He said: "Prison officers do vital and important work and we urge them to return to their duty stations, in line with their obligations to the law and the prison service.
Emergency legal action is being taken today by the government to try and quell the POA protests. They are banned from taking industrial action, and were forced to return to duties last time they took action over staffing levels.
DeleteThis time however its claimed the protests are based on health and safety issues, and there's lots of legislation in place and case law on this issue that can be argued.
It's not beyond possibility that the govenment could come unstuck with today's legal action. Will a judge rule that it's OK to force employees into a workplace where there is a real risk (and a well documented risk) to life or limb?
Perhaps they will, but I think the government will feel pretty uneasy about the outcome of any ruling.
Have to wait see. But its a really interesting situation.
'Getafix
From Sky news update.
DeleteNotices handed to prison officers protesting outside HMP Bedford warned that the industrial action was "unlawful" and in breach of their employment contracts.
The letters, issued by the prison's governor Helen Clayton-Hoar, said: "I am therefore giving you a direct order to return to work.
"I must also advise you that if you do not return to work and ignore this order, that deductions will be made to your pay and you may be subject to disciplinary procedures."
Oh yea what they going to do sack them all hardly. Maybot is responsible for this mess with her henchman Grayling. It is falling apart for them now and soon we will see change.
DeleteGreat interview on Sky by POA.
ReplyDeleteGovernment more interested in privatisation and outsourcing and giving taxpayers money to privateers then dealing with the real issues.
Government say overcrowding is a major issue, yet they have closed twenty prisons down in the last six years.
The POA will take further action if HMP Birmingham does not remain in the public sector.
The prison service have been telling government from 2010 just how dangerous their policies are making prisons, but they just wont listen.
It's not the fault of prison service staff that the prison estate is in this state of crisis, its completely the fault of government and their profit making friends.
Good up to date report from Mark Leech Converse News.
ReplyDeleteAccess via Mark Leech Twitter account he has references to judges comments in Sheffield about prisoners not being produced and more.
Deletehttps://twitter.com/prisonsorguk/status/1040547498971095040?s=19
78% of staff operating HMP Bedford have less then 12 months experience within the prison service.
DeleteThat is just incredible.
A few pages into the Leroy Campbell review talks about SPO's supervising less experienced PO's. In my experience I usually have more experience than an SPO who usually apply for a promotion in order to get a pay rise.
Delete