I resisted for as long as possible, but it seems there is now no option but to use the new Blogger dashboard despite it being much worse than the original. It all takes much longer to navigate, is not user-friendly and will inevitably drive me to distraction. I hate change for it's own sake and especially when not an improvement!
--oo00oo--
We didn't cover it last week, but there was a scathing report from the Public Accounts Committee on the state of our prisons which yet again underlines why probation should not be part of the dreadful HMPPS:-
The Ministry of Justice and HM Prison and Probation Service have failed in their attempts to improve the condition and suitability of the prison estate. Despite promises to create 10,000 new-for-old prison places by 2020, just 206 new places have been delivered so far, and prisoners continue to be held in unsafe, crowded conditions that do not meet their needs. Budget cuts imposed at a time of much promised reform across the department have exacerbated the challenges to these ambitious programmes which have been on the cards for over a decade. As we saw with the Ministry’s inability to successfully contract out services during probation reforms, the Ministry has once again exposed taxpayers to higher than expected costs as a result of inadequate planning, unrealistic assumptions and poor performance whilst managing facilities within prisons. HMPPS has allowed a staggering backlog of maintenance work to build up that will cost more than £900 million to address. This means that 500 prison places are taken permanently out of action each year due to their poor condition. Prisons play a crucial role in supporting prisoners to stay away from crime on their release and reduce the £18.1 billion cost to the economy of reoffending each year. The poor condition of many prisons, coupled with high levels of overcrowding, are contributing to dangerously high levels of violence and self-harm in prisons. Despite our recommendations in May 2019, there is still no sign of a cross-government strategy for reducing reoffending.
Although COVID-19 has eased pressure on demand for prison places in the short-term, we are concerned about the Ministry’s ability to both improve the condition of the estate, and meet rising demand through building new prison places in the medium to long-term. The Ministry’s track record does not inspire confidence, and there is limited headroom in the prison estate to allow the space for vital maintenance work. The Ministry is now optimistic about both its capacity and capability to improve the prison estate and its future financial position. But it will need to demonstrate it has learnt lessons from its past failures and that it has a coherent long-term and fully funded plan in order to make genuine progress.
--oo00oo--
This from the Guardian on Friday:-
England and Wales' disgraceful prisons expose ministers' refusal to learn from mistakes
The slow-motion collapse of England and Wales’ prison system is a textbook example of the government’s repeated public service failures in the age of austerity.
The mismanagement of the prison estate, exposed in a scathing report from the Commons public accounts committee, is a carbon copy of ministers’ numerous other foul-ups over the past decade. There are starring roles for inadequate funding and disastrous use of private contractors, with supporting parts for squandering money by aiming for unachievable savings, raiding capital budgets to prop up running costs, making big promises with no credible delivery plan, and failing to join up policy. Inevitably, it is all followed by yet more delusional promises of future delivery and the piecemeal populism of ever-longer sentences.
Prisons are the responsibility of HM Prison & Probation Service, an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). Its declared aim is to ensure they are decent, safe and productive places to live and work.
But the last annual report from HM Chief Inspector of Prisons for England and Wales said living conditions for most prisoners were inadequate and some were squalid, including cramped, bloodstained, flooded and filthy cells, rat, flea and cockroach infestations, and broken windows.
Among the 117 prisons in England and Wales, two-thirds are crowded. The 10 most crowded hold at least 47% more prisoners than intended. Today, more than 79,000 people are incarcerated in prisons and young offender institutions. A year ago – before the pandemic caused a backlog of more than 500,000 trials – it was 83,000.
Low-risk prisoners are forced into high-security regimes. High-risk prisoners are inadequately secured. Assaults on staff have doubled since 2015 and around 1,000 attacks a year are classified as serious. There were more than 50,000 incidents of self-harm in the year to September 2018.
Inevitably, incompetent contracting plays its part. In 2015, the MoJ handed management of the facilities to two companies – one of which, Carillion, collapsed within three years – without fully understanding what it was contracting out. The MPs say this failure will affect prisons for many years.
In yet another example of grandiose promises being followed by failure, the government has delivered just 206 of the 10,000 new-for-old prison places promised by 2020.
Five days after the MPs’ report, the government unveiled plans to ram in ever-more prisoners. Its white paper A Smarter Approach to Sentencing is anything but – simply a rehash of the default position of longer sentences, including the ability to sentence people in their teens to life without parole. Other measures such as deferring sentences to give offenders a chance to turn themselves around will do little to ameliorate the increase in the prison population, which could run into thousands.
The long-running disgrace of our prison system betrays a refusal among ministers to learn from mistakes. Every single one of these failures has been seen elsewhere.
Mismanagement of probation and defence equipment exemplifies a strategy of dumping complex problems on private contractors for vast amounts of money without fully understanding the causes of the difficulties or what was required to put them right.
The £1.2bn programme to modernise courts over-promised, failed to get to grips with delivery, and didn’t listen to the people the changes would affect. The quality of NHS hospitals and equipment, meanwhile, has been undermined by repeated raids on its capital budget.
And yet the government’s planning reforms – facing growing opposition from Tory backbenchers – continue to show an inability to join up policy across government, handing massive power to developers while failing to address priorities such as investing in England’s northern towns and cities, providing more social housing and tackling climate change.
This shambolic way of running the country has now reached its nadir in the utterly inadequate test and trace system – incompetent contracting, an inability to understand the problems, overpromising, failing to focus on the detail of delivery, and an pathological refusal to listen to experts. There must be a better way.
The slow-motion collapse of England and Wales’ prison system is a textbook example of the government’s repeated public service failures in the age of austerity.
The mismanagement of the prison estate, exposed in a scathing report from the Commons public accounts committee, is a carbon copy of ministers’ numerous other foul-ups over the past decade. There are starring roles for inadequate funding and disastrous use of private contractors, with supporting parts for squandering money by aiming for unachievable savings, raiding capital budgets to prop up running costs, making big promises with no credible delivery plan, and failing to join up policy. Inevitably, it is all followed by yet more delusional promises of future delivery and the piecemeal populism of ever-longer sentences.
Prisons are the responsibility of HM Prison & Probation Service, an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). Its declared aim is to ensure they are decent, safe and productive places to live and work.
But the last annual report from HM Chief Inspector of Prisons for England and Wales said living conditions for most prisoners were inadequate and some were squalid, including cramped, bloodstained, flooded and filthy cells, rat, flea and cockroach infestations, and broken windows.
Among the 117 prisons in England and Wales, two-thirds are crowded. The 10 most crowded hold at least 47% more prisoners than intended. Today, more than 79,000 people are incarcerated in prisons and young offender institutions. A year ago – before the pandemic caused a backlog of more than 500,000 trials – it was 83,000.
Low-risk prisoners are forced into high-security regimes. High-risk prisoners are inadequately secured. Assaults on staff have doubled since 2015 and around 1,000 attacks a year are classified as serious. There were more than 50,000 incidents of self-harm in the year to September 2018.
Inevitably, incompetent contracting plays its part. In 2015, the MoJ handed management of the facilities to two companies – one of which, Carillion, collapsed within three years – without fully understanding what it was contracting out. The MPs say this failure will affect prisons for many years.
In yet another example of grandiose promises being followed by failure, the government has delivered just 206 of the 10,000 new-for-old prison places promised by 2020.
Five days after the MPs’ report, the government unveiled plans to ram in ever-more prisoners. Its white paper A Smarter Approach to Sentencing is anything but – simply a rehash of the default position of longer sentences, including the ability to sentence people in their teens to life without parole. Other measures such as deferring sentences to give offenders a chance to turn themselves around will do little to ameliorate the increase in the prison population, which could run into thousands.
The long-running disgrace of our prison system betrays a refusal among ministers to learn from mistakes. Every single one of these failures has been seen elsewhere.
Mismanagement of probation and defence equipment exemplifies a strategy of dumping complex problems on private contractors for vast amounts of money without fully understanding the causes of the difficulties or what was required to put them right.
The £1.2bn programme to modernise courts over-promised, failed to get to grips with delivery, and didn’t listen to the people the changes would affect. The quality of NHS hospitals and equipment, meanwhile, has been undermined by repeated raids on its capital budget.
And yet the government’s planning reforms – facing growing opposition from Tory backbenchers – continue to show an inability to join up policy across government, handing massive power to developers while failing to address priorities such as investing in England’s northern towns and cities, providing more social housing and tackling climate change.
This shambolic way of running the country has now reached its nadir in the utterly inadequate test and trace system – incompetent contracting, an inability to understand the problems, overpromising, failing to focus on the detail of delivery, and an pathological refusal to listen to experts. There must be a better way.
Transport, the NHS, Track and Trace, Prisons and Probation and a multitude of other public services are all broken, in disarray and many not fit for purpose.
ReplyDeleteHowever, all the failing public services have a common link, and that is they've either been franchised or outsourced to private contractors changing the ethos from providing quality services to extracting quantatve renumeration.
I think it's as plain as the nose on anyone's face that when privateers become involved in public services they decline rapidly and cost more. Even the diehard Tories must see that, but refuse to accept it.
A public service needs to be just that, a public service and not a business oppertunity to be sucked dry at great expense to the public.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.theconstructionindex.co.uk/news/view/prison-repairs-backlog-tops-900m-as-fm-outsourcing-fails%3famp=1
'Getafix
uk never-wrong govt covid-19 data 21/9/20
ReplyDeletetesting: 219,723 (today!!)
new cases: 4,368
deaths withn 28 days of 1st +ve: 11
hospitalisation: 134 on 7 Sept, but BBC News has just shown figures of 200+ per day over the last week
FranK.
WTF! Why are they not being forced to close?
Deletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/wetherspoons-coronavirus-outbreak-30-staff-18969109.amp
That's an easy question to answer:
DeleteDec 2019: Brexiteer Tim Martin reveals staggering sum he gave Tories this week to DEFEAT Labour -
TIM MARTIN the owner of Wetherspoons gave the Conservative Party £50,000 at the start of this week in order to help them beat the Labour Party in the general election.
In 2016, Martin donated £200,000 to the Vote Leave campaign.
Dec 2019 - Wetherspoon boss Tim Martin was £44m richer on Friday thanks to a boost from the Conservatives’ election victory. The pub chain owner and prominent Brexit supporter saw the value of his stake in the pub chain jump almost 10 per cent from £487m to £531m.
He spent £94,856 on pro-Brexit beer mats and has regularly used the pub group’s magazine to promote the benefits of leaving.
Feb 2020: Tim Martin, owner of Wetherspoons and ardent Brexiteer gave the party £50,000 – matching a previous donation he made in the last quarter.
Guardian Editorial yesterday:-
ReplyDeleteThe Guardian view on the Covid crisis: Boris Johnson let it happen
The United Kingdom is facing a Covid calamity, and it is a situation that was made in Downing Street. Infections and hospital admissions are rising rapidly. An exponentially growing epidemic is outpacing the rate at which the testing regime is expanding, meaning that it is not possible to properly track the spread of the disease. If nothing changes, the government’s chief scientific adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, warned on Monday, there could be 200 deaths a day by mid-November.
It is clear that transmission of the disease through the population needs to be stopped. This might not require a nationwide lockdown, where schools and workplaces are closed. However, stringent measures ought to come into force across the country, alongside a clear strategy to rebuild the test and trace system. Boris Johnson needs to move decisively to contain the risk. There will be a balance to strike. Dilemmas such as the tension between reducing social contact and continuing economic life are not easy to resolve. But the lesson from earlier this year was that in a pandemic it’s best to move fast.
The trouble is that Britain has the wrong government for the Covid era. Boris Johnson has not yet shown that he can weigh the seriousness of the situation and act appropriately. He let events spin out of control, because he believed he could spin his way out of the problem. All too often, the prime minister has overpromised and underdelivered – if he delivered at all. Mr Johnson is unwilling to take responsibility for his missteps during the pandemic. His psychological strategy is to avoid admitting fault. This has led him to snub the checks and balances designed to ensure that the British state learns from experience to improve services. The idea is to update views to take better decisions in future.
Mr Johnson prefers non-accountability in government policy. Parliament has been sidelined during the pandemic. Graham Brady, the chair of the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, is right to insist that further Covid restrictions be debated – and voted on – in the Commons. The prime minister will probably resist this move, and he will be wrong to do so. Parliament can give the public a window on why the government acts as it does. Mr Johnson sees little value in this. He wants the public to face punitive fines for breaking lockdown while his chief adviser smirks that he did so earlier this year to test his eyesight.
Downing Street is in the grip of a groupthink that delegitimises independent voices. The clearout at the top of the civil service is part of that. What Mr Johnson seems to run is a gang rather than a government. He does not appoint people for competence but loyalty. This promotes an us-versus-them worldview. Dido Harding, the businesswoman and Conservative party peer who failed to get the test and trace system running effectively, has been picked to run Mr Johnson’s new public health system. Her qualification is that she will defend incompetence by blaming the public. Labour’s Lord Falconer calls it a “corrupting” of the constitution. He’s not wrong.
The disinformation is designed to put Downing Street above morality and the truth. There are things the country can and cannot do, and things Mr Johnson can and cannot do. The prime minister does not care that there is a difference. He tells voters that he can do anything and that the country can deliver whatever they want. He is gambling that his government will not be judged at the next election on its inept coronavirus response. It may work. Mr Johnson has reached the top by peddling half-truths. Britain’s high Covid death toll points to a set of real issues: a political culture of exceptionalism, shrivelled public services, rampant inequality and poor health. The unanimity of views in No 10 may be hard to escape, but the accumulation of blunders has led the country into a crisis.
Last week people were being forced back into offices. Now another huge U turn.
DeleteMetro...
Britons will be told to ‘work from home if you can’ as one of a package of new measures to fight the second wave of coronavirus.
Boris Johnson is set to scrap his ‘back to work’ drive when he unveils his plan to bring down soaring rates of the virus later today.
Workers have been encouraged to go back to the office since August to get the economy going again.
Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove told Sky News there will be a ‘shift in emphasis’ in the government’s working from home advice.
Speaking ahead of the statement, Mr Gove said: ‘They are reluctant steps that we’re taking, but they’re absolutely necessary because as we were reminded yesterday and as you’ve been reporting, the rate of infection is increasing, the number of people going to hospital is increasing, therefore we need to act.’
On Monday the UK’s top scientists warned the UK’s infection rate was doubling every week and the number of new cases could rise to 50,000 per day by mid-October if urgent action wasn’t taken.
The day of dramatic developments also saw the coronavirus alert level raised from three to four for the first time since June, which means a high or rising level of transmission requiring enforced social distancing
Among the new restrictions being announced today is a 10pm curfew on pubs, restaurants and bars, which will be restricted to table service only.
The government has stopped short of proposing a total shutdown of the hospitality sector amid warning it would be crippled by more draconian restrictions. However, reports have suggested some venues could be forced to close in virus hotspots.
Mr Johnson is also set to announce an ‘enforcement blitzkrieg’ on bars and pubs who ignore lockdown guidance such as the ‘rule of six’.
The PM is set to chair his first emergency cobra meeting in four months later this morning, before giving a statement to the House of Commons and then an address to the nation.
'Getafix
Johnson can't piss straight let alone make a decision that's right.
Deletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/www.thelondoneconomic.com/politics/must-read-the-week-in-tory-returns-for-second-time-in-four-days/21/09/%3famp
DeleteThank you, 09:19 - I really enjoyed that. It lifted the clouds!!
DeleteThe only fly in the ointment (fruit fly, not bluebottle) is that the staff at Perugia airport mixed up Bliar with Bozo. Easy mistake, I guess, can't get a cigarette paper between 'em. Both as morally & financially corrupt as each other.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000mk3v
DeleteEntertaining radio is still alive & kicking!
Loads of ‘stuff,’ on HMPPS homepage about pay arrangements for prison staff.
ReplyDeleteNot a word about probation.
NAPO continue to honour their vow of silence too!
The gen\sec of Napo agrees everything to maintain a foothold to no place. Napo is lost with little real prospects to succeed on any issue. Followers may be wallowing in the dust now as all the status is long gone. The NAPO roles have become defunct. Covid 19 brings an already dwindling association to a zero interpersonal programme where we will see the final collapse. The AGM most likely a finale of deceit and the nonsense messages getting out in poorly managed Napo edits or bulletins just illustrate further Napo's worst ever lamentable performance and dysfunction from the inept leadership.
Deletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/www.unison.org.uk/news/2020/03/nps-increments/amp/
DeleteReturning to topic
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.lbc.co.uk/news/degrading-unacceptable-shocking-conditions-found-hmp-erlestoke/
Did this get an airing on here?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.independent.co.uk/voices/prison-justice-system-probation-homelessness-chris-grayling-coronavirus-a9701931.html
Yes we did thanks.
Deleteuk disgrace-of-a-govt covid-19 data 22/9/20
ReplyDeletenew cases: 4,926
deaths within 28 days of 1st positive test: 37
NOW STAY AT HOME... or is it get back to work... or is it go to the pub... or is it don't eat... or is it go to Wales... or is it stay in Greece... or is it...?????
As the U.S. death toll approached 200,000 Trump tells the world that covid-19 really only affects "elderly people with heart problems and other problems."
Delete"That's what it really affects," Trump said during a campaign rally in Ohio. "That's it."
Trump also said the virus doesn't really affect anyone below the age of 18.
"In some states, thousands of people, nobody young... they have a strong immune system, who knows," he said. "But it affects virtually nobody. It's an amazing thing."
So what are we worrying about??
FranK.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/live-updates-trecco-bay-caravan-18978373.amp
DeleteOffice workers are being told to work from home again if possible and we must observe the rule of 6.
ReplyDeleteNot for probation staff who must continue to work in busy probation offices and ignore the rule of 6 in the workplace.
As usual, Probation managers and directors are silent.
Probation is not an emergency service. It is not even an essential service.
DeleteMen and women queuing outside probation offices is ridiculous.
Close the offices.
what happens with the critical cases who we've been instructed to resume office visits? Surely if phone contact was adequate in the earlier lockdown then that should be the same now? What would a court say if i breached someone for failing to attend? We've had no communication and we're all desperate for some guidance.
DeleteNo the managers will not be silent but they will bleat for the extra 150 a month while staff get zip no doubt nafo will agree.
DeleteBoris Johnson has blamed coronavirus rule breakers for the second wave of infections as he warned of the potential for a second lockdown.
ReplyDeleteIn a televised address to the nation, the prime minister said there have been "too many breaches" allowing the "invisible enemy to slip through".
The rule-breakers: Boris Johnson, Dominic Cummings, Robert Jenrick, Stanley Johnson, Stephen Kinnock, etc etc etc.
ReplyDeleteI didn't watch Johnsons address to the nation last night, but I did watch his statement to the Commons earlier on.
There's much been said about how confusing and ambiguous the new covid measures. However not much has been said of possible unintended consequences that might stem from those measures.
The imminent ending of the furlough scheme has received much coverage in the press and on news channels. However the ending of the eviction ban has hardly been mentioned at all.
The Metro reports that there are many thousands of people at risk of eviction as the ban ends.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/metro.co.uk/2020/09/21/thousands-of-renters-at-risk-of-homelessness-as-ban-on-eviction-ends-13300720/amp/
At the same time much of the accommodation that was found to house the already homeless and rough sleepers is being withdrawn, as the hotels used return to business 'as much' as normal.
The Guardian reports today on how social distancing measures is impacting on the numbers of people that night shelters and other 'usual' modes of accomodation support can safely accommodate.
It makes for worrying reading, and I fear there may be an avalanche of homelessness and rough sleepers just around the time the Christmas lights are being switched on in our towns and cities.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/society/2020/sep/23/coronavirus-distancing-measures-could-leave-homeless-people-out-in-cold-experts-warn
'Getafix
'Getafix, there's an Urgent Question being raised by the Lib Dems on ending the eviction ban after PMQs today.
DeleteA must read......
ReplyDeletehttps://www.google.com/amp/s/m.huffingtonpost.co.uk/amp/entry/brexit-grayling-seaborne-freight-ferries_uk_5f6a276dc5b68400a231dc3f/