In a parting shot before Parliament packs up and we head for a barmy Christmas General Election, Bob Neill and his Justice Committee issues a blistering report on our prisons. The trouble is, no-one will be in the slightest bit interested:-
The major report makes conclusions and recommendations in a range of areas. These include:
- Series of “policy by press release” announcements indicating focus on building new prison places to accommodate tougher sentences has refreshed concerns over the near £1 billion maintenance backlog on “appalling” state of existing prison estate.
- The condition of the prison system is such that a multi-year funding settlement is urgently required. Prisons should be safe and decent environments that rehabilitate offenders - this not currently the case. The Committee is calling again for a long-term plan to improve the prison system underpinned by the funding make it work.
- Much greater investment in purposeful activity is needed to reduce the estimated £18 billion cost of reoffending and improve safety in prisons. The Government's recent announcements on sentencing may over time result in a significantly increased prison population, without any guarantees that the necessary infrastructure will be put in place to avoid further overcrowding of prisons.
- Even at a daily operational level, the Committee says current arrangements for facilities management do not work. The Ministry should move as soon as possible away from national contracts for facilities management to much smaller, localised arrangements, so that governors have more control over the service and can adapt it to meet the needs of their prison. Initiatives already in place where teams of staff and prisoners carry out minor maintenance work around the prison show what can be achieved and Government should look seriously at rolling out similar initiatives across the whole prison estate.
- Greater autonomy for prison governors is welcome but will not drive necessary change without clear structures and mechanisms for accountability. Additional responsibilities for governors under the empowerment agenda do not match the rhetoric used by the Ministry of Justice, meaning there is still no clarity either as to what governors themselves are responsible for, or who is accountable for the performance of individual prisons.
- Assessment of prison performance is heavily skewed towards safety and security – though even with that, it is taking too long to get important security equipment like body scanners into prisons, and these processes must be reviewed and made to work more efficiently. The commitment to additional measures on purposeful activity and time spent out of cells is welcome, but there needs to be a whole-prison approach to measuring prison performance, particularly measures relating to health and education provision.
- Too often, prisons are identified as needing extra support, but their performance continues to decline. In the case of HMP Bristol, the Chief Inspector of Prisons invoked the urgent notification protocol despite the fact the prison was under the Ministry’s own special measures. There is little point in identifying poor performance if the necessary resources are not then provided to drive improvement.
“The prison system in England and Wales is enduring a crisis of safety and decency. Too often we have seen what might be called "policy by press notice" without any clear or coherent vision for the future of the prison system. New prison places might be welcome, but they do nothing to improve the appalling condition of much of the current prison estate, nor the prospect of offering a safe environment in which to rehabilitate offenders. Prisons will not become less violent without proper investment in purposeful activity for prisoners to support rehabilitation. At any rate, given Government’s poor track record in building prisons, we now want to see the detailed plans for the promised £2.5 billion for 10,000 more places, what they’ll look like and when they’ll be up and running.”
The Committee also reiterates its wide-ranging concerns about recruitment, retention, training and incentives for prison staff, from governors to officers, and makes a series of practical recommendations to begin to try to address these problems within a coherent framework for reform.
--oo00oo--
This from the Guardian:-
Prisons in England and Wales are facing a safety crisis, warn MPs
The prison system in England and Wales is in an “appalling” state of crisis, lacking decency or security and no clear plan for desperately needed change, MPs have warned in a report that raises questions over the government’s pledges on prisons ahead of an election.
The justice committee, chaired by the Conservative MP Bob Neill, condemned Boris Johnson’s “policy by press notice” approach to prisons following a raft of announcements widely seen as electioneering tactics.
The committee condemned the lack of a clear plan for reform and a long-term strategy to “reverse the fortunes” of the prison estate and called for detailed plans of how the government would meet a series of pledges it has made to increase funding.
Neill said: “The prison system in England and Wales is enduring a crisis of safety and decency. Too often we have seen what might be called ‘policy by press notice’ without any clear or coherent vision for the future of the prison system. New prison places might be welcome, but they do nothing to improve the appalling condition of much of the current prison estate, nor the prospect of offering a safe environment in which to rehabilitate offenders.”
The report added: “Too often, prisons are identified as needing extra support, but their performance continues to decline. There is little point in identifying poor performance if the necessary resources are not then provided to drive improvement.”
Amid estimations that reoffending costs £18bn, Neill said violence would not reduce in prisons without proper investment into rehabilitation and activities for inmates. “At any rate, given government’s poor track record in building prisons, we now want to see the detailed plans for the promised £2.5bn for 10,000 more places, what they’ll look like and when they’ll be up and running,” Neill added.
The report also said the latest government announcements had “refreshed concerns over the near £1bn maintenance backlog on the appalling state of existing prison estate”. There were no guarantees that “necessary infrastructure” would be put in place to avoid overcrowding of prisons in the future, the committee said. It found that the government’s recent announcements on longer sentences for some offenders may over time result in a significantly increased prison population, without any guarantees that the necessary infrastructure will be put in place to avoid further overcrowding.
Peter Dawson, the director of the Prison Reform Trust, said: “This report is a scathing indictment of a political failure. The government doesn’t hesitate to promise more jail time for more people, but it has no plan for how to deliver a decent, safe or effective prison system to accommodate them. People’s lives and public safety are at stake, and making ‘policy by press notice’ isn’t good enough. The people who live and work in prison deserve to be told when overcrowding will end.”
Frances Crook, the chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said: “Now that we are heading into a volatile election period, it is important that all policy announcements are tempered with the use of evidence – and it starts with this vital report by the justice committee, which lays bare many of the problems in the prison system.”
She accused politicians of too often using plans for prisons for “personal political gain” or to come up with “superficial quick-fix answers when, clearly, a more fundamental solution is needed”. She added: “The idea of constantly expanding the number of people in prison is simply untenable and at the root of the problem.”
The Ministry of Justice said: “We know that many prisons face challenges but we have been confronting those head-on by recruiting over 4,400 extra officers in the last three years. This government is investing tens of millions in security and improving conditions – an extra £156m for maintenance, £100m to ramp up security and tackle drugs issues, and £2.5bn to create 10,000 additional prison places. We also fully recognise the value of purposeful activity to reduce reoffending and cut crime, which is why we launched our Education and Employment Strategy which has led to hundreds of new businesses signing up to work with prisoners and help their rehabilitation.”
"The trouble is, no-one will be in the slightest bit interested".
ReplyDeleteYou're absolutely right, Jim. In terms of the state of this country, it's politics, it's politicians & it's population, we seem to have been reduced to a binary nation; the state of having two opposite or contradictory tendencies & opinions.
No-one has the time or patience for nuance, for subtlety, for consideration. The liars, cheats & revisionists are in control; whatever they say at any given hour of any given day is 'Policy'. The naysayers are rubbished, abused & sidelined by threats from the acolytes of hate.
These are dangerous times. Think its bad now? I fear that the Clown Prince will take the throne on Dec 12; and then the *really* nasty shit will start to hit the fan. That's when we'll truly understand the meaning of 'us & them'.
Give this a listen if you can:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0009qvr
Thinking Allowed, R4.
"No one will be in the slightest bit interested."
ReplyDeleteAnd that's the truth!
It galls me to read about the money. £1billion mess left by Carillion. A £100m to improve prison security. £2.5billion for 10,000 extra prison places.
It's seems a lot, but GEOAmey and Serco have been awarded prisoner escort contracts only this week, and Serco's alone is worth 800m (don't know about GEOAmey's).
Both contracts include caveats about prison security, safety and decency, so is that seperate to the monies pledged by the Tories, or just a big chunk of what's already been announced being fed strait to the private sector?
Ministers stand at the dispatch box evey week and say that they're spending more money then ever before in their relevant departments. It true. They are spending more. But they fail to say that most of what goes in is now being sucked out again by private enterprise, which means there's actually less being made available for shop floor services.
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/prisoner-escort-contracts-awarded
There's also a report today I find interesting, by the IMB at HMP Warren Hill. Unusual for these times it praises the prison, especially its success in the rehabilitation of offenders. However, it raises a major concern with the number of prisoners being recalled not for reoffending but for breaches of licence. 38% is the figure they give.
I'm sure not everyone will agree, but I consider that a very high percentage of people being sent to prison without reoffending.
https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/hmp-warren-hill-prison-hollesley-report-1-6350077
'Getafix
https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.theguardian.com/society/2019/oct/31/self-inflicted-deaths-among-offenders-on-probation-rise-by-a-fifth?amp_js_v=a2&_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15725294765083&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&_tf=From%20%251%24s&share=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theguardian.com%2Fsociety%2F2019%2Foct%2F31%2Fself-inflicted-deaths-among-offenders-on-probation-rise-by-a-fifth
DeleteThe number of suicides among offenders who were being managed in the community has risen by a fifth in the past year against a backdrop of criticism of the probation service.
DeleteFigures released by the Ministry of Justice show the number of self-inflicted deaths increased by 19% from 283 in 2017-18 to 337 in 2018-19, and made up 31% of all deaths of offenders in the community.
In 2018-19, there were 1,093 deaths of offenders in the community, up 13% from 964 in the previous year. The number of deaths from natural causes rose by 7% from 308 in 2017-18 to 331 in 2018-19, and made up 30% of all deaths.
The probation sector in England and Wales was overhauled in 2014 by the then justice secretary, Chris Grayling. Ignoring significant warnings from within the MoJ, he broke up probation trusts and replaced them with a public sector service to deal with high-risk offenders and community rehabilitation companies (CRCs) that manage low- to medium-risk offenders.
In May, the then justice secretary, David Gauke, announced the supervision of all offenders in the community would be renationalised.
Deborah Coles, the executive director of Inquest, a charity that provides expertise on state-related deaths, said: “These figures are deeply disturbing and require urgent scrutiny due to the current lack of independent investigation. What is known is that people are being released into failing support systems, poverty and an absence of services for mental health and addictions. This is state abandonment. This is the violence of austerity.”
In a separate dataset, the MoJ revealed the number of self-harm incidents in prisons was at a record high. There were 60,594 in the 12 months to June 2019, up 22% from the same period in the previous year. In the past quarter, the number of incidents increased by 13% to a record high of 16,342.
There were 34,112 incidents of assault in the year ending in June, up 5% on the previous year. But there was a slight drop of 1% in the latest quarter to 8,360 incidents.
Attacks on staff rose by 10% from the previous 12 months, with 10,424 assaults recorded. The number of deaths in custody fell by 5% in the 12 months to September, from 325 to 308. Of these, 90 were thought to be self-inflicted.
The government is planning to keep some offenders in prison for longer, increasing the automatic release point for some violent and sexual offences from halfway to two-thirds through their sentences.
Peter Dawson, the director of the Prison Reform Trust, said: “How can any government contemplate sending more people to prison on ever longer sentences when it is failing so completely to meet its duty of care to the individuals involved?
“These terrible figures show that the prison system is not in recovery. Politically motivated announcements over the summer can only make the situation even worse, and the justice committee’s scathing report today correctly shows that the government has no plan to deal with the consequences. In prison, those consequences can be a matter of life and death.”
Boris Johnson made a number of announcements on prisons investment shortly after taking office as prime minister, but these were criticised on Thursday by MPs on the justice committee as “policy by press notice” with no clear vision for the future of the prison system.
DeleteAn MoJ spokesperson said: “We know that levels of violence and self-harm in prisons are unacceptably high, but we remain determined to make progress so that our jails reform offenders, reduce reoffending and keep the public safe.
“Our £2.75bn investment will modernise jails and step up security to stop the flow of drugs and weapons which fuel these issues. We have also trained over 25,000 staff in suicide and self-harm prevention and introduced the key worker scheme to give each prisoner a dedicated prison officer for support.”
38% on recall? Most without reoffending.
DeleteA 5th increase in suicides of those being supervised in the community?
Not blaming probation, but somethings going very very wrong.
'Getafix
Mappa annual report 2018/19
ReplyDeleteOn 31 March 2019,there were 82,921 offenders under MAPPA management in the community in England and Wales.
Category 1 - Registered sexual offenders(RSO). These are offenders who have been convicted of a specified sexual offence and/or to whom the notification requirements under Part 2 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 apply (and who are therefore required to notify the Police of their name, address and other personal details, and notify the Police of any subsequent changes).
The number of Category 1 offenders under MAPPA has been growing yearly. The total in 2019 [60.294] was 3% higher than in last year and 73% higher than in 2010.
Category 2 - Violent offenders. These are offenders who have been convicted of a specified violent offence and sentenced to imprisonment/detention for at least 12 months or detained under a hospital order. This category also includes a small number of sexual offenders who do not qualify for the notification requirements that apply to Category 1 offenders
The number of Category 2 offenders under MAPPA on 31 March has been increasing. The total in 2019 [22.268] was 1% higher than in last year and 67% higher than in 2010.
Category 3 -Other Dangerous Offenders. These are offenders who do not qualify under Category 1 or 2 but have been assessed as currently posing a risk of serious harm. The link between the offence they have perpetrated and the risk that they pose means that they require active multi-agency management
The number of Category 3 offenders [140] has remained below pre-2014 levels, and the latest figure is 43% lower than in 2010.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/843057/mappa-annual-report-2018-19.pdf
Other HMPPS data
ReplyDelete83,810 prisoners in England and Wales as at 30 September 2019. The total prison population is at a comparable level (less than 1% decrease) to the same point in the previous year.
254,165 offenders on probation in the latest quarter. This number of offenders on probation has fallen by 3% compared to the same point in 2018.
6,531 licence recalls in the latest quarter. This is a 9% increase on the same quarter in 2018, driven in part by an increase in HDC recalls following the policy change in early 2018.
Recall to custody - The prison population who have been recalled to custody (8,096 prisoners) increased by 22% over the year leading up to 30 September 2019. This is linked to the increase in the numbers released on Home Detention Curfew (since the policy change in early 2018), with more of whom are being recalled to custody. Additionally, there have been increases in the numbers recalled from IPP sentences.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/offender-management-statistics-quarterly-april-to-june-2019/offender-management-statistics-bulletin-england-and-wales--3
Today's Telegraph.
ReplyDeletehttps://www-telegraph-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/10/31/200-offenders-probation-have-convicted-murder-since-government/amp/?amp_js_v=a2&_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15726227060857&csi=1&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&_tf=From%20%251%24s&share=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.telegraph.co.uk%2Fnews%2F2019%2F10%2F31%2F200-offenders-probation-have-convicted-murder-since-government%2F
When will Napo have something to say? Last tweet was over 3 weeks ago; last blog was August; last news update on website was May 2019. Pay your subs & weep...
DeleteTelegraph story:
More than 200 offenders under probation supervision have been convicted of murder since the system was overhauled in 2014 by the then Justice Secretary Chris Grayling.
They were among 1,100 offenders sentenced under what are termed serious further offences (SFOs). Since April 2014, a further 86 people have been convicted of manslaughter and 378 of rape.
Of all those convicted of a “serious further offence,” 29 had previously served a life sentence and 28 had been held for indeterminate sentences to protect the public.
The figures confirm criticism of the part-privatisation of the probation service in 2014 when responsibility for managing and rehabilitating offenders was split between private firms and the state.
A Commons inquiry earlier this year said the reforms made the system which supervises thousands of criminals worse, put the public at greater risk and failed to reduce the rate of reoffending by released prisoners.
Harry Fletcher, director of the Victims’ Right Campaign, said: “This is an extraordinary rate of murders over the past four years. Critics said in 2013 that the probation reforms were very high risk and these figures show that they have proved disastrous for victims.
“The Government must ensure that trained probation officers are supervising offenders, not people working for contracted companies with little expertise.”
It is difficult to compare data with the numbers before 2014 because of the change to supervision of under-12 month sentence prisoners.
Robert Buckland, the new Justice Secretary, is bringing probation services back under public control after criticism of the part-privatisation by not only MPs but also chief inspectors of probation and prisons and the National Audit Office.
The 2014 reform programme split the probation system in two, with 21 private Community Rehabilitation Companies monitoring medium and low-risk offender while the National Probation Service retained oversight of high-risk offenders.
"When will Napo have something to say? Last tweet was over 3 weeks ago; last blog was August; last news update on website was May 2019. Pay your subs & weep..."
DeleteYes it does make you wonder doesn't it, and especially in a digital age when publishing and disseminating is just damned easy! Only today I searched the Napo website and it's difficult to navigate, out of date and full of tumbleweed.
Be in no doubt that they have yet another crafty, strategic calamity to unleash upon members very soon...?
Delete