Tuesday 10 March 2020

Napo at Work in Wales

Thanks go to the reader for pointing me in the direction of the latest Napo Cymru Newsletter:- 

Napo Cymru 
SPRING NEWSLETTER 2020

Just in: CRC PAY OFFER ACCEPTED GMB, NAPO and UNISON members have voted to accept the following offer: Realignment of all salary bands to the 2019 NPS Pay Banding. If this results in less than a 3% increase for an employee Seetec will apply an unconsolidated payment for the percentage differential. Acceptance of this offer brings an end to the current pay dispute.

Office and Interface meetings

Feedback from members 

Your Napo officers have been getting out to offices, many topics discussed, and an opportunity to garner feedback about how the transition for both “legacy” and “onboarding” staff is going. We will continue to get around the offices, please come to these meetings, or send your comments via local reps. These meetings also inform our joint chairs, Helen and Pen, who attend the monthly Interface meetings with the transition leads: so your information and opinions are vital. There were themes common to all the meetings in Wales, the points are covered in this newsletter. 

We must not work for free 

Many “Onboarding” staff have felt very pressurised by the training: the risk assessment and management training has in general been welcomed and useful. Completing the workbooks has however put many members under pressure, and we have accounts of staff taking the workbooks home to do in free time, in some cases, even taking annual leave in order to complete the work to deadline. This is not acceptable: We have been told that overtime is available for extra work engendered by the transition. If you are having to work extra hours, ensure that you are paid for them. 

Doing work over and above what you are paid for is unfair on you, and it also impacts unfairly on colleagues who may be feeling swamped, but intimidated by the apparent ability of their workmates to get it done. It also encourages our employers to accept unacceptable workloads as the norm. Please speak to reps or contact officers if you need support.

SFO’s, Workloads and Stress 

You may have seen the shocking report in the press recently regarding the increase in the number of killings committed by people supervised by probation, since TR (it has basically doubled). This is devastating for victims and their families. It is also very concerning for Probation staff. Napo is campaigning for workload to be included in the information considered in SFO investigations and reports. We received feedback from members that press coverage of a recent inquest has not been addressed with staff: members voiced concerns that the OM in question was not supported by managers and that managers have made no attempt to learn how this has impacted staff on the front line. Members now feel anxious and vulnerable. 

Foreseeability notice 

We strongly encourage all members who are experiencing work related stress to complete a “foreseeability notice” form and give this to their manager. You can find this form, and further advice, on the Napo website here https://www.napo.org.uk/stress-work. Speak to your local Napo Cymru rep. Stress related absences appear to be very high in the CRC staff group in particular. We have been given partial information by Seetec and are pursuing this with them. “Soldiering on” while experiencing prolonged stress is bad for your health. It is also bad for business: it is in the interests of the organisation to take steps to mitigate against stress as early as possible, as leaving this untackled raises the probability of long term sickness absences. 

Workplace Adjustment Passport 

NPS staff. If you require adjustments to enable you to work, we strongly advise you to complete the HMPPS Workplace Adjustment Passport. Adjustments can include extra time to complete tasks (to be reflected in WMT), a variation to hours, flexibility for carers, as well as Assistive technology or special equipment. The advantage of the passport is that once completed and agreed with your current manager, you can carry this with you through changes in post or manager, without having to have the same discussion repeatedly. If you require a copy please contact your local rep or branch officers 

Justice Unions motion in the House 

Napo is under the Justice Unions umbrella, this group organises lobbying, questions to ministers, and so on. In solidarity with our colleagues in the prison service, you are invited to write to your MP to ask them to support this Early Day Motion: 

Safe inside prisons charter EDM #215

Tabled 25 February 2020

2019-21 Session

That this House notes with alarm the record-high levels of violence against prison staff, with over 10,000 reported annual assaults compared with less than 3,000 a decade ago; welcomes the new Safe Inside Prisons Charter launched by the Joint Unions in Prisons Alliance, a coalition of nine national trades unions representing the majority of staff working in prisons; believes that the Charter's proposed single reporting system for violence, accessible both internally and externally so staff can report incidents away from the workplace, represents the kind of common-sense solution so badly needed to tackle the health and safety emergency in our prisons; and calls on the Government to adopt the Charter immediately and work with the Alliance to help protect the diligent, brave and committed staff that keep our prisons running under the most challenging circumstances.


Overpayment of wages 

We have been made aware of some NPS staff being overpaid, and then subject to demands from Shared Services for immediate repayment. DO NOT AGREE TO THIS. There is a process by which you can negotiate a schedule of repayment. If you are experiencing difficulties with this, please speak with a rep.

Wages and negotiations update 

Please keep an eye on Napo Website and your email in-tray for updates from Napo HQ. NPS except transitional staff, will get automatic pay band escalation in their pay packets in April 20. Transitional staff – Pay harmonisation and other t’s and c’s are still under negotiation. Transitional staff who were part of the original TR split have pay/pension/ contractual protections, these are still in place: however, Napo is pressing for staff employed since TR to have similar protections put in place, this is the hold up. CRC staff - We have put your update at the head of this newsletter! 

Sickness Policy and Coronavirus 

You will have seen the guidance issued regarding Coronavirus. We believe that any absence in this respect should fall outside the sickness policy guidelines, but there has been no specific statement from managers indicating this. We will be seeking agreement that arrangements should be made for staff to continue to work where possible: for example, a member required to self-isolate should be enabled to work from home. We will be seeking clarification about how your employers intend to make compatible the sickness policy and the Coronavirus advice in a way which does not unfairly discriminate. 

Napo Union Activists Training 

The training event running from 1 st to 2rd April in Swansea is nearly full. At the time of writing there are two places left. Get in touch with your local rep, or Napo HQ urgently if you are interested in a place. This is obligatory training for reps new and established, with a follow-up final day for new reps. The April event is also suitable for members who are interested in the workings of our professional association, and who may be thinking about taking a more active role. Accommodation and travel expenses will be met for you. Please contact a rep or go to Napo HQ (number is on the website) if you would like to attend. 

PQuip Training questionnaire 

You have been emailed recently with a questionnaire about the qualification training. The quality -and brevity- of the PQuip training has been a concern and was debated at Conference in October. Please, everyone, complete this questionnaire. 

Workloads 

NPS staff should check their WMT regularly - To ensure that any agreed “credit”, eg facility time, is still in place in the calculator for each individual - To monitor the, albeit crudely measured, workload they are shouldering. We strongly recommend that your workload is recorded and discussed at every supervision meeting with your manager. While the WMT allows for required training and administrative tasks, it is well worth asking your manager if any task or role you take on (eg single point of contact in an office or team) comes with extra workload allowance. We reiterate the headline from above: we must not work for free.

16 comments:

  1. Chancellor's Budget to unveil £70m to 'toughen up' criminal probation

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/chancellors-budget-to-unveil-70m-to-toughen-up-criminal-probation-a4382951.html

    A bit more here

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/budget-chancellor-rishi-sunak-probation-tagging-devices-treasury-a9389001.html


    Sky news hilariously invokes a Lib Dem criticism


    "Budget 2020: Criminals on probation targeted in crime crackdown

    The Lib Dems welcome the funding, but accuse the government of "failing to rehabilitate people, leading to more crimes". "

    https://news.sky.com/story/budget-2020-criminals-on-probation-targeted-in-crime-crackdown-11954188


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The Chancellor has said he will use his Budget to unveil £70 million worth of "toughening up" measures for criminals on probation. The extra cash will be part of an overall £100 million package that Rishi Sunak is due to reveal on March 11.

      Convicted criminals released from prison on licence half-way through their sentences will have tighter constraints slapped on their probation period. This will include a roll-out of tagging devices that monitor whether they have drunk alcohol. The electronic ankle tags could not only monitor their location but also sample skin perspiration every 30 minutes to determine whether drink has been consumed.

      Boris Johnson piloted putting sobriety tags on offenders when he was mayor of London but, despite a compliance rate of 92 per cent, the scheme was discontinued and never rolled out nationally. The idea was revived by Justice Secretary Robert Buckland at the Conservative Party conference in the autumn.

      Other clampdowns to be paid for by the incoming investment include expanding the use of GPS to monitor offenders, tightening their curfews and increasing the hours of unpaid work that those undertaking community service need to carry out, according to the Treasury.

      Mr Sunak said: "Keeping our streets safe is one of the people's priorities - we are already delivering on this by hiring 20,000 new police officers and building 10,000 new prison places. At the Budget, we will go even further with new funding to toughen up community sentences, crack down on domestic abuse and provide victims with the support they need."

      A further £15 million will be provided to improve the court process for victims of rape and sexual abuse. The Treasury said the cash injection will be used to hire independent sexual advisers who are "trained to guide and support victims through the justice system".

      The Government hopes the added funding will speed up charging decisions, while also providing extra online resources for victims of rape and sexual abuse, including a single digital hub.

      Another £5 million will be used to trial a new domestic abuse court, and the Budget is expected to contain £10 million which will be directed at curbing domestic abuse by tackling "high-risk, high-harm perpetrators" through early action and using one-to-one interventions.

      Delete
    2. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-51804674

      Delete
    3. A probation service whose management of risk of harm was judged to be "consistently poor" has been given the lowest rating by inspectors for the second year in a row.

      The West Yorkshire Community Rehabilitation Company (CRC) was found to be understaffed and under-resourced.

      Inspectors rated the service, which supervises low and medium-risk offenders, as "requiring improvement".

      The CRC said it was working to improve the service it offered offenders.

      An inspection by HM Inspectorate of Probation in 2018 found challenging staffing levels and many employees saying they were "overwhelmed".
      Lacking skills and experience

      Justin Russell, chief inspector of probation, said a new inspection in autumn 2019 found the company had restructured but had reduced the number of qualified probation officers.

      "This has resulted in staff at a lower grade taking on larger workloads - even though some of them lack the necessary skills and experience to undertake complex work," he said.

      Inspectors analysed a number of cases to examine how staff assessed, planned, delivered and reviewed activity with individuals on probation.

      A large number of the cases involved domestic abuse and safeguarding issues.

      "We found the management of risk of harm was consistently poor," Mr Russell said.

      "Major improvements are needed to ensure staff use all the available information to assess risk factors."

      The report accepted managers were doing their best to make improvements despite financial constraints.

      Martin Davies, chief executive of the West Yorkshire CRC, said it delivered "targeted training and audits" to provide the best possible service to offenders.

      "We also take swift action to hold offenders to account for their behaviour," he said.

      "Protecting the public is our priority."

      He said a new senior position had been created to deliver the changes required by the inspectorate.

      Delete
    4. Martin Davies, chief executive of the West Yorkshire CRC, said:

      "We take swift action to hold offenders to account for their behaviour... Protecting the public is our priority... a new senior position had been created to deliver the changes..."

      Arse about face.

      1. Don't courts hold people to account?
      2. Surely rehabilitation is the priority?
      3. More managers; we always need more managers!!!

      Welcome to the Community Holding People to Account Management Club.

      Delete
    5. Arse about Face part 2:

      *Another £5 million will be used to trial a new domestic abuse court, and the Budget is expected to contain £10 million which will be directed at curbing domestic abuse by tackling "high-risk, high-harm perpetrators" through early action and using one-to-one interventions.*

      Meanwhile, in Yorkshire:

      * A large number of the cases involved domestic abuse and safeguarding issues. "We found the management of risk of harm was consistently poor," Mr Russell said.*

      Delete
  2. https://www.expressandstar.com/news/uk-news/2020/03/05/probation-officers-do-not-understand-risk-to-public-in-too-many-cases/

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/feb/17/pioneering-policing-and-probation-work

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. https://www.shropshirestar.com/news/uk-news/2020/03/10/probation-work-on-risk-offenders-pose-to-public-consistently-poor/

      https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/mar/05/midlands-probation-firm-rated-inadequate-over-high-workloads

      Delete
  3. On a different note I'd urge anyone with a disability who works for Hmpps NPS to watch the panorama documentary on DWP. It virtually mirrors issues faced in our role for many. That is government departments or agencies not following legislation and representing thenselves as disability confident when how they operate is anything but. Apologies Jim but such an important issue it will get noticed if on your blog and colleagues facing such problems may get comfort in knowing they are not alone in doing so.

    ReplyDelete
  4. https://www.eagleradio.co.uk/news/uk-news/3059390/budget-2020-criminals-on-probation-targeted-in-crime-crackdown/

    https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/budget/budget-2020-offenders-gps-trackers-sobriety-tags-probation-rishi-sunak-2444737

    ______________________________________________________

    Its yet another PR triumph for the revisionist Tory liars - EVERY story hails Sunak as the saviour, funding innovative ways of managing crime.

    And after a series of devastating HMI Probation reports they are laying the blame at probation's door for being rubbish, incompetent, failing to tackle risk, not keeping the public safe.

    Hark, is that a thundering silence I hear? That'll be napo then.

    No-one gives a shit about how & why this all came to pass.

    For anyone wanting to research the outcomes of historical HMiP inspections, try these links:

    https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20100512162514/http://www.justice.gov.uk/inspectorates/hmi-probation/previous-reports-adult.htm

    https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20140204212106/https://www.justice.gov.uk/publications/inspectorate-reports/hmi-probation

    https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/inspections/previous-inspection-programme-reports-2003-2010/

    https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/inspections/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So how's TR going?

      https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/inspections?s&probation-inspection-type=adult-transforming-rehabilitation-2014-2016

      Delete
  5. bbc r4 tonight 8pm - WORTH A LISTEN!!!

    Extreme measures: Can extremists be de-radicalised?

    File on 4

    How effective are schemes designed to de-radicalise extremists? File on 4 hears from the 'intervention providers' tasked with turning offenders away from violence.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A bit like exposed sex offender programmes, the de-rad stuff was/is fur coat, no knickers.

      Yet further evidence of the perennial MoJ/NOMS/HMPPS Emperor's New Clothes policies, e.g. Trusts, TR, SOTP, HII, DDP, etc

      https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/intervening-with-extremist-offenders-a-pilot-study

      https://rusi.org/commentary/The_New_UK_Counterterrorism_Strategy

      https://homeofficemedia.blog.gov.uk/2019/11/05/fact-sheet-desistence-and-disengagement-programme-2/

      Delete
  6. Riddle me this:

    Guardian Jan 2020: "Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation has painted a picture of a service in crisis with hundreds of vacancies, overstretched officers and managers, and crumbling, overcrowded buildings, including hostels for recently released offenders."

    Napo briefing: "CRC and NPS staff who are in an over-supply situation following mapping/matching will inevitably find themselves in a redundancy situation... the staff who are in over supply must be offered the VS/VER option which we are seeking to negotiate as part of the Staff Transfer and Protections Agreement."

    Wonder if napo will once again negotiate a cash windfall for the CRC owners & leave their members seriously out of pocket?

    ReplyDelete
  7. I just have to post this. I find it incredible.

    https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/political-parties/conservative-party/news/110513/conservative-anger-boris-johnson-makes

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The Sun reports that Boris Johnson will order Tory members of the powerful body - which scrutinises the work of the UK's intelligence agencies - to elect the former Cabinet minister its new chairman.

      The move could raise eyebrows because of Mr Grayling's association with a string of controversial government projects, including a now-scrapped shake-up of the probation service and his stint as Transport Secretary during the botched rollout of new railway timetables.

      The former Cabinet minister was also among the most high-profile backers of Mr Johnson's Conservative leadership campaign. One Tory MP told the paper: "Giving Grayling the ISC job is going down very badly, and is being seen as a blatant ‘jobs for the boys’.

      Delete