We all understood where Nightingale Hospitals came from as an emergency response to the pandemic, but courts for heavens sake? What the hell is the logic there then? Are we going to have Nightingale prisons? I can't claim credit for this as it was Rob Allen on Twitter who suggested they be named after a distinguished former Lord Chancellor - Sir Thomas More 1478-1535 hence 'More Courts'.
10 ‘Nightingale Courts’ unveiled
10 ‘Nightingale Courts’ unveiled
The Lord Chancellor has today (19 July 2020) announced locations for 10 ‘Nightingale Courts’ which have been rapidly set up to tackle the impact of coronavirus on the justice system. Middlesbrough Town Hall, the Knights’ Chamber within the grounds of Peterborough Cathedral, and the Ministry of Justice’s headquarters in London are among the venues that will soon be in use.
The 10 sites will host the so-called Nightingale Courts with ongoing work to identify more potential locations. This will start to alleviate the pressure on courts and tribunals resulting from the pandemic – ensuring that the wheels of justice keep turning.
Spanning England and Wales, they will hear civil, family and tribunals work as well as non-custodial crime cases. The move will free up room in existing courts to hear other cases, including custodial jury trials, which require cells and secure dock facilities to keep the public, victims and witnesses safe.
A court set up in East Pallant House, Chichester, is expected to begin hearing an expanded list of cases next week, with all 10 locations up and running in August. The move forms part of government plans to ensure courts recover from the coronavirus pandemic as soon as possible and to avoid any delays getting criminals behind bars.
The confirmed sites are:
Former county court at Telford, Shropshire
Hertfordshire Development Centre, Stevenage
Swansea Council Chambers, Swansea
Cloth Hall Court, Leeds
Middlesbrough Town Hall, Teesside
East Pallant House, Chichester
102 Petty France, London
Prospero House, London
Former magistrates’ court at Fleetwood, Lancashire
Knights’ Chamber and Visitor Centre, Bishop’s Palace, Peterborough Cathedral
The Lord Chancellor, Robert Buckland QC MP said:
"Our action to keep the justice system running throughout the pandemic has been globally recognised, with these Nightingale Courts being the latest step in this effort. They will help boost capacity across our courts and tribunals - reducing delays and delivering speedier justice for victims. But we won’t stop there. Together with the judiciary, courts staff and legal sector, I am determined that we must pursue every available option to ensure our courts recover as quickly as possible."
--oo00oo--
All Buckland's rhetoric is cobblers of course, with Covid proving useful cover for drastic cost-cutting and incompetence at the MoJ and confirmed by justice insiders on Twitter such as Catherine Baksi, Barrister 'now award-winning freelance hack, writing for The Brief TimesLaw, Guardian and Telegraph' :-
Since 2010 the Ministry of Justice has closed 295 courts - almost a third of all courts in England & Wales, including over half of all magistrates' courts and eight crown courts - most recently the large and modern facility at Blackfriars Crown Court. At the end of 2019, there was a backlog of 37,500 crown court cases, due to Ministry of Justice spending cuts, that meant courtrooms were left idle, while the number of cases waiting to be dealt with increased. Since lockdown the backlog has risen to over 41,000.
In 2019 only 12,000 crown court trials were completed. The backlog of crown court trials is now 26,500 -- more than twice the number of trials heard in the whole of last year. This means victims & defendants are left in legal limbo for up to three years before trials take place. In the magistrates courts, which hears 95% of criminal cases, the backlog of cases is over 500,000.
The lord chancellor, Robert Buckland, said: "Our action to keep the justice system running throughout the pandemic has been globally recognised, with these Nightingale Courts being the latest step in this effort." It is possible that he is living in an alternative reality. Last week a report from the Bar Council said the Ministry of Justice spends 39 per person per day on the justice system -- less than the price of a pint of milk.
Caroline Goodwin QC, chair of the The Criminal Bar says the 10 Nightingale court are "a start, but just that" and urges the MoJ to open more courts and fund the justice system properly. Caroline Goodwin QC, CBA chair: "Time is of the essence. Two months of delay getting these 10 [Nightingale courts] on stream just piles on the human suffering to get trials on that have been delayed for between 1 & 3 years, impacting tens of thousands of those left waiting."
Caroline Goodwin QC, The Criminal Bar chair, continues: "The government was quick to cut a court budget by 15% last year & just as quick to sell off a perfectly good & much-needed crown court at Blackfriars. Lets see the same government ... invest" and open up court buildings.
As well as Nightingale courts, the Ministry of Justice tells me other options to tackle the backlog, incl crown court trials heard by a judge & 2 lay magistrates, reduced jury numbers & extending court sitting times during the week & at weekends, are still on the table.
Catherine Baksi
--oo00oo--
J Mellor court reporter on Twitter:-
London’s 10 Crown Courts have about 100 court rooms (approximate figures based on quick tally of lists) 18 trials are starting or ongoing on Monday 36 court rooms are probably overflow/public gallery/jury retirement rooms 46 court rooms are left ‘not sitting’ Breakdown:
Old Bailey: 4 trials (4 not sitting)
Southwark: 2 trials (5 not sitting)
Inner London: 1 trial (4 not sitting)
Woolwich: 2 trials (3 not sitting)
Croydon: 2 Trials (2 not sitting)
Kingston: 0 Trials (7 not sitting)
Isleworth: 2 Trials (3 not sitting)
Snaresbrook: 1 Trial (9 not sitting)
Snaresbrook: 1 Trial (9 not sitting)
Harrow: 1 Trial (6 not sitting)
Wood Green: 1 Trial (3 not sitting)
--oo00oo--
Judge Itis on Twitter:-
We are now struggling to cover lists with Deputy DJs as they to begin to pick up their own practices post lockdown. A number of lists cancelled this week. So these new civil and family Nightingale Courts are going to be populated by?
--oo00oo--
Update
***43% of the criminal court rooms in purpose built courts are not being used today***
--oo00oo--
Judge Itis on Twitter:-
We are now struggling to cover lists with Deputy DJs as they to begin to pick up their own practices post lockdown. A number of lists cancelled this week. So these new civil and family Nightingale Courts are going to be populated by?
--oo00oo--
Update
From Twitter - John McNamara - Crime & Proceeds of Crime Barrister at 5SAHLaw Assistant Sec The Criminal Bar Association
***43% of the criminal court rooms in purpose built courts are not being used today***
Empty court rooms/no declared purpose: 196 Total court rooms on list: 458 42.7% of court rooms are not sitting/not listed. But the MoJ say their handling of this crisis is world leading. This is important - the government have add 3 "dedicated" nightingale courts. They say we must work longer hours - but they are not even "sweating" the existing estate yet. There are NO recorders sitting. Part-time judges who would happily sit now to clear a backlog. We are 4 months into this, and there is still no apparent urgency to provide a solution. The longer the situation continues the more Government will state EOH [extended operating hours?] is a necessity to remove a purposefully created backlog & and now the delay in providing judges to speed up the courts.
Methodology: Court counted as empty/not sitting if stated so on listing, or if court room fails to appear on list. Where courtroom stated as being used for trial e.g. jury room/public gallery not counted empty. Where HHJ doing box work or reading court room not counted as empty. ? means unsure that the full number of courts rooms are listed. Help would be appreciated! The number of court rooms is based on the listings, if the numbers are incorrect it is because the courts do not appear on the lists.
It's been a very very long train ride this morning. Court's below as listed = no. empty/total no. court rooms:
Methodology: Court counted as empty/not sitting if stated so on listing, or if court room fails to appear on list. Where courtroom stated as being used for trial e.g. jury room/public gallery not counted empty. Where HHJ doing box work or reading court room not counted as empty. ? means unsure that the full number of courts rooms are listed. Help would be appreciated! The number of court rooms is based on the listings, if the numbers are incorrect it is because the courts do not appear on the lists.
It's been a very very long train ride this morning. Court's below as listed = no. empty/total no. court rooms:
Aylesbury -2/3
Basildon – 1/5
Birmingham – 8/17
Bolton- ?
Bournemouth – 0/5
Bradford – 5/8
Bristol -5/8
Burnley – closed
Cambridge – 1/3
Canterbury – 3/7
Cardiff – 3/9
Cardiff – 3/9
Carlise – 0/3
CCC – 13/22
Chelmsford – 0/6
Chester – 1/4
Croydon – 2/7
Derby – 1/4
Durham – 0/1
Exeter – 0/2
Gloucester – 2/3
Great Grimsby – 5/8
Guildford – 2/5
Harrow – 4/8
IL – 6/10
Ipswich – 1/4
Isleworth – 4/13
Kingston (Hull) – 1/4
Kingston (London) – 7/11
Kingston (London) – 7/11
Leeds – 6/13
Leicester - 8/12
Lewes – 3/5
(Hove – 1/3)
Lincoln – 2/4
Liverpool - ?
Luton – 2/7
Maidstone – 5/9
Manchester – 9/15
Manchester Minshull – 5/10
Merthyr – 1/3
Mold - ?
Newcastle – 4/11
IOW – 1/2
Northampton – 1/5
Norwich – 0/4
Nottingham – 4/10
Nottingham – 4/10
Oxford – 6/9
Plymouth – 2/3
Portsmouth – 4/7
Preston – 5/11
Reading 2/9
Salisbury – 1/2
Sheffield – 2/10
Shrewsbury – 1/2
Snaresbrook – 10/21
Southampton – 2/4
Southwark – 7/15
St Albans – 4/8
Stafford - 0/2 (?)
Stoke on Trent – 0/2 (?)
Swansea – 2/4
Swansea – 2/4
Swindon – 0/2 (?)
Taunton – 1/2
Teeside – 2/5
Truro – 0/1 (? Mixed use court centre)
Warwick – 1/4
Winchester – 3/9
Wolverhampton – 4/7
Wood Green – 5/10
Woolwich – 4/9
Worcester – 0/3
York – 0/2
I've read that the intention is to keep the courts open late nights and weekends. All parts of the CJS will be impacted on if that is the plan, and even prisons will have to be prepared to process those coming from courts when they are usually operating a 'skeleton' night-shift.
ReplyDeleteThere's staffing shortages everywhere, lawyers are leaving in droves, and there will no doubt many childcare issues that come from extended working hours.
It seem to me that the thinking is if the locations are found, somehow everything else will fall into place automatically.
Overtime? Unsociable hours? Childcare support, and even transport?
It's not a response to problems caused by Covid19, it's the enevitable consequence of the political wrecking ball the Government have been swinging through the justice system for years.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.kentonline.co.uk/news/national/amp/justice-being-put-in-the-reduced-section-at-the-supermarket-lawyers-claim-8150/
'Getafix
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/coronavirus-probation-skype-supervision-prison-justice-committee-report-a9627256.html%3famp
Delete'Getafix
People in England and Wales pay more for a cup of coffee each day than the Government spends on the justice system, senior lawyers have claimed.
DeleteThe Bar Council described justice as being “in the reduced aisle” at the supermarket as a report suggested just 39p per person per day was being spent on law and order, which it likened to being “less than the price of a red pepper in Tesco”.
The body, which represents barristers around the country, said the findings from a study it commissioned reveal the “true scale of Britain’s neglect of law and order” as the backlog of criminal cases tips over half a million in light of the coronavirus pandemic.
Compiled by economists Professor Martin Chalkley and Alice Chalkley, the review analysed spending on prisons, probation, courts, legal aid, prosecution, as well as the police between 2010 and 2019.
"We’ve seen what a lack of funding for law and order achieves, rising crime, low detection rates, long delays to cases with many collapsing before they get anywhere near a court, victims of crime denied justice, and all because government after government has scrimped on the justice budget" - Bar Council chairman Amanda Pinto QC
According to the report: In 2019, justice spending in England and Wales was £144 per person, or 39p per person per day. This is low compared with budgets of European countries and England and Wales had experienced the largest percentage reduction.
Overall funding for justice plummeted 24% in real terms between 2010 and 2019, resulting in a 29% drop in spending per person in real terms between 2010-2019.
To restore spending to 2010 levels per person, after adjusting for inflation, an extra £2.48bn of spending on the justice system and an extra £2.33bn for the police would be required – an extra 22p per person per day.
Bar Council chairman Amanda Pinto QC said: “Law and order is as much about keeping the public safe as it is about access to justice. We’ve seen what a lack of funding for law and order achieves, rising crime, low detection rates, long delays to cases with many collapsing before they get anywhere near a court, victims of crime denied justice, and all because government after government has scrimped on the justice budget. “Compared to other countries and other Whitehall budgets, UK justice is the poor relation. For just small change, 22p per person more, the Government could put its money where its mouth is, commit to boosting law and order and protecting the public by investing the price of a packet of Hobnobs per person per week in the whole justice system.”
A Government spokesman said:
“This Government is committed to restoring confidence in the justice system. We are providing the biggest increase in police funding in over a decade as part of our plan to put 20,000 additional officers on the streets. We are also investing more than £1 billion to reform and modernise courts £85 million for the CPS to manage caseloads, and hundreds of extra prosecutors are being appointed. Together with work to build more than 13,000 new prison places we are taking action to deliver justice and keep the public safe.”
The Government said it received 51 responses to its consultation on the future of Blackfriars Crown Court. Out of these 11 were in support, 35 were opposed and 5 were neutral.
Delete"The sale of Blackfriars Crown Court will release funding for reinvestment in the HM Courts & Tribunals Service Reform Programme," said the Ministry of Justice in its response to the consultation published this week.
"This money will be reinvested in improving the delivery of court services to users.
"This closure will also contribute to reducing the overall running cost of our estate and operating more efficiently. Closing this court, consolidating the estate and reinvesting the receipts will represent improved value for money for the taxpayer and help us improve facilities for court users."
In 2007 the Blackfriars Crown Court site was valued at £32 million on the Government's National Asset Register.
https://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/9690
In its response to the consultation, Southwark Council said that it would "strongly welcome opportunities to explore how the building could be made available for future affordable housing".
Delete__________________________________________________
Property investment manager Fabrix Capital has beaten off stiff competition to acquire Blackfriars Crown Court, SE1.
The 1.4-acre freehold site on Pocock Street, Southwark, was put up for sale in March by Her Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service for in excess of £45m.
It is understood Fabrix has paid around £65m for the court, which is due to close by 2020.
The firm is expected to convert the existing building into a commercial-led scheme containing offices and some retail.
Fabrix is already an investor in Southwark, having last year purchased the former police building
Fabrix: "We carefully select investments that are underutilised, unloved and have capacity for value enhancement... We are a team with private equity, banking, consultancy and fund management backgrounds. With an average age of 28 we are not your traditional property company...
https://www.egi.co.uk/news/blackfriars-crown-court-sold-to-fabrix-capital/
_________________________________________________
https://hmcts-courtdisposals.live.jll.com/blackfriars-crown-court/
_________________________________________________
http://www.blackfriars-crown-court.co.uk/#welcome
http://www.blackfriars-crown-court.co.uk/yoursay1.html#history
http://www.blackfriars-crown-court.co.uk/timeline.html#location
In our local area (Sussex) we've had Nightingale Courts for quite some time now. They've been very successful:
ReplyDeleteMain facts
Retirement housing
67 flats. Built in 1984. Sizes 1 bedroom, 2 bedroom
Resident management staff and Careline alarm service
Lounge, Laundry
New residents accepted from 60 years of age
Tenure(s): Leasehold
What an astonishing state of affairs:
ReplyDelete"Since 2010 the Ministry of Justice has closed 295 courts"
And they still this Govt has the brass neck to say:
"This Government is committed to restoring confidence in the justice system."
But we have to accept we get what we ask for - the UK electorate continue to eagerly lap up every last drop of the Tories' sloppy shit sandwich & have voted in a range of Tory governments in 2010, 2015, 2017 & 2019 headed variously by Cameron, May & Johnson.
https://www.landlordlawblog.co.uk/2019/09/26/sale-court-buildings-profits-chaos/
ReplyDelete- between 2010 and 2017 the Ministry of Justice has sold off £223 million in court real estate and in London alone £175 million has been raised by selling the buildings off, many of which have become hotels.
- 250-year-old Bow Street Magistrates sold to Qatari investment firm BTC, with planning permission to convert into a 100 room hotel. Bow Street was sold in 2008 for £17 million; it was sold on again in 2016, without any further work having been carried out, for £75 million. Nice profit for doing nowt, while the local community went without a court service.
- Both Old Street and Tower Bridge courts already converted into luxury hotels.
- Bloomsbury and Central London County court have been demolished and are to be replaced with 73 homes, selling @£15 million a pop with no affordable housing in sight.
- Developers Barratt’s are making £160 million in clear profit from the redevelopment of Horseferry Road magistrates court to build flats starting @ £700,000 each, whilst Bellway, who bought Hammersmith Magistrates court for £43 million, have plans to build a 25 storey hotel.
- between January 2018 and January 2019, Her Majesties Court Service and the Ministry of Justice paid £75 million to consultants
Judge Nic Madge: “The villains of the piece are our politicians who believe that once the justice system has been scraped to the bone, no harm can be done to people’s lives by giving the well scraped bone another scrape or two”
* Based upon information from retired judge Nic Madge and his article printed in Legal Action magazine, Sept 2019.
We can add at least a further £65m for Blackfriars to the £223m quoted above = nigh on £300m.
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/local-data/constituency-data-magistrates-court-closures/
ReplyDeleteKESWICK POLICE STATION AND MAGISTRATES COURT
"Magistrates Court and Police Station. 1901-2, with minor late C20 alterations By the Cumberland County Architects Department. Borrowdale rubble slate walling with Cumbrian Red Sandstone ashlar dressings . Coped gables, tall square gable stacks and Westmorland slate roof coverings, laid to diminishing courses. Severe Vernacular Revival style with some Classical detailing."
Heritage Category: Listed Building Grade: II
List Entry Number: 1381337
Date first listed: 07-Aug-2000
Statutory Address: POLICE STATION AND MAGISTRATES COURT, BANK STREET, KESWICK
Cumbria POlice Authority: "Keswick's old police station and magistrates' court was one of dozens of buildings put up for sale. The authority has to save £20.3m from its budget by 2016 and said £2.8m would be raised from selling the buildings."
Sale Price: Undisclosed
Current Status: Wetherspoons Pub
Just helped someone complete benefits entitlement calculator. Their situation isn't dire, but it certainly isn't 'easy' as a result of covid-19 lay-offs. They're in a bit of a pickle. They reckon they've saved up some £50K over the years as a nest-egg for when they retire and understand they'll probably have to raid that pot.
ReplyDeleteHowever, as we know, bank accounts/ISAs etc pay peanuts these days.
BUT our wonderful Govt thinks otherwise. The online benefits calculator shows the following:
Total capital - £ 50,000
Assumed weekly income from capital - £ 176
Anyone know where you can get £176 a week from a £50,000 investment? That's £9,000 annually. I'd risk borrowing £50K from the bank for that.
Money management websites show that for a £50,000 loan at 4% over 36 months, you'll repay £53,143.
If I could find the government's magic investment account I'd receive £27,000, netting about £24,000, or £8,000 a year.
Presumably its the bank Boris & his chums use? So come on, chaps, do tell!!
No jigs or dancing in the aisles as yet but...
ReplyDelete"A coronavirus vaccine developed by the University of Oxford appears safe and trains the immune system.
The vaccine - called ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 - is being developed at unprecedented speed.
It is made from a genetically engineered virus that causes the common cold in chimpanzees.
It has been heavily modified, first so it cannot cause infections in people and also to make it "look" more like coronavirus.
Scientists did this by transferring the genetic instructions for the coronavirus's "spike protein" - the crucial tool it uses to invade our cells - to the vaccine they were developing.
This means the vaccine resembles the coronavirus and the immune system can learn how to attack it.
Much of the focus on coronavirus so far has been about antibodies, but these are only one part of our immune defence.
Antibodies are small proteins made by the immune system that stick onto the surface of viruses.
Neutralising antibodies can disable the coronavirus.
T-cells, a type of white blood cell, help coordinate the immune system and are able to spot which of the body's cells have been infected and destroy them.
Nearly all effective vaccines induce both an antibody and a T-cell response.
Prof Sarah Gilbert, form the University of Oxford, UK, says: "There is still much work to be done before we can confirm if our vaccine will help manage the COVID-19 pandemic, but these early results hold promise."
.gov.uk proclamation:
ReplyDelete"On 17 July, the Secretary of State asked Public Health England (PHE) to urgently review the way daily death statistics are currently reported. We’re pausing the publication of the daily figure while this review takes place."
daily uk govt data for 20 july 2020 (subject to review, weekend-effect caveat & any other codacil)
Deletedaily reported cases: 580
daily recorded deaths: 11
What a great programme. Helped me make sense of many things in the last decade, let alone during the pandemic - "nudge, nudge, say no more!"
ReplyDeleteReleased On: 20 Jul 2020
Available for over a year
There were two narratives that emerged in the week before we locked down on 23rd March that could go some way to explaining why the UK was relatively slow to lockdown. One was the idea of “herd immunity” - that the virus was always going to spread throughout the population to some extent, and that should be allowed to happen to build up immunity.
That theory may have been based on a misunderstanding of how this particular virus behaved.
The second narrative was based on the idea of “behavioural fatigue”. This centred around the notion that the public will only tolerate a lockdown for so long so it was crucial to wait for the right moment to initiate it. Go too soon, and you might find that people would not comply later on.
It turns out that this theory was also wrong. And based on a fundamental misunderstanding of human behaviour.
Despite photos of packed parks, crammed beaches and VE day conga lines, on the whole the British public complied beyond most people’s expectations.
So what informed the government’s decision making?In this programme we ask, what is “behavioural fatigue”, where did it come from, how much influence did it have on the UK’s late lockdown, and where does Nudge theory fit into the narrative?
Presenter: Sonia Sodha
Producer: Gemma Newby
" LOCKDOWN "
ReplyDeletereally?? Now when OUR ENGLISH country was ordered to lockdown, Surely that meant nobody could get in or out?
you may have to correct my thinking on the meaning of LOCKDOWN.Any citys,towns, villages that had any outbreaks should have been shutdown apart from food and medical supplies until the threat had died.
But we unfortunates end up with boris and co slowly killing us all instead getting it out the door as fast as possible to resume normal asap
what a WANKER ππππππ