Napo and POA in dispute over OMiC as Johnson announces 10,000 more prison places
Today’s big story on sentencing reform, and the return of the Tories favourite old pre-election mantra of ‘lock em up and throw away the key,’ is symptomatic of the failure by successive Governments to properly understand the need for a balanced approach to prisons and rehabilitation.
I have just returned to HQ from the interview with Sky News earlier today where I tried to introduce a different perspective, and highlight a number of Napo’s campaigning priorities. Depressingly today’s debate has been dominated by the headline of 10,000 new prison places (and at least one new prison) to be financed by another huge windfall from that Magic Money Tree.
Same old, same old
There are a few reasons why the policy shift should be subject to major scrutiny. Firstly, because it represents a brutal ‘pitchforking’ of the reformist shoots previously planted by Messrs Gauke and Stewart on the need to abolish short term prison sentences which would have made a decent start in freeing up space across the HMP estate. Although by now we should know better than to expect a few facts to get in the way of the populist soundbites resurrected by Boris and his chums as they move inexorably towards a November general election.
Secondly, and in fairness to Secretary of State Robert Buckland, who at least acknowledged the need to take a holistic view of penal and rehabilitative policy on the early bulletins, it's yet again been all about Prison being the place where society’s ‘problems’ can be sent and sorted. Anyone with even half an idea about the justice system can tell you that this is a patently absurd mind-set, both from a financial and political standpoint. It's been tried tested and failed more times than many of us can remember and has seen the Prison population rise to bursting point across several decades.
OMiC dispute
Today, and perhaps very well-timed, your National Chair Katie Lomas and I have served notice on Sonia Crozier that Napo are now in dispute over the Offender Management in Custody strategy for a number of reasons as articulated in our letter. Our serious doubts about the practicalities of OMiC were raised a long time ago and have been again in light of the Governments U-turn on Probation, but it’s been an awfully long slog trying to get someone to take our concerns seriously. Today’s announcements should at least ring some more bells in this regard.
Fortunately it's not just us who are somewhat miffed at developments, and last week we met with our colleagues from the POA who also have serious issues in common cause around grading, qualification and workloads. We agreed to exchange notes going forward, maintain contact and seek joint meetings with senior HMPPS leaders and Ministers.
We will also be raising this subject as a matter of urgency at this weeks’ meeting of the NPS JNC and we will report further to members as soon as we can.
Ian Lawrence, General Secretary
Sonia Crozier, Chief Probation Officer and Executive Director Women
--oo00oo--
HM Prison and Probation Service
12th August 2019
Dear Sonia,
Dispute re OMiC
During recent engagement with your Officials about OMiC, we have received information that causes such significant concern to our members that we have no option but to formally register a dispute. Our concerns are summarised here.
Lack of Consultation
At the last meeting on July 24th we were presented with (after around a year of asking) a Powerpoint presentation titled “OMiC Staffing Model”. The document was dated March 2019. This document includes changes to agreed workload timings and changes to work practices such as completion dates for OASys and the OASys review frequency that we have not been properly consulted about. These constitute a significant change for members as well as establishing a lower level of assessment and review than is currently in place for clients in custody.
Broken assurances on staffing levels
At the start of OMiC, we were assured that the Offender Management part of the project would not be rolled out until staffing levels are safe. It is now clear that this is not the case and many members are reporting that their division is pressing ahead despite the significant vacancy levels and unacceptably high workloads that exist.
We have been informed that, in five prisons, there are serious staffing issues that are not likely to be resolved by the “go live” date. Our understanding was that in such a situation the “go live” would not proceed, but instead we have been informed that the Case Management Support model will be used instead. This will force Probation staff to take on dangerously high caseloads of high risk clients and will see prison staff who have not had the requisite training or acquired the qualification to carry out offender management tasks with those clients. Taking aside the reality that the Case Management Support model rarely affords the workload relief it promises in the custody part of the sentence, there is little work that can be usefully given to someone else in this way. Our members who are being forced to work in this way are at real risk from such excessive workloads and we know from tragic experience that working so far beyond capacity also prevents members from delivering the standard of work required from them.
SPO workloads
We have raised our concerns for some time about the prison SPO role after it was announced that the ratio of SPO: reportee would be 1:14 FTE rather than the 1:10 FTE in the community. The SPOs working in prisons will be supervising both probation and prison staff who are on different sets of terms and conditions. We already see SPOs in the community struggling with workloads, especially where there are a number of part time staff (far more likely in a predominantly female workforce) which often means there are far more than 10 staff to supervise. In Prisons, these difficulties will be exacerbated, as the SPO is expected to drive the rehabilitation culture in the OMU while referencing multiple management and support structures for the two sets of staff. Our representations on this issue up to now have been ignored.
Change to agreement on the contracted out estate
During the meeting on the 24th July, we were also informed that, contrary to the previous assurance that high-risk clients in the contracted-out estate would have an OM with a Probation Qualification, there was a plan to use the Case Management Support model here too. This again forces members to work with dangerously high caseloads and way beyond their safe capacity thus risking their health and safety as well as making it impossible for them to deliver the standard of work expected.
Concerns about the model
You are of course aware that right from the start, Napo have questioned the OMiC model because it builds in working practices that are not supportive of desistance including inconsistency of worker through the sentence. The change of Offender Manager during the preparation for a client’s release is particularly concerning; as the period immediately prior to and just after release are especially vulnerable points in the sentence. The blueprint for the change to Probation Services discusses how problematic these “handoffs” are, and this forms part of the basis for one of the most significant U-turns in policy we have seen in Probation. It is therefore astounding that the OMiC model is being forced through with the same flaws embedded.
The announcements by the Prime Minister over the weekend of the intention to create 10,000 new Prison places, in itself means that urgent dialogue (and surely a further review) is now necessary on the whole OMiC strategy and the resourcing requirements that are going to be needed in Prisons and Probation.
In addition, the OMiC model has been altered for the Women’s Estate to remove the Keyworker role for those women described in the documentation as “high complexity women”. We have made representations about the degrading language being used and suggested that “women with complex needs” would be more appropriate. We question the decision to remove the Keyworker role which has been described as providing more consistency. Using consistency of worker as a reasoning for any decision in this model is bizarre, given the representations we have made about the model overall, but in this case it doesn’t fit at all. The Keyworker role is one of the positive aspects of OMiC, providing an additional supportive member of the “team” in the prison. This should be used to enhance, not supplant the interaction with the Offender Manager. Instead of removing the Keyworker role we believe that the Keyworker should remain, but the Offender Manager should be allocated additional time to ensure that positive working relationships can be built.
No consultation on job losses
In addition to the practice concerns we have illustrated above, it is very clear that the OMiC model is simply seeking to resolve the acute and chronic staffing issues in the NPS by giving staff unacceptably high workloads and by giving 30% of the custody caseload to Prison staff to manage. Although no NPS staff will lose their employment (because of the high vacancy rate in the NPS and our ‘no redundancy’ agreement) this nevertheless represents a net loss of jobs which has also not been the subject of prior consultation with the unions.
In view of the urgency of this issue, we are seeking its inclusion as an additional item at this weeks’ meeting of the NPS JNC. Meanwhile, Napo will be taking steps to consult with our sister trade unions and our members about how we should progress this dispute.
Yours sincerely
IAN LAWRENCE
General Secretary
KATIE LOMAS
National Chair
And yet in some areas, those in charge of the OMiC project and it’s implementation are being promoted!
ReplyDeleteRewarded for failure and creating additional stress for staff seems worthy of a career enhancement.
Its a very English trait which has its roots in protecting the class system, empire & colonialism. That's why gongs are handed out, why Boris is PM & why so many of the self-styled 'elite' are so utterly useless.
DeleteAnd one probable backlash was the vote to leave the EU.
That elitism pervades all structures including the poa Napo self styled dictorial but not very intelligent leaderships. They had plenty of early warning omic would change the role of a po and coincidentally probation officer to the same morphed rubbish neither one or other. A bit to late to whine and bleat poa Napo blowhards.
DeleteDavid Fraser, long serving senior probation officer writes today in Conservative Women.
ReplyDeleteI'm baffled as to why he ever became a probation officer given his views.
https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/why-the-liberals-are-so-wrong-about-soft-sentences/
'Getafix
We covered this at the time - it's a rehash:-
DeleteBoris Johnson’s welcome ‘urgent review’ and promised U-turn on Rory Stewart’s softer prison sentencing policy has sparked a predictable spate of liberal criticism, led by BBC Home Affairs correspondent Mark Easton, Labour’s Diane Abbott and Francis Crook of the Howard League of Penal Reform.
Earlier this year on TCW crime expert David Fraser comprehensively debunked this liberal critique. Anyone serious about cutting crime must make prison sentences longer. This article was first published on February 3, 2019.
Unfortunately Getafix David Fraser is highly likely going to be championed by the powers that be in Government as he sings the right doing for them - as ever no acknowledgement that it was failing Graylings reforms that pulled apart what was working ( as much as I disagreed with the trust's being formed we were in the main Gold standard and people focused ) - I often question and wonder why management within the CRC I work within ever bothered to qualify as Probation officer's as they are so far removed from being " people focused " but much rather the privateer's whip cracking shameless target chaser's - it really is soul destroying as it appears to be getting much worse than even I anticipated it would ( and after this past 4 years in purgatory I really wasn't expecting much )
ReplyDeleteThat OmiC Dispute Letter from Napo reads as a good professional document and basis for negotiation recognising both the client and staff needs and also different types of staff.
ReplyDeleteI wish it well and wonder who put it together.
Meanwhile... latest from MoJ:
ReplyDeletehttps://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/825100/Update_on_scope_of_services_-_webinar__Market_engagement__-_August_2019.pdf
Also (still relatively fresh) from MoJ:
Deletehttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/gps-location-monitoring
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/warwickshire-and-west-mercia-crc
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/north-east-nps-action-plan
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/kent-surrey-sussex-crc-action-plan
https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/prison-population-figures-2019
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/pay-rise-for-prison-officers-2019-statement-by-robert-buckland
"By accepting the Prison Service Pay Review Body’s recommendations in full, we are continuing our investment in the prison officers, managers and governors at the very heart of what we do.
The pay award is worth at least 2.2% for all prison staff and a targeted 3% increase for our Band 3 F&S prison officers on the frontline.
This is the second year in a row we have announced above inflation pay rises over 2%. On top of that, we have made further pledges to recruit and retain prison officers and managers, helping to make our prisons safer and reduce reoffending."
Fuck probation?
Hang on, didn't the press release say napo were cosy with Buckland?
Delete"Napo had a good working relationship with Justice Secretary, Robert Buckland, and we believe he understands the situation. But, Ian stressed, the way forward is properly resourced supervision in the community"
So why no equivalent pay award across the board for probation staff regardless of their location? Presumably the POA represent staff in public & private prisons?
No pay rise, no fair pay structure, sold out.
Look at the quality and capabilities of the Napo leadership. Don't expect anything now will you.
DeleteAnd some £6m of alternative provision up for tender:
ReplyDeletePolice and Crime Commissioner for Dyfed-Powys - The proposal for an offender diversionary scheme is a culture-changing initiative that seeks to tackle the root causation of offending and associated health and community related issues. It is a multi-agency scheme which seeks to address offending behaviour at a much earlier stage in an individual’s offending journey. It also improves awareness of and access to health-based services for all persons committing low level offences.
The scheme will result in Dyfed-Powys Police making a transition from being a prosecution based force to being an offender management based force.
Estimated total value excluding VAT: 1 000 000.00 GBP
________________________________________________________
Leeds City Council - The service will contribute to the overarching integrated offender support service arrangements in the city to reduce offending and reoffending. The key principle of the new service will be the provision of a flexible and intelligence led intensive support service, responding to the changing landscape of criminal justice, to prevent offending and reduce reoffending.
The Leeds IOM arrangements help to improve the quality of life in communities by:
— helping to improve the public’s confidence in the criminal justice system,
— reducing the negative impact of crime and reoffending,
— reducing the number of people who become victims of crime.
The service shall have an integral role within the Leeds IOM arrangements, providing a flexible and evidence-based intensive support service to reduce crime and disorder by addressing issues such as drug and alcohol misuse.
Estimated total value excluding VAT: 3 600 000.00 GBP
_________________________________________________________
And there are two NHS England - Specialised Commissioning lots available here:
1. Provision of community based services for offenders likely to have personality disorders together with an intensive intervention and risk management service in Derbyshire.
Estimated value excluding VAT: 637 060.00 GBP
2. Provision of community based services for offenders likely to have personality disorders together with an intensive intervention and risk management service in Leicestershire.
Estimated value excluding VAT: 926 716.00 GBP
Why no pay increase for Probation. Only HMPPS when it suits. So pissed off with all this
ReplyDeleteWhen are crc staff going to be compensated for loss of wages due to TR.
ReplyDelete95% of napo ballot have refused Interserve pay offer of 1% per increment increase.
ReplyDelete