Thursday, 16 May 2019

As Predicted!

Thank goodness TR is officially dead! It was predicted of course. This from only a week ago:- 

Ducks Form Row

It certainly took some time, but the inevitability of a humiliating admission that TR was an unmitigated disaster of gigantic proportions and that TR2 hasn't a hope in hell of being sold to anyone as a bright new future, has at last dawned on the MoJ and its political masters. Of course it won't be spun like that because taxpayers pay for a huge team of enthusiastic young spin doctors who as we speak are developing the positive narrative that will accompany news of probation reunification.


Of course this has been on the cards for some time with the MoJ spin department having fallen silent some time ago. But we've been reading the runes; the ducks are forming up in rows and the celestial bodies are coming into alignment. The stage is set; it just needs to be packaged as an exciting, bright new future and the politicians have to save face, obviously. There has to be a role for the private sector because Tories believe in privatisation, even though it doesn't work. There has to be a role for the third sector because that gives the impression that the Tories aren't the nasty party and believe in the value of 'charity'. Of course there is the small matter of them having been royally shafted by TR, but that letter the other day ordering a 'bung' makes clear the political dimension to all this:-

"I intend to put in place a more stable and resilient probation system, which works effectively to protect the public and tackle reoffending. In that context, there is clearly value in maintaining a diverse and varied market of providers able to address the complex needs of individuals in the probation system. Organisations such as these will be key in the future market for probation services; if our failure to stand behind them results in their departure from the market, this could make it difficult for our reformed service to properly do its job from inception."
In order to save face it looks clear that the private sector will probably be rewarded with hugely-expanded tagging contracts, together with programmes and UPW along the Welsh model. The MoJ will champion the fact that they listened to the evidence from the 'sham' consultation; they heeded the stern words from Bob Neill and took on board the damning reports from the PAC and NAO. Just about everyone can claim success for this outcome; the unions, academics; campaigning groups; this blog even, but it's only a first step. It won't be like it was before and we simply must shake free of HMPPS command and control. But that's for another day folks.

--oo00oo--

This from the Guardian:-

Probation will be renationalised after disastrous Grayling reforms

The supervision of all offenders in the community is to be undertaken by the state in a major renationalisation of the probation sector, just five years after Chris Grayling introduced a widely derided programme of privatisation while justice secretary.

Under his disastrous shake-up in 2014, the probation sector was separated into a public sector organisation managing high-risk criminals and 21 private companies responsible for the supervision of 150,000 low- to medium-risk offenders. Following years of damning criticism from MPs, inspectorates and former probation officers, the justice secretary, David Gauke, has decided to bring all offender management under the National Probation Service (NPS) by spring 2021.

He said the private sector would still play a part in the provision of services, with £280m worth of contracts for rehabilitation services such as the provision of unpaid work and accredited programmes. But the core function of the service – supervising and managing about 250,000 offenders in the community – will once again be publicly provided.

Gauke said: 

“Delivering a stronger probation system, which commands the confidence of the courts and better protects the public, is a pillar of our reforms to focus on rehabilitation and cut reoffending. I want a smarter justice system that reduces repeat crime by providing robust community alternatives to ineffective short prison sentences – supporting offenders to turn away from crime for good. The model we are announcing today will harness the skills of private and voluntary providers and draw on the expertise of the NPS to boost rehabilitation, improve standards and ultimately increase public safety.”

Gauke announced last summer the contracts of eight private firms which run the 21 “community rehabilitation companies” (CRCs) in England and Wales would be terminated in 2020, two years early. This followed a £500m-plus bailout by the Ministry of Justice. But it had been the government’s intention to offer fresh contracts to private providers, under proposals put out to consultation last year. The new model will introduce 11 new probation regions in England and Wales run by the NPS. Each will have an “innovation partner”, either a private firm, charity or NGO, which will provide some rehabilitation services.

As justice secretary, Grayling ignored significant warnings from within his department to push through his so-called transforming rehabilitation reforms in 2014. In February, MPs on the public accounts committee said the changes were rushed through at breakneck speed, taking “unacceptable risks” with taxpayers’ money. The justice committee described the overhaul a “mess” and warned it might never work.

Last October the Guardian revealed the number of offenders in England and Wales charged with serious offences, including murder, manslaughter and rape, while they were being monitored in the community increased by more than a fifth in 12 months. There were 627 serious further offence (SFO) reviews conducted in 2017-18, a freedom of information request response disclosed, a 21% rise on the 517 in the previous 12-month period. SFO reviews are triggered when an offender under statutory probation supervision is charged with murder, manslaughter, rape or other serious violent or sexual offences.

Dame Glenys Stacey, the chief inspector of probation, who revealed theGrayling shake-up had led to tens of thousands of offenders – up to 40% of the total – being supervised by tphone calls every six weeks instead of face-to-face meetings, said the changes were “irredeemably flawed”.

Commenting on Gauke’s announcement, Stacey said: 

“I am delighted at the secretary of state’s decision. Probation is a complex social service, and it has proved well-nigh impossible to reduce it to a set of contractual requirements. Today’s announcement puts the focus firmly on improving the quality of probation services. More than a quarter of a million people are under probation supervision each year, and high-quality probation services can make such a difference to them and to wider society as well. Hard-pressed probation professionals now face yet more change, but I anticipate they will be in good heart. It is a chance to restore their professionalism, enabling them to make the biggest possible difference to the lives of some of the most troubled and troublesome people in society, and that is what gets probation staff up in the morning, above all.”

Richard Burgon, the shadow justice secretary, said: 

“After putting public safety at risk and squandering hundreds of millions of pounds on trying to shore up failing private probation companies, the Tories have been forced to face reality and accept their probation model is irredeemably broken. The Tories didn’t want to make this U-turn and had been desperately trying to re-tender probation contracts to the private sector. It is right those plans have been dropped and that offender management is to be brought back in-house.”

He added: “We will press the government to ensure that probation is fully returned to being the award-winning public service it was before this disastrous Tory privatisation.”

50 comments:

  1. Minister announces policy u-turn for Probation

    Napo, the trade union and professional association for probation staff is today celebrating a major turning point in its campaign to restore Probation to public sector ownership as the Secretary of State for Justice David Gauke, announces a fundamental change in government policy.

    The statement by the Minister confirms a decision that will result in the eventual transfer of around 80% of probation work from that currently undertaken by the Community Rehabilitation Companies (CRCS) to the National Probation Service. The current CRC contracts with the Ministry of Justice are due to be terminated in December 2020.

    In 2014, the then Secretary of State, Chris Grayling, privatised 80% of probation services under his ‘Transforming Rehabilitation’ (TR) agenda. Eight organisations acquired 21 CRC contracts, which have been subject to a plethora of highly critical reports by Dame Glenys Stacey Chief Inspector of Probation. These reports, alongside the findings from the Justice Select and Public Accounts Committees, have repeatedly raised concerns about public safety, the quality of service being delivered and the ability of private sector providers to make a real difference to reoffending rates. In February this year three Working Links CRC contracts went into administration leaving debts of over £1.2 million to third sector contractors for which the MoJ has been directed to make reparation.

    As the largest union representing probation staff, Napo has been campaigning for the CRCs to be returned to public ownership since day one. Voicing members’ feedback about the way the CRCs have managed their contracts, Ian Lawrence General Secretary said: “Since these so called reforms were first outlined Napo has raised serious concerns about this untested social experiment. The government went ahead and implemented a model that had been criticised across the board for being unfit for purpose. Our members predicted that the TR model was doomed to fail from the outset. We are pleased that this Minister has chosen to heed our concerns, examine the need for a different approach and take action.”

    The new arrangements will replicate the Welsh model for probation that was announced earlier this year and which will be enacted by this December. This will see the majority of probation work involving clients under supervision transferred into public ownership by December next year, along with the staff involved. The government intends that the remaining intervention work, such as Community Payback and Accredited Programmes, will be put out to tender.

    Ian Lawrence went on to say: “We are obviously disappointed that there is an intention for some probation work to remain in the private sector. Napo will continue to campaign to ensure that all of these services and our members who provide them, are eventually transferred back into the public sector and that we will step up our efforts to secure pay parity for all Probation staff. This victory has not given us all that we want and while this news will be welcomed by Napo members and other stakeholders, the campaign for public ownership is not over yet.”

    Ian Lawrence
    Napo General Secretary

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  2. Frances Crook, Chief Executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said: “Scrapping the failed market and re-unifying probation services is welcome. David Gauke should be warmly congratulated for listening to what the Howard League and many others have been saying about the catastrophic split and part-privatisation of probation.

    “The probation service needs national leadership and accountability sitting squarely within the public sector. Probation will only keep the public safe and help people turn their lives around if it is integrated with housing, health and other such services, and promotes high professional standards at all levels.

    “At the same time, the devil still lurks within the detail. How services will be delivered locally on the ground remains unclear. The regional structure proposed may prove unwieldy, while clinging to private sector delivery of something like unpaid work seems to fly in the face of repeated failures by companies to deliver on such contracts.

    “Today, however, marks a huge step in the right direction.”

    The Howard League submitted proposals for a Community Justice system – which would involve a national strategic focus combined with local service delivery – to the Ministry of Justice in September last year, as part of the ministry’s consultation on strengthening probation.

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    1. Whilst unions and reformers and politicians celebrate, claim victory and make the headlines, some who's strived tirelessly might not even get a mention.
      You might just have to buy your own pint to celebrate Jim, but there's no doubt at all you deserve it!

      But.. Someone needs to keep a close eye on what the privateers do between now and the end date because their only mission now will be to strip every penny out that they can before they go.

      'Getafix

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    2. Thanks 'Getafix - you've certainly done your bit too and I know from personal contact that many regular readers look forward to your contributions and get worried if you fall silent for any length of time. Raise a pint yourself today - I will!

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    3. No Jim..... you will get a pint (or two) from me. Thanks for your tireless and relentless work in galvanising morale to fight this tragedy.
      Of course there is still a fight, so don't think of going away...there is a new chapter to shape and chronicle. Very best....

      'Alfred'

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  3. From FT:-

    Ministers are to renationalise the management of probation services in England and Wales after the failure of a chaotic privatisation that put public safety at risk.

    David Gauke, justice secretary, will announce on Thursday that the publicly run National Probation Service is to take back control of all management work, ending a regime that outsourced supervision of all but the highest-risk offenders to eight companies, including Sodexo.

    Several of the companies expressed disappointment at the move, saying the changes would create a more fragmented system that would increase costs.

    The part-privatisation of probation services in 2015 by Chris Grayling, justice secretary at the time, split probation work into 21 regional contracts worth £3.7bn to the outsourcing companies over seven years.

    It was intended to bring down reoffending rates and inject innovation into the rehabilitation of ex-prisoners but the system has been beset by difficulties.

    Glenys Stacey, the chief inspector of probation, warned this year that the current system was “irredeemably flawed”. Parliament’s spending watchdog criticised the probation service as presenting “significant risks” to both offenders and the wider public.

    In February, Working Links, one of the private providers, collapsed after four years of poor service and failing efforts to maintain a lossmaking contract.

    The outsourced contracts were due to last until 2022 but Mr Gauke intervened last year to shorten the contracts, which will now end in December 2020.

    Under the new model, the private sector will no longer manage offenders directly but will be able to tender to run training and rehabilitation courses worth up to £280m a year.

    Each of the regions will have a private or voluntary sector “innovation partner” responsible for providing the courses. The Ministry of Justice will now begin a market-testing phase ready to bring the new contracts into effect in the spring of 2021.

    Mr Gauke said: “I want a smarter justice system that reduces repeat crime by providing robust community alternatives to ineffective short prison sentences — supporting offenders to turn away from crime for good.

    “The model we are announcing today will harness the skills of private and voluntary providers and draw on the expertise of the [National Probation Service] to boost rehabilitation, improve standards and ultimately increase public safety.”

    Probation services deal with more than 250,000 offenders in England and Wales, including inmates preparing to leave jail, ex-prisoners living in the community and those on serving community or suspended sentences.

    Dame Glenys said she was “delighted” at Mr Gauke’s decision, and noted that it had proved “well-nigh impossible” to outsource the work successfully. She acknowledged that probation professionals would face yet more upheaval but anticipated they would be in “good heart” as a result of the changes.

    Speaking on behalf of Interserve, MTC, Seetec and Sodexo, the businesses responsible for 17 of 21 community rehabilitation companies in England and Wales, Janine McDowell, head of justice services at Sodexo, said she was “disappointed” by the government’s decision. “As well as increasing cost and risk, this more fragmented system will cause confusion as offenders are passed between various organisations for different parts of their sentence,” she added. We will now work closely with the government to minimise risks as the cases we manage are transferred to the National Probation Service.” The companies were not given advance details of the justice ministry’s announcement.

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    1. Ian Lawrence, general secretary of Napo, the probation officers’ union, welcomed the plans and called Mr Grayling’s reforms an “untested social experiment”.

      “The government went ahead and implemented a model that had been criticised across the board for being unfit for purpose,” he said. “We are obviously disappointed that there is an intention for some probation work to remain in the private sector. Napo will continue to campaign to ensure that all of these services and our members who provide them are eventually transferred back into the public sector.”

      However Tom Sasse, a researcher at the Institute for Government, warned that the plans would not be an “instant fix”.

      “The National Probation Service will face many of the same pressures that providers felt — and the changes will involve a significant transfer of cases, which will need to be managed carefully,” he said. “The NPS may also require extra funding.”

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    2. "As well as increasing cost and risk, this fragmented system caused confusion as offenders apassed between various organisations for different parts of their sentence"

      There you go. Fixed it for McDowell & the 17/21 CRCs. She describes TR beautufully...

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    3. Yes she does and what an obvious idiot she is. These are the way we described the failure of the TR rubbish in the first place. This is private companies now working out their minimum redundancy costs for all their execs non qualified and quislings who shall all be looking for work shortly. Boot on the other foot springs to mind Hoorah. Good by See-it-take it sodit-co MTC NOGO interswerving you should be paying the money back robbing no marks opportunists.

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  4. NAPO can't claim any if this glory they couldn't even get us a payrise

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    1. No your wrong look at branches success in places and Napo central have come along credit is due.

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    2. So now its proven to have been such a dusaster I'm looking forward to Napo/Unison retrospective actions against Govt in support of staff who had EVR stolen, who lost careers, who endured stress-related conditions, etc.

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    3. Not a chance leaver and losers ran for cover and did not fight no rear-guard actions is a prospect anyone sulking can ask. The unions will be busy protecting the fee paying members who have stuck it out not running for a small bag of cash and after all so many agreed to sign didn't they? Todays news is for the remainers not the runners.

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    4. 07:20's response to 07:14 shows how deeply Grayling & TR have wounded Probation, how severely those wounds have become infected and how much specialist treatment is still needed.

      Today's announcement is neither a broad-spectrum antibiotic nor a panacea of any kind, its merely an acknowledgement of the diagnosis.

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    5. I think those are very wise words indeed annon @ 07.30.
      As the waters of privatisation receded, the destruction TR has caused will be laid bare in its totality. It will be a long and difficult fix structurely, IT nightmares, relocations and reassignments and upheaval everywhere.
      The damage caused to the workforce could be even more difficult heal, the wounds as you say have indeed become infected.
      But today is a good day nevertheless. However long the journey back takes, it can begin knowing its a step in the right direction.

      'Getafix

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    6. Quite right and the posts above 14 seeking a retrograde look back and make claims had a blue touch paper effect on the later reply. I have sympathy for those that left but that was a long time back and the battle is for the future restoration and so I have a foot in the later post although perhaps not as blunt as was stated. It is a mixed bag as getafix directs us.

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    7. Too true. A victory but a hollow victory for the casualties along the way.And there will still be much turbulence ahead. Will all CRC staff be TUPE'd back to the NPS? I think not - the NPS won't require some staff and I'm sure the contracts offered could well be less favourable than those currently enjoyed by the long term staff. So concerns about job losses,futures will still be there.

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    8. No I think the golden share is the key here the equalities of terms is a paramount position anyone going into the NPS will be on equitable terms has to be no two tier. Right to be concerned though that's what th efight coming is about.

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    9. There is no TUPE arrangement as the Offender Management Act made us exempt. There is a staff transfer scheme. This will still protect pay and conditions but it does allow the NPS to cherry pick who they want from the CRC and discard the rest after they have reviewed ‘roles and responsibilities’. It’s far from over. I can’t feel jubilant when my colleagues jobs are at risk.

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  5. From Russell Webster:-

    Analysis

    Last July the MoJ announced its decision to cut short the contracts of the private Community Rehabilitation Companies and re-model probation although it also said it intended to keep the public/private split with CRCs continuing to supervise low- and medium-risk offenders. Under pressure from Chief Probation Officer Dame Glenys Stacey, the Public Accounts and Justice Committees and the National Audit Office, the MoJ has now changed its mind and decided that the public sector National Probation Service will now be responsible for all offender management.

    However, it is clear that there remain many details to be worked out. No new operating model has been published today and the MoJ has provided only a little additional information about what happens next:

    The Ministry of Justice will now run a period of market and stakeholder engagement to finalise these proposals, including on how services will be tendered to providers.

    A commercial competition will launch later this year for providers to bid for to source the necessary rehabilitative services.

    Offender management in Wales will be integrated on a quicker timescale, by the end of 2019.

    Three launch events to discuss the reforms in more depth will be held week commencing 27th May in London, Cardiff and Manchester and will be open to stakeholders.
    So, we must wait and see to get more details. However, two key issues spring to my mind:

    1) How practical are the eleven new probation areas which do not align with any other boundaries (health, police, local authority etc. — except for the three areas of London, Greater Manchester and Wales) and are much too large for key criminal justice players such as Police and Crime Commissioners to have any real influence?

    2) Which organisations, private or voluntary, will be interested in bidding to become one of the new CRCs – now known as “Innovation Partners” – and deliver unpaid work and accredited programmes? Will some of the current multi-national providers walk away and will we see a new supply chain mechanism which really encourages small and medium sized charities being paid to work with offenders?

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  6. Spare a thought for those in interventions, who are probably feeling undervalued and very anxious this morning

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  7. We need to give credit where it is due. Well done Jim for keeping up the pressure. Napo has a much better team centrally with the likes of Katie Lomas, David Raho, Dean ‘Brains’ Rogers, and others who joined together with other organisations in January for a coordinated push. https://www.union-news.co.uk/unions-call-on-government-to-renationalise-probation-services/

    The Napo press statement makes clear that the continued involvement of private firms will be resisted and their campaign goes on together with other justice organisations. However, let’s acknowledge that this is a major reversal of government policy and an enormous step in the right direction. There is a lot of work to do.

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    1. Who wrote this NAPO get real !

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  8. Thank you for your tenacity in keeping this blog alive whoever you are. It helped to keep staff informed and kept a connection across the areas and between nps and crcs. I don't believe that napo should be claiming victory they agreed the terms and conditions of staff being sifted into private companies. I am concerned about what conditions they may now agree to in the near future. I think this blog is far from over.

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    1. The struggle is not over. There is a substantially different line up at Napo now and lessons have been learned. They are operating in a union hostile environment but have made progress against a strong headwind. It is easy to be negative in retrospect but let us look at this as an opportunity and challenge. We will only get further progress if we remain firm and stick together. Rallying around Napo at this time sends the right message to employers.

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    2. Yes indeed - the Trade Unions failed to make effective use of social media; this blog did not well done and thank you Jim Brown.

      As for it being predicted last week - the failure of the split was predicted from the week it was announced in 2013, especially in this blog - that is six years ago - now we need to look at what is proposed for the recovery.

      It needs - consent probation - early release as it was pre 1991 - only on application - .

      Community sentences - under the control of the local courts except when reserved by sentencers.

      Probation Employimg Agencies under the jurisdiction of the local judiciary and thus workers - including probation officers will be officers of the court & probation will no longer be part of the executive but of the judiciary.

      Post release supervisation could be under the oversight of the Judiciary rather than the Secretary of State - that would be at least one bit of progress from what was established in 1967.

      Finally joint training with social workers and some defined system of role boundaries so that only trained and or experienced and qualified personnel have prime responsibility for supplying pre sentence and pre-parole reports and supervising convicts.


      Something about a proper professional salary perhaps even linked to the police scales of pay.


      I doubt we will get much of that.

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    3. I left NAPO in despair at their hollow opposition. Well done Jim for being a central point for communications and information. I heard on the grapevine that NAPO tried to sue you.... so fuck em if that's true.

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    4. Napo tried to shaft known members and lost that action.

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  9. Here we go again. The tattered fag packet used to record Tory probation policy has been dusted off and put back to use. Another headlong rush to design and implement a new system which, will almost inevitably result in more fuck ups. Let's just remember what fuck ups actually mean. Lost careers, more harm caused to our communities; I could go on. It's beholden on us to try to mitigate these as much as we can and make the very best of what is coming to preserve best practice and achieve better outcomes. More working extra hours, more stress through uncertainty; I could go on again. So thanks Jim and all of us who've argued and fought to get to this stage. Good luck to all of us who'll have to get through it. We will because that's what we do but it shan't be easy. The battle is won today but the war to ensure that Probation returns to a sensible locally managed and integral part of the CJS continues. Stay committed my wonderful colleagues and stay safe.

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  10. Two cheers for today’s news!
    As with everything else, the devil will be in the detail. Let us remember that the NPS is not a haven of tranquility. The silence from our ‘leaders’ over the last five years has been deafening and these are the people who will assume that they are taking control of the re- formulated service. A new broom is very much a necessity.
    We have another disaster looming with OMiC which once again delivers a two tier system between state and private prisons, seemingly with the support of the unions, and sTaff being ordered into prisons while the government is making noises about strengthening community sentences.
    Huge thanks to you Jim, the voice of sanity in the wilderness.
    A victory yes, and something to build upon, but by no means the end of the war.
    Anyway, let’s enjoy today, restore our energies and prepare for what is to come.

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  11. Do we now worry about redundancies, pay parity, terms & conditions?

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    1. In a nutshell , yes. This isn't a joyous occasion

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    2. There will certainly be some need for the a transfer process in both directions but lets see if the privateers pull out they will never deliver decent CP or Programmes . NPS already do its own iontervention work in Sotp and less reliant for DV in CRCs as they are crap . Lone tutors large groups and massive attrition why pay for that off the failed rate card. New contracts will be a waste of money and they may want to reconsider re badging interventions as probation plus and attach it back to public services proper sharing the same infrastructure and sentence compliance will reduce risks and better the confidence of the whole organisation. No more pandering to failing private companies. I think many will want to see appropriate exit procedures agreements as was before with TR1 but these will need to be enforceable this time round lets hope the unions have learnt a lesson.

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    3. Unfortunately I think this is a very real possibility.

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    4. AND beware of The Probation Institure scrabbling for justification with control of some sort of professional register which - if it is needed - can just as well be managed by the Health and Care Professions Council - even if it needs a name change .

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    5. Andrew you have to be kidding. The Probation institute is full of discredited has beens who offer nothing but incredible bad faith experience Ex Napo officials on the one hand with the other a clutch of the worst EX CPOs one with a record of discrimination against trade union officers in ET and the other responsible for the catastrophic HMIP report in the Working Links wings . This lot offer nothing.

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  12. Big Thanks to Jim, All Contributors to the blog, Napo, Unison, Dame Glenys, Frances Crook, Russell Webster & many many more. But...

    ... Gauke said on tv this morning that "the widespread reform of Probation Services was necessary in 2014". No, David, it was not.

    Do NOT mistake today's news as any sort of victory. As many posts on here are suggesting, its merely a political strategy for something equally or more divisive & damaging.

    TR was not such a stealthy process - hindsight shows it was openly discussed but either missed or dismissed. Do not make the same mistake with Gauke's reforms.

    Read. Every. Single. Word.

    Then read it again.

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    1. Gaukey is obvious and squirming with snake oil on the TV today but he does not believe what he is saying anymore than the viewers it is Tory mantra spin and I wonder why grayling does not face arrest. All said they want to spin out a positive U turn and the offensive is poor. They are going soon as so lets hope the May bot falls quickly and the new government Labour will end any new contracts for probation anyway. So Gawky boy can get lost .

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  13. Lets hope there is a redunacy package for those of us that have now been shafted twice.

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    1. You can always resign your in a job not a pay out scheme that attitude is how the privateers expect to treat hard working staff. You may well be transferred back properly and get on with your career.

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  14. Who's looking after the pension pot?

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  15. Ian Dunt at politics.co.uk (who has been one of the best in the media at following this story over the last 5-6 years) is typically coruscating.

    https://www.politics.co.uk/blogs/2019/05/16/probation-privatisation-debacle-crazed-obsession-with-the-ma

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  16. I'm currently with the Nps and after 5 years felt like I needed a change in terms of the role, type of caseload etc. I decided to apply and have been offered a position with the Crc. With today's news I'm unsure where to progress with my career ��

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    1. Stay put crcs are toast dead in the water

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  17. Also as predicted this major Probation and lead story that ran on the BBC late late yesterday and through the morning has now been dropped. Back to May, BoJo, Trump soap opera politics.

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  18. Please remove Probation from the Civil Service as I did not sign up to the code of conduct when I joined NPS
    I have take the comments within the documents ' We want to turn Probation back into a proffession on a par with teachers and Social Worker's . Are they having a laugh? Same people that have shafted our pay, terms and conditions over the last 10 years.
    Afraid I might not be arround long enough to find out

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  19. Hi, Jim it's Joanna here. Well done, you've kept at it for all this time and played a huge part. Thanks xx

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    1. Thanks Joanna! I still have happy memories of those early campaigning days - hope you are well. Jim x

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    2. I so hope voluntary redundancy is offered. I've had enough!

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  20. Yes we'll done Jim. Never met you but glad to have been an avid reader and contributer to this blog. If you have the energy there is still more to blog about for some time to cone. All the best.

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