Our results
So, what were the key findings on our first round of inspections last year? First, you won’t be surprised to hear, we found a significant gap between the performance of National Probation Service divisions and CRC services. Of the 7 NPS divisions, we gave an overall rating of ‘good’ to five – although we found real issues with probation officer vacancies and facilities management contracts where our ratings were lower.
By contrast, only 1 out of the 21 CRC services got this rating, with 19 rated as requiring improvement. Whilst we often found good and committed leadership in CRC services and a commitment to investing in decent accommodation and IT and other equipment for staff, this was all too frequently undermined by what we regarded as unacceptably large caseloads, which too often made good quality casework all but impossible.
9 - CASELOADS
Whereas two thirds of NPS responsible officers had a caseload of 40 or less – the situation was exactly the reverse for the CRC staff we spoke to – two thirds of whom had a caseload of over 50. Forty two percent had caseloads over 60 and significant minorities over 70 and into the eighties.
10 - IMPACT OF CASELOADS STORIES
The impact of this on some of the staff we spoke to was clear. Some were in tears as we spoke to them. Others spoke of being burnt out and of having to work evenings and weekends to keep their head above water.
11 - CORRELATION OF QUALITY RATINGS AND CASELOAD
Not surprisingly, we found a clear correlation between size of caseload and our rating of the quality of work done. As caseload increases, the proportion of staff saying their caseload is manageable sharply declines and our judgements on the quality of supervision also drops. Whilst this may not have amounted to a crisis – and we only gave one CRC a rating of inadequate in our first set of inspections – it certainly indicates a service that in places was under great stress.
12 - IMPACT OF TRANSFORMING REHABILITATION
And that stress was becoming greater as the flaws in the CRC funding model started to play out over the past couple of years. As a result of fundamental flaws in that model – in particular very flawed assumptions around the ratio of fixed to variable costs and of the income that would flow from payment by results - CRCs have received far less funding from MoJ for each case they supervise than the NPS.
The NAO calculated in March last year that the MoJ will end up paying CRCs £822m less over the 7 year lifetime of the contracts than it had originally forecast it would (and that the Treasury had been willing to spend). That has meant that some CRCs have fallen far short of what they need to provide a decent service.
The issue for me, is not that staff working for a private company or non-profit provider, can’t deliver a decent service – I’ve met many talented and very committed managers and staff on my visits to CRCs. It’s that they can’t do this if they’re not receiving the funding they need to make caseloads manageable and to recruit and retain the skilled probation officers needed to manage the more complex work. Two other inherent aspects of private provision, add to the problem.
First, in order to outsource probation, a very complex business with many hundreds of moving parts, has to be turned into 21 different contracts. And if any of the assumptions underlying these contracts are wrong, as they’ve turned out to be, then it can take months, if not years to renegotiate the necessary changes – if indeed these changes can be made at all under contract law. In the meantime, performance and the income needed to support that, continues to be problematic.
And second, because the great majority of the CRC contracts are owned by large parent companies – some of them with multinational interests –they can be brought crashing down by the wider failure of the parent company – as happened at the beginning of last year when Working Links, the owner of three large CRC contracts, went into administration.
These challenges around the contracts have affected different providers in different ways. Whilst some were cautious in their initial bids; took action early on to rein in costs and have seen their financial position stabilised by contract changes in 2018 – others have been in a much more perilous position and even with the contractual changes have seen significant cuts in their operating budgets this year compared to last which has had a real impact on the quality of service we are finding they’re able to deliver.
When you add the impact of Covid into the mix, on top of these major challenges around outsourcing, it’s perhaps not surprising that the Government has now decided that the safest way forward is to abandon the planned re-procurement of unpaid work and behavioural change programmes and return delivery of these to the public sector from June 2019.
As I said on the day this was announced, whilst this is likely to be welcomed by many, it is not a magic bullet for improving performance by itself. The probation service must be properly funded. The quality of probation supervision will not improve merely by lifting and shifting large volumes of cases from CRCs back into the NPS next year. Vacancies for probation officers must be filled and staff properly trained for their new responsibilities. The positive innovations that CRCs have brought with them – must not be lost.”
Year two of inspection
In the meantime, while we wait for next year’s reforms and almost one year on from our first round of inspections, is there any sign that things have improved?
13 - YEAR 2 OVERALL RATINGS TO DATE
Well there are some grounds for optimism but it’s still a pretty mixed picture. Since September 2019, we have been re-inspecting the services we visited in 2018 and 2019 – starting with the CRCs and using broadly the same methodology. So far we have published the results of nine of these local inspections and I wanted to give you an overview of what this is showing so far.
In terms of overall ratings, all 9 of these CRCs were judged to be requiring improvement in our first round of inspections against the new standards. Our year two ratings, show that three of these nine have now improved their overall rating to ‘good’. One other was just one point off being rated ‘good’. Whilst the remaining four have seen little shift in their scores and remain a concern.
14 - STANDARDS BREAKDOWN
Across the nine services, we assigned ratings to 90 individual quality standards – 10 at each service. Looking at the distribution of markings across these 90 standards, we see an upward trend in performance with a majority of standards – 48 out of 90 – now rated as ‘good’ or ‘outstanding’ compared to 35 previously and a small drop in the number rated as ‘inadequate’ from 22 to 20.
15 - SHOWING YEAR 1 VS YEAR 2 – AVERAGE STANDARD SCORES
We can also compare the average scores for each quality standard to last year. First, the good news. Comparing this year’s average scores for each standard with last year’s we see that these services continue to be rated reasonably positively on their overall leadership; on the menu of services they offer and on the quality of facilities and IT for staff. [A score of 2 is equivalent to a ‘good’ rating].
On through the gate services, we are seeing positive signs that the investment of an extra £22m a year by the Ministry of Justice in supporting prisoners being released from custody, is paying real dividends, with 6 out of 9 CRCs we’ve inspected so far being rated as ‘outstanding’ on this aspect of their work.
With the extra money, CRCs have been able to put significantly more staff into prisons and to strike innovative deals with voluntary sector partners to provide more specialist help with accommodation and mentoring services, so that more (though still only a minority) of the highest need individuals can be met at the gate and supported through the first days after release.
16 - SIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENTS IN TTG – DTV EXAMPLE
Durham and Tees Valley CRC, for example, has seen its rating for through the gate work improve from ‘requires improvement’ to ‘outstanding’ over the past year, with much better and more personalised resettlement planning.
17 - DTV EXAMPLE – ‘MARY’
And this fed through into the individual cases we inspected as well – like this one for someone we have called ‘Mary’. And we found similar examples in the East and West Midlands, South Yorkshire and Thames Valley, even where other aspects of these services gave cause for concern.
Offender management
18 - AVERAGE STANDARDS SCORES
But the picture on core offender management is less positive. Across the four key stages of the supervision process that we inspect – initial assessment; sentence and risk planning; sentence delivery and ongoing review – we’ve seen little shift in average scores. In four of the CRCs we inspected, we found more than half of the cases we inspected to be ‘inadequate’ in terms of core supervision – with five out of nine CRCs being rated ‘inadequate’ across all four case supervision standards.
A clear gap has started to emerge between different providers, with some continuing to invest in trained probation officers and manageable caseloads and others going backwards. Once again, we seem to be finding an association between workloads and quality. All of the CRCs we’ve given a rating of ‘good’ to, for example, report caseloads for both POs and PSOs of 50 or less – with probation officer caseloads in South Yorkshire and Durham and Tees Valley, now under 40.
19 - SHOWING ‘MANAGEABLE CASELOAD %’
But overall, we haven’t seen a shift in the average proportion of responsible officers telling us they feel their caseloads are manageable – if anything this has got slightly worse, particularly for PSOs with over half of probation officers and PSOs now saying they think their caseloads are unmanageable – though this hides a wide variation between services.
In one service we found almost 70% of POs were struggling; in another, 83% of PSOs told us their caseloads were unmanageable . Although at the opposite end of the range, in one of the best performing areas only a third thought this was the case. We were worried to see that in a few of the services we have re-inspected, there has been an increasing shift of caseloads from more skilled and experienced probation officers – whose numbers are declining – to recently recruited and less highly trained PSOs – who have been easier (and cheaper) to recruit. It was particularly concerning to find PSOs, some of them only recruited in the previous 6 months, being expected to take on more complex, medium risk domestic violence cases, which up to now had been reserved for experienced probation officers.
CASE OF PAUL
And as in our first round of inspections, the impact of all this on the individual cases we inspect was often very evident – as for example with this complex IOM case being supervised by a PSO whose caseload was still in the high seventies, having been over 90 at one point.
"Whilst we often found good and committed leadership in CRC services... this was all too frequently undermined by what we regarded as unacceptably large caseloads"
ReplyDeleteNever could understand this view, whether NPS or CRC. The whole charade effctively started in 2013, so six years later one would have thought "good & committed leadership" might have got their shit together.
But no, it seems failure to deliver is synonymous with excellent leadership.
Then again, thinking about it, that's been par for the course at our nation's top table for quite a few years now. We have a prime example in post just now.
Undermined my arse. Caseloads were not regarded above the serial defrauding of public services monies. Aided and assisted by every aco and manager in CRC land.
Delete"In one service we found almost 70% of POs were struggling; in another, 83% of PSOs told us their caseloads were unmanageable"
DeleteMore explicit signs of good & committed leadership.
"We were worried to see that in a few of the services we have re-inspected, there has been an increasing shift of caseloads from more skilled and experienced probation officers – whose numbers are declining – to recently recruited and less highly trained PSOs – who have been easier (and cheaper) to recruit."
DeleteIrrefutable evidence of excellent leadership here.
Yes and our CRC spo is still pushing us despit it being all over in less than a year under the CRC . Leaders dont make me laugh, we mean losers.
DeleteRemember all the talk about piloting a change - the point about CRCs as private companies being sold to another company is excellently made - those folk at Policy Exchange and the MOJ should have nailed that before Grayling even announced TR in 2013 - I am sorry I did not think of it - but I was a social worker not an accountant.
ReplyDeleteThis report from the Inspector shows just how dysfunctional our Parliament is because surely parliament was the place where TR should have been stopped dead before it ever started and maybe aspects of it could have been carefully piloted in different petty sessions areas like Community Service Orders and Day Training Sentence - special conditions to traditional (alternative to a sentence) Probation Orders were - six areas each from about 1973/4 - Powers of Criminal Courts Act 1973 -
------
"c. 62 Powers of Criminal Courts Act 1973 PART I
4.-(1) Where a court makes a probation order in the case Probation of an offender it may, subject to the provisions of this section, include in the order a requirement that he shall during the probation period attend at a day training centre specified in the order.
(2) A court shall not include such a requirement in a probation order unless-
(a) it has been notified by the Secretary of State that a day training centre exists for persons of the offender's class or description who reside in the petty sessions area in which he resides or will reside ; and
(b) it is satisfied that arrangements can be made for his attendance at that centre.
- - - - - - - -
14.-(1) Where a person of or over seventeen years of age is convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment, the court by or before which he is convicted may, instead of dealing with him in any other way (but subject to subsection (2) below) make an order (in this Act referred to as " a community service order ") requiring him to perform unpaid work in accordance with the subsequent provisions of this Act for such number of hours (being in the aggregate not less than forty nor more than two hundred and forty) as may be specified in the order.
- - - - - -
(2) A court shall not make a community service order in respect of any offender unless the offender consents and the court-
(a) has been notified by the Secretary of State that arrangements exist for persons who reside in the petty sessions area in which the offender resides or will reside to perform work under such orders ; and
(b) is satisfied-
(i) after considering a report by a probation officer about the offender and his circumstances and, if the court thinks it necessary, hearing a probation officer, that the offender is a suitable person to perform work under such an order ; and (ii) that provision can be made under the arrangements for him to do so."
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1973/62/pdfs/ukpga_19730062_en.pdf
"Guidance
ReplyDeleteKeeping court and tribunal buildings safe, secure and clean
This page provides details about security, cleaning and social-distancing arrangements in court and tribunal buildings during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Published 29 March 2020
Last updated 6 July 2020 —
From: HM Courts & Tribunals Service"
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/keeping-court-and-tribunal-buildings-safe-secure-and-clean?utm_source=b05a7e90-aa31-4319-9ef3-b0d19066e9d9&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=govuk-notifications&utm_content=daily
David Lammy, Robert Buckland, Rishi Sunak - read on:
ReplyDelete"Looking at the distribution of markings across these 90 standards, we see an upward trend in performance with a majority of standards – 48 out of 90 – now rated as ‘good’ or ‘outstanding’ compared to 35 previously and a small drop in the number rated as ‘inadequate’ from 22 to 20."
48/90 = 53% of provision is ok
20/90 = 22% of provision is worse than useless
Presumably the remaining 25% aren't up to scratch either, but just not the worst.
So how could it ever be agreeable to Parliament that £Billions of public money is thrown at something that is just 53% okay?
So on top of the £500m additional bailouts thrown at the CRCs, plus the £170m termination costs AND the £80m Modernisation Fund money (intended for redundancy payments but pocketed by the CRCs), some 47% of any public money invested to date in the CRCs has been wasted on service provision that is not fit for purpose... "The MoJ said it had budgeted to pay firms £2.5bn by 2020 but had only paid out £2.2bn"
Total Financial Cost that should be recouped from Grayling for his failed vanity project aka TR?
£500m + £170m + £80m + £1,034m + just shy of £1.8bn
That's the equivalent of Rishi's "world-beating" offer to the Arts - or, as Ollie Dowden prefers to say, "to save the crown jewels" (probably not your local theatre then).
Grayling simply dished it out in spades to his useless chums, who started squawking when there was a subsequent suggestion they had to do something to earn it.
*** £1.8 billion of taxpayer money ***
Just given away despite all advice to the contrary from professionals & academics, and despite all evidence it would fail.
So only £1.16bn of the £2.2bn spent was used to any positive effect if only 53% of service provision was ok.
I do not think it was quite Grayling's "vanity project" - I suspect he was well supported by those backing the LibDem/Conservative Government (2010-2015) as a resolute public relations type of person (initially termed press agent) to spin a policy with whatever obfuscations were needed to get it into place to give commercial organisations further opportunities to extract money from the public purse as our state services become ever more contracted out.
DeleteI am not sure what Cameron and Clegg were in the grand scheme of things, other than personally ambitious for power, status and acclaim BUT our parliament is not fit for purpose if it cannot stop such commercial greed which also causes unnecessary deaths & damage to Her Majesty's Subjects and Residents
For your information Cameron and the tories were to sell it all off the compromise to keep the libs on board during coalition meant the half privatised outcome agreed by that idiot half wit Clegg . Half wit being their collective norm.
DeleteI'd like to read a report from the inspectorate that was offender specific.
ReplyDeletePrivate companies, low moral of probation staff, high caseloads, approved premises, the under 12mths cohort, and less involvement with the third sector must have considerable consequences for those subject to probation. What's the damage there?
'Getafix
Some good radio progs:
ReplyDeleteR4 Unchained - "In 2008, 20-year-old Brenda Birungi got into a fight in a nightclub to protect her sister. With no previous convictions, Brenda ended up serving 11 months in prison. It altered the course of her life.
Two Government reports - the Corston Report in 2007 and the Ministry of Justice Female Offender Strategy in 2018 - have concluded that short-term custodial sentences do not work for women. At the same time, the proportion of women serving very short sentences has actually risen.
Almost 60% of women in prison have experienced domestic abuse. Nearly half of crimes committed by women are to support someone else's drug use. Women are substantially more likely than men to lose their children and their homes while serving a sentence of less than six months. And almost 75% of women sentenced to less than a year in prison go on to re-offend.
In prison Brenda wrote notes to herself, in verse, to stay out of trouble. After release, she built a platform as Lady Unchained. Brenda now shares her story and inspires others to do the same.
In Unchained we hear from:
Paula, who called the police to her house 9 times to report domestic violence in the year before her arrest;
Amanda, who became a sex worker to support her partner’s drug use;
Krystal, who was arrested after stealing a duvet for her child;
Georgia, who was left to fend for herself at 15 while her single mum served a 3 month sentence.
Untold stories, punctuated by Brenda’s spiky, potent poetry.
All statistics in this documentary come from research by Women in Prison.
Producer: Jessie Lawson
Sound Design: Axel Kacoutié
A Prison Radio Association production for BBC Radio 4"
______________________________________________________
Also Brixton Hill by Lottie Moggach - a novel in 10 episaodes
"Gripping contemporary novel by Lottie Moggach. Nearing the end of his sentence, a prisoner on day release bumps into someone who will change his life. Read by Will Howard."
ONS data released today ref-Week 26, w/e 26 June 2020:
ReplyDelete"In Week 26, the number of deaths registered was 3.4% below the five-year average (314 deaths fewer), this is the second consecutive week that deaths have been below the five-year average;"
Which certainly paints an encouraging picture at the present but, as with other countries, we need to be very mindful of the lull before the next wave.
And the testing regime in the UK remains woeful, so the opportunity to monitor/track cases is somewhere between pisspoor & impossible. Which does NOT bode well.
No doubt it will be some other poor bugger that carries the can, not Hancock-up or any of the Tory Superheroes.
uk gov reported data updates seem to be back again -
ReplyDeleteMon 6 July 2020: 343 new cases & 16 deaths
Tue 7 July 2020: 581 new cases & 155 deaths
Yes that has always surprised me and I've seen many colleagues made unwell over the inhuman demands of the job. Napo are useless in any action when it comes to stress as I have seen myself. People are put in roles where the only training they get is from colleagues particularly in the case of redeployment. If you look at individual tribunal cases strangely most are withdrawn before hearing. Makes you wonder why, probably worn down with senior managements insistance the organisation is not at fault it's the individual!
ReplyDelete