Tuesday 19 February 2019

MoJ Masterclass in News Management

Well, yesterday saw the culmination of a weekend's-worth of MoJ news management in order to try and drown out the disgraceful failure of TR so perfectly demonstrated by the collapse of Working Links. Just for the record it went like this:-

Friday am - Rory Stewart kicks things off with a made-up story about prison violence reducing
Friday pm - news of Working Links failing put off to the graveyard slot of 3.30pm
Saturday am - rehash of old electronic tagging story for the weekend
Monday am - Gauke makes speech about reducing prison population and smarter justice with no mention of probation
Monday pm - no parliamentary questions re Working Links just a ministerial written statement
Tuesday - job done!  

--oo00oo--

That Reform speech in full:-

Beyond prison, redefining punishment

Since the early 1990s, we’ve seen the prison population almost double, from about 45,000 in 1993 to just over 83,000 in 2008. Since then, it has been broadly stable and currently stands at a little below 83,000. This is the highest rate of imprisonment almost anywhere in western Europe.

For every 100,000 people in the Netherlands, 61 are behind bars, in Denmark 63, in Germany it’s 76, in Italy it’s 99 and in France it’s 104. In England and Wales our incarceration rate is 139 people per 100,000. Why do we have such high rates of imprisonment – both by international standards and our own historic standards? Part of this is about our society and government rightly recognising and responding to the rise in certain types of crime.

More offenders are being jailed for violent crime for example. And last year, over a third of people sentenced for crimes involving knives or other weapons were given immediate custodial sentences. That’s up from 23% in 2009. And the length of sentences is increasing – sentences for sexual offences for example have gone up from 43 months in 2007 to just under 61 months in 2018. 


It’s also about changing expectations about the kinds of crimes for which we expect perpetrators to be more severely punished. Look at sexual offences where we’ve seen more victims feel able to come forward, more people brought to justice, and with many more convictions and much longer sentences than a decade ago. But it’s not just about violent or sexual offences. Prison sentences, in general, have been getting longer. Even for offences which aren’t violent or sexual, the average sentence length overall has increased. Take fraud: the average custodial sentence for that has gone up from just under a year in 2007 to over 18 months in 2017.

Now, whatever your own views on what should happen, as a matter of fact it is clearly not true that sentences overall are getting shorter or justice is somehow getting softer – as some argue. When it comes to the length of prison sentences we are now taking a more punitive approach than at any point during Mrs Thatcher’s premiership.

Let me be clear. I do not want to reverse the tougher sentencing approach for serious offences. But equally, we should be extremely cautious about continuing to increase sentences as a routine response to concerns over crime. We have to recognise that such an approach would lead us to becoming even more of an international and historical outlier in terms of our prison population. Instead, we need to take a step back and to ask ourselves 3 questions:

  • Is our approach to sentencing actually reducing crime – when reoffending remains stubbornly high, creating more victims and putting the public at risk?
  • Are we running our prisons in a way which maximises offenders’ chances of turning their lives around, of going on to gainful employment and re-joining society as a responsible citizen?
  • And should we be seeking opportunities in the coming years to find better and alternative ways of punishing as well as rehabilitating offenders?
It is these questions – how we punish people for their crimes - which I’d like to talk about today (18 February 2019). I think now is the time for us as a society, as a country, to start a fresh conversation, a national debate about what justice, including punishment, should look like for our modern times. Because as I see it, there is a false choice between the narrow and often polarising discussion about ‘soft’ justice versus ‘hard’ justice.

In my view, we should be talking about ‘smart’ justice. Justice that works. Now, for most of us in society, the very idea of going to prison for even a short amount of time, and the loss of liberty that entails, is a real deterrent. But that thinking fails to get into the mindset of many of today’s criminals –who are either reckless, or who don’t fear prison because they have friends and family who have all done time. Perhaps their lives are so chaotic that prison, in the scheme of things, might not seem so bad. That is true of no group more than those serving the shortest sentences.

In the last five years, just over a quarter of a million custodial sentences have been given to offenders for six months or less; over 300,000 sentences were for 12 months or less. But nearly two thirds of those offenders go on to commit a further crime within a year of being released. 27% of all reoffending is committed by people who have served short sentences of 12 months or less. For the offenders completing these short sentences whose lives are destabilised, and for society which incurs a heavy financial and social cost, prison simply isn’t working.

The most common offence for which offenders are sentenced to less 6 months – some 11,500 offenders – is shoplifting. We know that offenders who commit this kind of crime often have drug or alcohol problems, and many are women. Almost half of women sentenced to a short custodial sentence are there for shop theft. The impact of short custodial sentences on women generally is particularly significant. Many are victims, as well as offenders, with almost 60% reporting experience of domestic abuse and many have mental health issues. For women, going into custody often causes huge disruption to the lives of their families, especially dependent children, increasing the risk they will also fall into offending.

And for many offenders, both men and women, who may not have a stable job or home, and who are likely to have alcohol or drug problems, a short stay in prison can result in them losing access to benefits and drug or alcohol support services and treatment. Coming out of prison, they find themselves back at the start of the process and feeling like they have even less to lose. That’s why there is a very strong case to abolish sentences of six months or less altogether, with some closely defined exceptions, and put in their place, a robust community order regime.

Let’s be honest. The public will always want to prioritise schools or hospitals over the criminal justice system when it comes to public spending. But where we do spend on the criminal justice system, we must spend on what works. Why would we spend taxpayers’ money doing what we know doesn’t work, and indeed, that makes us less safe? We shouldn’t.

The reception of a new offender into custody – that first night inside – is one of the most resource heavy moments in an offender’s journey through the system. Every offender must have their property logged. They must be issued with their prison essentials – toothbrushes; clothing; bedding. They must be risk assessed for self-harm risks and the risks they pose to other offenders. There are full security procedures including a strip search for many. And then once these offenders are set up inside, there’s no time for the prison service to do any meaningful rehabilitative work with them.

In 2017, almost 50,000 offenders were sentenced to immediate custody for 6 months or less. By abolishing these sentences we’d expect also to reduce the number of receptions carried out. Just think how much better we could use the prison officers’ time and resources, whether focusing on security, whether looking after those at risk of self harm, or whether spending more time on running regimes which really will make a difference – those built around temporary release for work, education, and tackling drug addiction.

And offenders are less likely to reoffend if they are given a community order, which are much more effective at tackling the root causes behind criminality. Now, I do not want community orders which are in any sense a ‘soft option’. I want a regime that can impose greater restrictions on people’s movements and lifestyle and stricter requirements in terms of accessing treatment and support.

And critically, these sentences must be enforced. That’s why on Saturday I announced the rollout of our new GPS tagging programme which will allow offenders’ movements to be more effectively monitored. Working with our justice partners, I hope that GPS tags will be available across the country by April. It will be an important new tool in controlling and restricting the movement and certain activities of offenders. It will also help manage offenders safely in the community and strengthen the protection available for victims by monitoring exclusion zones.

Other new technology and innovations are opening up the possibility of even more options for the future too. For example, technology can monitor whether an offender has consumed alcohol, and enables us to be able to better restrict and monitor alcohol consumption where it drives offending behaviour. We are testing the value of alcohol abstinence monitoring requirements for offenders on licence, building on earlier testing of its value as part of a community order.

Underpinned by evidence of what works to reduce reoffending, we are also increasing the treatment requirements of community orders. Our research shows that nearly 60% of recent offenders who engaged with a community-based alcohol programme did not go on to reoffend in the two years following treatment. Offenders given a community sentence including mental health treatment have also shown to be significantly less likely to reoffend.

That’s why we have worked with the Department of Health and Social Care, NHS England and Public Health England to develop a Treatment Requirement Programme which aims to increase the number of community sentences with mental health, drug and alcohol treatment requirements. The programme is currently being tested in courts across five areas in England –Milton Keynes, Northampton, Birmingham, Plymouth and Sefton. It dictates a new minimum standard of service, with additional training for staff to improve collaboration between the agencies involved – all of which is increasing confidence among sentencers to use them. I look forward to seeing the outcomes of those trials shortly.

Many offenders in prison have mental health problems, but often struggle to engage with treatment on the same terms as they could in the community. That is why the Health Secretary and I want to explore how innovative digital technologies can be put to use to serve the mental health needs of our prisoners.

We also know stable accommodation is a key factor in reoffending. As part of the Government’s Rough Sleeping agenda, we are investing up to £6.4 million in a pilot scheme to help individuals released from three prisons – Bristol, Leeds and Pentonville – who have been identified as being at risk of homelessness into settled accommodation, while providing them with wrap around support for up to two years. This is part of a cross-government action necessary to cutting reoffending and tackle the root causes of criminality.

But if we want to successfully make a shift from prison to community sentences it is critical that we have a probation system that commands the confidence of the courts and the public. I will return to the subject of probation in much greater depth later this year. But, in thinking strategically about the future of our justice system I believe in the end there is a strong case for switching resource away from ineffective prison sentences and into probation. This is more likely to reduce reoffending and, ultimately, reduce pressures on our criminal justice system. I am determined to strengthen the confidence courts have in probation to ensure we can make this shift away from short custodial sentences towards more punitive and effective sanctions and support in the community. However, as I mentioned earlier, prison will continue to be right for some.

My second question was about what sort of prison regime we want. For those who are serving longer sentences, we need to ensure that prisons are humane, safe and secure. Much good work has been done over the past year, led by the excellent Prisons Minister Rory Stewart. But in prison, to reduce the chances of reoffending on release, there needs to be a positive outlook for the future and a sense that there is light at the end of the tunnel so long as an offender wants to turn their back on crime.

That’s why I have spoken before and we have consulted on a new approach to incentives and privileges that better incentivises prisoners to abide by the rules and engage in education, work and substance misuse interventions, whilst ensuring poor behaviour can still be tackled through the loss of privileges. It means maintaining a link to the outside world – for example with work and family – so that prisoners don’t get institutionalised and lose hope.

If, at the end of a prison term, our objective is to release into the community a responsible citizen, we must first ensure that we have a responsible prisoner. An important way we can do this for some prisoners is release on temporary license – or ROTL. Research last year shows the more ROTL a prisoner gets, the less chance there is of them reoffending. It provides purposeful activity and experience while in prison so that they have the right attitude for work, can get a job when they’re released, prepare for re-joining their families and society and turn their back on crime for good.

We are currently consulting on loosening some of the barriers to using ROTL for some prisoners. Our plans will encourage using ROTL more often to get prisoners off the wings and into the workplace by removing blanket restrictions on when governors can consider ROTL, particularly those who have progressed to open conditions. Rather than blanket bans, the focus will rightly be instead on how safe it is for a prisoner to be released on ROTL, enabling them to go out to work sooner, and helping them to prepare for eventual release.

I am pleased to say that three prisons, HMPs Drake Hall, Ford and Kirkham, are currently testing out new arrangements for ROTL, giving their Governors more discretion over temporary release for men and women. This will be a great opportunity to learn from their experience, and explore the best ways to safely and more quickly get prisoners out for work.

Our other reforms will also make reoffending less likely on release. Whether that’s our £7 million investment for new in-cell telephones to maintain family links or looking at how we categorise the risk prisoners pose so they are put in the right type of category prison.

This brings me to my third fundamental question. Is it time to begin to think again about how we punish offenders in future. Historically, for many offenders our earliest prisons were little more than holding pens ahead of transportation or indeed capital punishment. Of course, those sanctions are no longer available to us. And, for the avoidance of doubt, I am not advocating their return. But for the past couple of centuries, we have – almost by default – come to accept the view that punishment essentially means prison.

Looking at reforming short sentences by providing a robust community orders regime is a near term initiative that will help us tackle the problem of reoffending. But thinking about effective punishment for different crimes isn’t limited to those that currently get short sentences. I believe we are nearing a time when a combination of technology and radical thinking will make it possible for much more intensive and restrictive conditions to be applied in more creative and fundamental ways outside of prison.

I think for some offenders we need to revisit what effective punishment really means. Home curfew, driving bans, alcohol bans and foreign travel bans are just some of the options that already exist and which might play a bigger role. I believe the biggest potential comes from being able to better target someone who makes large profits from committing a financial crime like fraud. Or the kingpin drug baron who makes his money one step removed from the violence and misery this illicit trade creates.

Fraud, for example, is a serious offence. It is far from victimless and the consequences for innocent people can be devastating. So, it needs a serious punishment. And the criminals who commit these offences are calculating. They are premeditated. And they are motivated by greed.

In recent years, the custody rate has increased from 14.5% in 2007 to over 20%, and the average custodial sentence going up from under a year to over 18 months. But once fraudsters have sat out their sentence, they may be able to return to their comfortable lifestyle as soon as they get out. Indeed, serving a 2 year prison sentence but knowing your illicit cash is still hidden from the authorities, is not an effective punishment.

I can see us being able to take a different approach. For example, this kind of fraudster or kingpin would still need to spend time in prison. And we will continue to pursue relentlessly to confiscate the proceeds of crime. But we could go further. I want to look at what happens after prison – whether our more effective punishment and deterrent for these criminals might involve jail time and more lasting and punitive community interventions. After serving part of their sentence behind bars, we could, for example, continue to restrict an offender’s movement, their activities and their lifestyle beyond prison in a much more intensive way.

And that could also mean a real shift in the standard of living a wealthy criminal can expect after prison. I want to look at how, once a jail term has been served, we can continue to restrict their expenditure and monitor their earnings, using new technology to enable proper enforcement. They would be in no uncertainty that, once sentenced, they wouldn’t be able to reap any lifestyle benefits from their crimes and would need to make full reparation to the community as part of the sentence.

I’m keen to get industry working with us to develop the necessary technology. Our banks are looking more and more at their social responsibilities, and they could look at what part they can play in investing to help us to deliver this vision. Community sanctions like this won’t be soft options, but they will be smart ones. They will enable us to impose an unprecedented level of punitive sanctions outside of a prison, with punishment hitting closer to home and hitting criminals where it always hurts – the pocket. It will allow us not only, as the old adage goes, to ‘let the punishment fit the crime’, but to let the punishment properly hit the criminal in a more tailored and targeted way outside of prison.

Prison will always play a part in serving as punishment for serious crimes and in rehabilitation, and our reforms will deliver that. But we need to think more imaginatively about different and more modern forms of punishment in the community. Punishments that are punitive, for a purpose. As with our approach to short sentences, ultimately, it’s about doing what works to reduce reoffending and make us all safer and less likely to be a future victim of crime. In that sense, I believe the choice – and the debate – isn’t one of soft justice or hard justice. It’s a choice between effective justice or ineffective justice.

I know that there will be some who argue that the only problem with our criminal justice system is that it isn’t tough enough, that the answer to short sentences is longer sentences, that the best way of stopping recently released prisoners from reoffending is not to release them. And that the endless ratchet effect of higher sentences is giving the public what it wants. But I believe that those in positions of responsibility have a duty to show leadership. To confront difficult issues, be led by the evidence and pursue policies that are most likely to deliver for the public. That, I hope, is the approach I have set out today – thank you.

30 comments:

  1. "Gauke makes speech about reducing prison population and smarter justice with no mention of probation"

    Now then, Mr Brown, credit where its due - out of the 39 paragraphs Probation is mentioned FOUR TIMES in paragraph 23.

    "But if we want to successfully make a shift from prison to community sentences it is critical that we have a PROBATION system that commands the confidence of the courts and the public. I will return to the subject of PROBATION in much greater depth later this year. But, in thinking strategically about the future of our justice system I believe in the end there is a strong case for switching resource away from ineffective prison sentences and into PROBATION. This is more likely to reduce reoffending and, ultimately, reduce pressures on our criminal justice system. I am determined to strengthen the confidence courts have in PROBATION to ensure we can make this shift away from short custodial sentences towards more punitive and effective sanctions and support in the community."

    FFS.

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    1. Excellent - so at least one reader has ploughed right through it. No MEANINGFUL mention of probation!

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    2. Quick count reveals at least 45 mentions of prison/imprisonment/custody - not so sure they were necessarily meaningful either!
      ______________________________________________

      12 month period to end of June 2017 saw 99,000 people required to serve a community sentence out of 1.2 million offenders sentenced - about 8% - as compared to about 14% in 2007. A significant reduction.

      At the same time, the figures, from the Ministry of Justice, show a slight increase in rates of imprisonment, to more than 7%.

      BBCNews, Danny Shaw, Jan 2018

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  2. 'But we need to think more imaginatively about different and more modern forms of punishment in the community. Punishments that are punitive, for a purpose.'

    It will be interesting to see what becomes of punishment in the community. Punishment is an understandable response to criminal behaviour but it is not what works to reduce reoffending. Community Punishment Companies is not the way forward and I trust the Minister does not imagine it is.

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    1. It's probably time to remind everyone about the original ethos behind 'Community Service' namely that the work was constructive and tailored to the individual so it had an educational and rehabilitative element. Blimey could be what Gauke was talking about!

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    2. It was always defined as a punitive sentence the education and rehabilitative feature came later. The problem with CP in the very South East is the Courts give it to everyone and groups get stood down constantly. Not enough staff to provide intensive CP orders drag on, sex offenders are not risk assessed adequately and get put on the wrong programmes, happens in Kent all the time.

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    3. Guardian 8th Jan 2013

      The first community service order was made in Nottingham crown court 40 years ago this month for Peter, a cannabis supplier.

      On 2 January 1973, Mr Justice James ordered Peter to undertake 120 hours of community service. As the senior probation officer responsible for initiating a Home Office community service order pilot scheme in Nottinghamshire, I was summoned to the judge's retiring room before the sentencing decision was announced. The judge wanted to know what the new measure involved, where the offender would be placed and how accountable the service would be if Peter failed to respond. I told him that Peter would be working for an old people's home run by Nottingham social services, assisting staff and residents. If he failed to turn up for community service, Peter would have been returned to court for being in breach of the order.

      This revolution in community-based sanctions was the creation of a subcommittee of the Advisory Council on the Penal System (ACPS), set up in 1966 by the then Labour government to advise the home secretary on "matters relating to the prevention of crime and the treatment of offenders". The ACPS non-custodial and semi-custodial penalties subcommittee was chaired by social reformer Lady Barbara Wootton.

      Probation pilots

      Following its recommendation, community service was piloted in six probation areas: Nottinghamshire, inner London, Kent, Durham, south-west Lancashire and Shropshire. Six senior probation officers/community service organisers were appointed by the pilot areas to negotiate a range of tasks with local public services and non-governmental organisations, set out criteria for the assessment and matching of offenders to work assignments, and prepare magistrates and judges for the new powers that, from January 1973, would be available to crown and magistrates courts.

      I asked the only surviving member of ACPS, Sir Louis Blom-Cooper, where the idea of community service came from. He said that, by chance, the committee's attention was drawn to a newspaper article about an experiment conducted by a criminal court judge in Darmstadt, Germany, in the 1950s. The judge exercised his discretion by ordering an offender, convicted of dangerous driving, to work for a certain period of time under nursing supervision in a local accident and emergency hospital. The knowledge that the judge, under German criminal law, could impose a legal requirement on a convicted offender to carry out such work provided the spur ACPS needed to develop their thinking of community service as a court sanction in its own right, Blom-Cooper explained. Yet, without Wootton's inspired chairmanship and forcefulness, community service would not have emerged as a distinct penal sanction, he added.

      ACPS believed that community service should be a constructive penalty whereby the offender took on the burden of social responsibility towards others. They saw great merit in merging the majority of offenders with non-offender volunteers so that the offenders could be inspired by the volunteers.

      When ACPS published its report on non-custodial penalties in 1970, it took the view that community service would appeal to the punitive-minded because it involved deprivation of leisure; to the retributive, because it would compel the offender to make some repayment to the community for the damage that he had done; and to others, mainly because it would be cheaper and probably a more hopeful alternative to a short period of imprisonment, or because it would make the punishment fit the crime.

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    4. The pilot areas were left with relative freedom to develop community service in appropriate ways. I was much influenced by the New Careers movement in the US, which was part of President Lyndon Johnson's anti-poverty programme. It used some offenders as a community resource in the belief that, instead of becoming recipients of help, they could become dispensers of service and, in doing so, gain status and approval. Within three months in Nottinghamshire, we had hundreds of potential tasks for offenders in the community, from helping at clubs for disabled people or young people and at old people's homes, to canal preservation and supporting A&E units of local hospitals.

      When the two-year pilots ended in 1974, the Home Office research unit's final report was a superb illustration of official caution punctured by unfettered enthusiasm. The researchers said the scheme was viable and, despite their doubt about its overall impact on the size of the population, revealed that, at its best, community service was an exciting departure from traditional penal treatment.

      By the end of 1977, community service was rolled out across England and Wales. And over the next 20 years, Europe, Australasia, parts of Asia and the US all adopted community service orders.

      In the UK alone, millions of hours of community service have been carried out by thousands of offenders at a fraction of the cost of imprisonment. The latest figures from the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) show that community sentences outperform prison sentences for 18- to 24-year-olds by 13% in terms of reducing reoffending. Even when offenders of all ages are closely matched in terms of criminal history and offence type, the performance gap remains 8%.

      Yet, in a retributive age, the image of community service has been ratcheted up by politicians to match penal populism. And a demand for tougher community penalties has been paralleled by the rebranding of community service to community punishment, then community payback, and now to unpaid work. Today's offenders wear fluorescent tabards over their clothes to indicate that they are offenders, easily recognisable by members of the public. In reality, I suspect, despite the hardening rhetoric, nothing much has changed in terms of nature of tasks undertaken, though the rigid enforcement of orders leaves little room for discretion.

      Further, probation staff have handed over responsibility for unpaid work schemes to private companies such as Serco, which in October was awarded a four-year contract in London. The justification for this is to ensure a more efficient and cost-effective service. There are no evidential grounds for this degree of optimism. Serco promises to cut costs. The probation union, Napo, warns that this will be achieved by changing the employment conditions of existing supervisory staff and cutting salaries.

      The MoJ intends to put out to tender £600m worth of probation services, about 60% of the entire budget. It is a far cry from the Wootton committee's founding principles that a private company should not make profits on the back of offenders while they are repaying their debt to society. Blom-Cooper, for one, is saddened that we have moved to an acceptance that profit, not a sense of public service, is the prime driver for certain parts of our criminal justice process. "Penal reform," he remarked drily, "is not necessarily penal progress."

      In addition, the government proposes, in its crime and courts bill currently going through parliament, to introduce a mandatory punitive element to every community order. This could include a fine or a curfew, which penal campaigners are warning may undermine community sentences' success in reducing reoffending.

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    5. Whether the foundation stones of community service, laid down over the past 40 years, will survive under fragmentation and privatisation is open to question. Those of us fortunate enough to have been involved in its conception and present at its birth, believed that probation could make a difference in offenders' lives, provided that hard work, and clarity of purpose and vision underpinned all our efforts.

      • John Harding was pioneer senior probation officer/community service organiser for Nottinghamshire, 1972-74, and chief probation officer for inner London, 1993-2001

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  3. Napo disppointed by ministerial response

    Napo is disappointed that the minister did not make a verbal statement to the House yesterday. A number of questions had been prepared for MPs that had indicated they would like to speak and we had hoped to glean more information from the session. Unfortunately Richard Burgon's Urgent Question was also not chosen. Although he will try to get another one in today off the back of yesterday's speech given by David Gauke. Napo will continue to push for a meeting with the Minister as well.

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  4. I'm aware that not many agree with me, but rehabilitation and punishment mixed together don't make a good cocktail
    They have to be separate. Whether someone is identified as deserving punishment, or in need of rehabilitation, or indeed both, they should be applied separately. Maybe one could follow the other, but for me, together they create a confusing mix when put together where the rehabilitation aspect is just seen as part and parcel of the overall punishment.
    I'd also have to argue that rehabilitation is an overused word that has lost its real meaning in a world where targets and outcomes have become the meter for renumeration.
    Gauke, Stewart and Co talk about populations, numbers and statistics, but the problem is pan social, and can't be solved by justice reforms alone.
    It's the people behind the statistics that need to be focused on.
    Data on its own dosen't commit crime.

    'Getafix

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  5. DDC CRC going down the pan was obviously orchestrated by MOJ, Working Links failing just enabled MOJ to wipe out DDC as the start of reducing them down to align with the new PCC borders. Very convenient for MOJ, they get rid of a failing private company and DDC, 2 for the price of one. How much did this cost? KSS CRC must be given a nice hand out by MOJ for picking up the worst performing CRC, that must surely be in the public interest! KSS CRC now trying to transfer DDC staff onto their staff terms and conditions failing to honour the national staff transfer arrangements written into the CRC ARSA contracts that KSSCRC are legally bound by the Secretary of State.Under the ARSA the contractor has no right to terminate the agreement so under what clause of section 33 did the MOJ terminate their contract? Whatever the reason sub clause 34.4 requires that termination of the Agreement shall not affect the continuing rights and obligations of the Contractor and the authority (employee matters, pensions and transfer arrangements etc).

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  6. From Spectator:-

    ‘Short term custody isn’t inherently bad, but the way we do it is awful.’ I didn’t expect Justice Secretary David Gauke to start an otherwise thoughtful speech yesterday on prisons like this, but he should have. No one wants people in prison when there are better alternatives that will properly punish them and give them the tools to break away from offending. To do otherwise is stupid. But the debate has been overwhelmed by a fixation on sentence length that wrongly suggests that short imprisonment must always and forever be toxic and counterproductive.

    Gauke presented his audience with sobering statistics on rates of incarceration putting us at the top of the league in Europe. We seem addicted to custody in this country, as long as it’s cheap. Let’s try some other data from countries often held up by our criminal justice commentariat as progressive role models. In Denmark in 2017, the average sentence length was 31-60 days. In Finland a year earlier, 40 per cent of all sentenced prisoners had served at most three months. Norway’s average prison sentence is just eight months. Why are we unable to send people to prison for short sentences here without making them worse?

    To be fair, all three of these countries lock up significantly fewer of their citizens as a proportion of their population and are (in sentencing terms) less punitive than we are. But they still manage to make short term custody a useful response to unacceptable behaviour as their much lower reoffending rates will testify.

    Critics of the British ‘bang-em-up’ school of crime theory are also largely silent on the inconvenient fact that many prison first timers have already been frequent flyers in our creaking criminal justice system; despairing magistrates finally crack after exhausting every community penalty available to them without success. Having a hollowed out probation system, destroyed by a lethal combination of wonkery and cuts doesn’t help either.

    So why are we so bad at dealing with people who continually offend and don’t seem to want to stop? Let me count the ways. Primarily, if you want to disrupt offending, particularly low-level acquisitive crime linked to drug addiction – the boom town of incarceration – you don’t send convicted prisoners into dystopian hell holes where it is easier to score your next fix than get a shower. The collapse of almost every metric of decency, safety and humanity in prisons is an appalling indictment of government policy weaponised by corporate incompetence. There’s no way around this. Slashing the numbers of prison staff on the landings has created an environment where it is often not clear who is in charge, never mind whether there is a regime, basic services or, God forbid, rehabilitation. Nowhere is this more apparent than in many of our overcrowded local prisons, home to the majority of short term offenders, where, as the Chief Inspector of prisons recently observed at HMP Bedford:

    ‘Prisoners became very angry, noisy and challenging and refused to comply with staff when directed to lock up. Staff struggled to deal with the incident, and appeared not to know what to do. Supervisors were not in control. For a period of an hour and a half, prisoners made unreasonable demands and many of them were acceded to.’

    The lack of suitable and sufficient prison officers, clearly and confidently in charge, has contributed to rocketing, record levels of violence and self-harm. Gauke devoted a sentence to the latest woeful safety statistics calling them, ‘disturbing.’ On the bridge of HMS good intentions, he opines on sentence reform. In the engine room, his excellent prisons minister, Rory Stewart, tries to sweat a few more miles from knackered engines. If you want prisons to be places of reform in the here and now, abstractions and think pieces won’t help broken staff running broken regimes.

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    1. So what can we do to meet the needs of public protection, punishment and rehabilitation? It’s absolutely true that we send far too many people to custody who are more nuisance than physical threat. But away from the cosy world of the middle class liberals and academics who comprise the bulk of the reform lobby, these same people often torture their neighbourhoods. A lack of effective sanction for their behaviour only encourages them and demoralises poor communities that don’t take the Guardian or shop in Waitrose. There are, let’s be blunt, places in our country, denuded of community policing and authority, where lawfulness is not entrenched behaviour. If you want to cut the dismal supply chain of feckless and impulsive young men from the wrong side of the tracks to custody and back again, there needs to be state-led strategic intervention to dig them out of normalised criminality. That’s a lot more than scrapping short sentences will do.

      In the meantime, we could explore why Scandinavian countries are so much more successful at short sentences than we are. Prison is an ideal place, uniquely suited, to breaking offending behaviour and getting services around offenders to help them rescue their potential and stop them victimising others. We ought to pay much more attention to the distinction between those in prison because they can’t – and those who won’t – comply with services and support around them. We need a new generation of ‘enterprise’ prisons solely focused on getting those who are motivated into employment after release. Secure, small scale, community-led detox facilities could do so much more than the bleak penal warehouses that too often accelerate addiction into suicide. There is so much we could do, away from the fixation on short term sentences. But as Gauke says in his speech, the public always want to prioritise hospitals over criminal justice. Which works well as a theory until it’s you in A&E, victim to someone bad and made worse in our blighted prisons.

      Ian Acheson is a former prison governor

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  7. Just an aside on Working Links. They were already in trouble in Ireland before going bust for putting people through their pathway to work program more then once and doubling the money claimed for outcomes from government. A familiar tale?

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/social-affairs/emergency-talks-under-way-on-future-of-company-which-administers-half-of-jobpath-1.3798365?mode=amp

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    1. Working links stole money in their work programme 250k had to be returned. Crooks in charge . Same as the Tories all chums.

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  8. Not sure if it's been noted on here previously, but...

    Justin Russell announced as the candidate for Chief Inspector of Probation, and would replace Glenys Stacey on 31st May.

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  9. Gauke's public warm words mean nothing when you consider what's going on under the counter...

    Open the link above & read it! Its been made bloody difficult to copy-&-paste but here are some snippets:

    * 10 probation regions in England will represent contract package areas or lots

    * Market share will be capped at 30% of caseload and a maximum of 2 contract package areas

    Regions will be (very conveniently in the current climate):

    North East
    North West
    Yorks & Humberside
    West Mids
    East Mids
    South West
    South Central
    East of England
    London
    Kent Surrey Sussex

    28th–31st January 2019:4-day period of events
    4th–22nd February 2019: optional one to ones
    12th–14th February 2019: voluntary sector market warming
    _________________________________________________
    Russel Webster tweet:

    "The MoJ’s market engagement webinar on Contract Levers scheduled for Thursday 21st February has been postponed in order for us to develop our thinking on the topic further."

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  10. I think I need to make it clear that I simply don't recognise nor understand the terminology and gobbledegook in this document and in my humble opinion impenetrable shit like this should have no place in the world of probation. It's utter bollocks as far as I'm concerned and I'm beginning to get angry again......

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  11. Jim - can't disagree, and sorry to be a provocateur of your ire. It makes me incandescent with rage that these documents, prepared in Dec 18, when the imminent demise of WL was known, show that TR2 is already being divvied up, viz-KSS being asked to pick up the WL package: "Market share will be capped at 30% of caseload and a maximum of 2 contract package areas", i.e. KSS & SouthWest = done deal for Seetec.

    While probation staff are being treated like shit right across the board Gauke & his MoJ cronies have already had lunch with the bidders and £thousands are being spent grooming each other...

    ... which means Gauke daren't kick off about WL - or anything else probation - in case he upsets the commercially sensitive apple-cart: "I will return to the subject of probation in much greater depth later this year."

    Contract launch is April 2019
    Initial bids evaluated May/June
    Qualifying bidders to tender June/Aug

    That'll explain why Gauke & co kept WL under their hats until there was no choice. If it had come out before this bidding process started then other bidders might have cried "foul", or muddied the waters over who has WL packages.

    NB - ANYONE NOTICE THERE'S NO 'WALES' PACKAGE?

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  12. Staff in SW - please read Page 13 of the "mobilisation-transition" document

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    1. Staff protections apply for legacy staff. Transfer the second or third the life of the contract placed an open protection until some Berk tries to agree a change. Fortunately the Napo branches and unison are well into this.

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  13. https://www.civilserviceworld.com/articles/news/working-links-outsourcer-%C2%A31bn-public-contracts-collapses

    In Wales, plans were already in motion to transfer probation services back to HM Prison and Probation Service by 2020, and Gauke said this would now be brought forward to the end of this year. “We are currently working at pace with Seetec to accelerate this process,” he said.

    Announcing her report on Dorset, Devon and Cornwall CRC, Stacey said the collapse of Working Links should be a “turning point” for probation provision. “Our CRC inspection evidence shows a variable picture but it is one in which the provision of services in most cases is wanting, often significantly so,” she said.

    She said changing the delivery model would not be easy but added: “The future model must preserve the ethos of probation, and respect and nurture the probation profession itself.

    “The alternative is made clear in the thoroughly dispiriting Dorset, Devon and Cornwall CRC report.”



    https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/working-links-probation-grayling-seetec-2556355

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  14. it would appear that the Moj have failed to include consultation with the union NAPO as outlined on page 13 of the transfer and mobilization guide in the case of Seetec. Transfer has already occurred behind close doors and the retrospectively the unions invited - not very transparent.............. Ian Lawrence what are you doing about this or are you going to leave for SW Branch to sort yet again?

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    1. Unless Napo *were* consulted but just haven't 'fessed up. Its just a thought. In these days of smoke & mirrors, anything is possible. It would be nice to have some idea as to how this farce has been manipulated & the "rules" either bent or broken.

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    2. Well said, but we are unlikely to find out this side of Hell or maybe Heaven as parliamentary or media scrutiny rarely happens, and neither via Napo as that would mean acknowledging this blog exists.

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  15. It seems likely that these "market warming" excercises are why the ministers are saying very little about probation right now - hence the other interested members of parliament and trade unions need to be asking very penetrating questions - I pay less attention to them now as my expectations of proper scrutiny are very low - have you dear reader heard anything meaningfull?

    I presume nothing significant will be heard from the Justice Committee until the market has gone cold!

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  16. https://www.thejournal.ie/jobpath-2-4502466-Feb2019/

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    1. ONLY 11,334 PEOPLE out of 206,000 who have taken part in JobPath sustained employment for over 12 months.

      However, despite the figures, Social Protection Minister Regina Doherty states the scheme is working.

      During a debate on 6 February on a motion which called for the end of referrals to the programme, the minister said:

      “Almost 206,000 people have engaged with the JobPath service, of whom approximately 48,000 are still engaged.”

      However, correspondence between the department and Sinn Féin’s John Brady gives a breakdown of the figures, showing that only 11,334 jobs out of 206,000 were sustained in employment exceeding 12 months.

      JobPath is an employment activation service provided to people who have been on the live register for more than 12 months and are trying to secure and sustain full-time paid employment or self-employment.

      The two private companies employed by the State, Turas Nua and Seetec, to operate the scheme have received €75.7 million and €73.3 million respectively to carry out its work.

      The two contractors are paid to work with both the jobseeker and employers to identify employment opportunities.

      They receive payments when someone who has taken part in the scheme gains proven employment.

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