HM Chief Inspector of Probation writes a blog and this is what he has to say, published today:-
London Probation’s staffing crisis – but better news on YOTsOur first inspection results for London Probation Service continued the worrying trend of the past year, with each of the three PDU reports we published on 18 October rated as ‘Inadequate’ and inadequate ratings for all of our case quality standards. We were particularly concerned about Hammersmith, Fulham, Kensington, Chelsea and Fulham PDU, where we declared an ‘organisational alert’ in view of the hundreds of cases we found that did not have a named probation officer or PSO and were therefore not being properly supervised. Worryingly, this included 58 unallocated MAPPA cases, some of whom had committed very serious offences. Whilst these have now been matched with practitioners, the other huge challenges facing London Probation won’t be so easy to fix. Top of these, is what amounts to a staffing crisis.
There are vacancies across virtually every role and function in London, with an overall vacancy rate of 43 per cent in HFKCW PDU at the time of our inspection, which is unsustainable. The most recent published probation workforce statistics show a total headcount for London in June 2022 that was 237 lower than in June 2021, in spite of heroic efforts to bring in more PQiPs and PSOs. And this is being compounded by rising sickness rates in the capital – now up to an average of 17 working days lost per annum – piling yet more pressure on those practitioners who are in post. Worryingly, at a national level, it is staff with five to nine years’ service, exactly the sort of experienced officers the service needs to hold onto, who have been most likely to leave.
In marked contrast, our youth offending service ratings have held up very well during the pandemic with our scores for London YOTs inspected after March 2020 matching, or even exceeding, those before the pandemic, with continuing strong scores for staffing, partnerships and services. At the same time as we were inspecting Hammersmith and Fulham Probation, for example, we were also inspecting Hammersmith and Fulham Youth Offending Service, which we rated ‘Outstanding’. Staff there told us caseloads were manageable; they felt valued and well trained; vacancy levels were low; robust quality checks and management oversight were in place and 85 per cent or more of the court cases we assessed passed our quality threshold.
Smaller caseloads are, of course, a significant factor in explaining this difference and significantly higher pay for YOT case managers than probation staff is helping recruitment (including of disaffected probation officers). But I wonder if the YOT model of locally autonomous services, often fully integrated into the local authority, with a wide range of embedded specialist staff (mental health, speech and language, ETE, drugs workers) is also a significant factor in the improved quality of supervision and support they offer and the resilience they have shown through the pandemic.
That’s not to say that everything is perfect in the world of youth offending services. An important analysis by our HMI research team was published last month of almost 2000 cases across 43 different YOTs looking at the identification of safety concerns relating to children (PDF, 564 kB). Whilst in general, YOTs score higher on risk assessment and management than probation, there are still gaps, particularly for community resolution cases. In a relatively large minority of cases, for example, the safety classifications deemed appropriate by our inspectors differed from that recorded by the case manager (we usually judged that the classification should have been higher). This can have damaging consequences, as the child may lose opportunities for support by the YOT and other partners, and potential victims can be left without protection. Given that nearly half of the court cases supervised by YOTs involve violence against the person and that 27 per cent involve children assessed as presenting a high or very high risk of harm to others, it’s very important to get this right.
In marked contrast, our youth offending service ratings have held up very well during the pandemic with our scores for London YOTs inspected after March 2020 matching, or even exceeding, those before the pandemic, with continuing strong scores for staffing, partnerships and services. At the same time as we were inspecting Hammersmith and Fulham Probation, for example, we were also inspecting Hammersmith and Fulham Youth Offending Service, which we rated ‘Outstanding’. Staff there told us caseloads were manageable; they felt valued and well trained; vacancy levels were low; robust quality checks and management oversight were in place and 85 per cent or more of the court cases we assessed passed our quality threshold.
Smaller caseloads are, of course, a significant factor in explaining this difference and significantly higher pay for YOT case managers than probation staff is helping recruitment (including of disaffected probation officers). But I wonder if the YOT model of locally autonomous services, often fully integrated into the local authority, with a wide range of embedded specialist staff (mental health, speech and language, ETE, drugs workers) is also a significant factor in the improved quality of supervision and support they offer and the resilience they have shown through the pandemic.
That’s not to say that everything is perfect in the world of youth offending services. An important analysis by our HMI research team was published last month of almost 2000 cases across 43 different YOTs looking at the identification of safety concerns relating to children (PDF, 564 kB). Whilst in general, YOTs score higher on risk assessment and management than probation, there are still gaps, particularly for community resolution cases. In a relatively large minority of cases, for example, the safety classifications deemed appropriate by our inspectors differed from that recorded by the case manager (we usually judged that the classification should have been higher). This can have damaging consequences, as the child may lose opportunities for support by the YOT and other partners, and potential victims can be left without protection. Given that nearly half of the court cases supervised by YOTs involve violence against the person and that 27 per cent involve children assessed as presenting a high or very high risk of harm to others, it’s very important to get this right.
Justin Russell
From Twitter:-
ReplyDelete"YES! I’ve said for years that the YOT model is the way to go for Probation. While linked to prisons and the Civil Service, Probation will continue to fail. Join the Probation Institute to help make this happen."
"Worryingly, at a national level, it is staff with five to nine years’ service, exactly the sort of experienced officers the service needs to hold onto, who have been most likely to leave."
ReplyDeleteI'll sing and you play ... Working five to nine, what a way to make a living:
Nine years? In any profession, that is the time it takes to cut your eye teeth. We are so diminished, and its being normalisesd
But I leave you with the wonderfully Ms Parton:
Workin' 9 to 5, what a way to make a livin'
Barely gettin' by, it's all takin' and no givin'
They just use your mind
And they never give you credit
It's enough to drive you crazy if you let it
Why? Simple - because those at the top don't know what they're doing & they feel threatened, so they cull those with experience & developing knowledge who won't cosy up & join in with the chumocracy. And what better way to wield & demonstrate your power than over a young & inexperienced workforce? All those new pquips... how powerful the senior managers must feel, despite being absolutely fucking useless in the job themselves. People tend to get to that 6,7,8 years' service mark & think - "whoa, what the fuck is going on here? Nowhere near the top of my paygrade, knocking my pan in for what? The lazy bullshitting bastards who hated frontline work & spent most of their time 'somewhere else' have suddenly leapt up the tree & are now bullying me. Fuck this, I'm off to Lidl/Aldi/Waitrose/Starbucks/enter name of choice."
ReplyDelete#BoaL = Better off at Lidl
DeleteFrom Twitter:-
Delete"Sums up my current feelings. 19 years in - most organisations would appreciate my experience and knowledge but not this one."
Some of that may be right but it's more a culture cleanse deep cleanse and its old guard doing it. The naff DDS and their aco henchies.
Delete19;30 you are so spot on with your observations and as a fellow vet,this is what comes with observing the service over a number of years
Delete19.30 please leave our service. It doesn’t need people like you!
ReplyDeletePeople like 19:30 are the ones the keep the true ethos of what probation is, alive and I am offended by your bullying comments
DeleteWhat 1930 says it like things have become. It is this rot we need to combat. What's your alternate tell us.
DeleteI think we do actually. If you can’t recognise those comments as someone who cares deeply then I think we need them more than you
DeleteAnonymous 28 October 2022 at 22:00: "19.30 please leave our service. It doesn’t need people like you!"
DeleteNo need to trouble your tortured soul about it - I left some time ago as a matter of principle once the lying privateers started plundering the service with MoJ's blessing. My soul couldn't cope with the lack of integrity involved.
Sad to say it was the bullies, the shitweasels & the fraudsters who were (mostly) those who benefitted from this new direction. With a handful of notable exceptions (& god only knows how they continue to operate in such an environment) the management of probation across Eng & Wales is variously woeful, useless &/or utterly shyte. The drift to the right, aided & abetted by the annexation by HMPPS, is a betrayal of the values the service used to uphold.
Now that MoJ/HMPPS is in the hands of (very) right wing politicians & sympathisers there's little hope for anything but increased incarceration, control & punitive directives.
If you're happy with that, @22:00, if its the kind of thing that floats your boat, then I feel sad for you & those around you. Given the anger in your original comment I suspect you won't have any understanding as to what that means.
The delivery of kindness, compassion & understanding in a professional framework was what I trained for and what I did (mostly well, sometimes got it wrong) for many, many, many years. When that framework was intentionally dismantled by ideologues, bullies & greedy opportunists on the dishonest premiss of "progress", it was time for me to exit stage left.
I have always maintained it won't end well.
Your right I heard an aco recently quoting how rich they had become and time to buy yet another house for renting out.
DeleteThey do not care. They want more work for less money. Do not complete the peoples survey. It is the only language they understand
ReplyDeleteIts the same everywhere else in public service. Its absolutely the right thing to do to fight our corner but at the same time look out of the window. The infrastructure is collapsing. Government are set to repeat the same mistakes looking for different results, but this time, wreaking Austerity Mk2 on health, justice, education and the rest, where we are all already stripped to the bone, knackered and traumatised. It is, they say all the fault of Covid and Putin. By the time we all take to the streets to demonstrate, this will be an offence, and we can then shackle ourselves with tags and court orders, and monitor ourselves, doubtless earning enough from G4S or whoever to allay some of our benefits top up to our inadequate wages. I bet some b'stard has already got a spreadsheet going in the MoJ costing this and putting it all ouit to tender.
ReplyDeleteI would be off now to chop up some furniture to burn and keep the chill out, except that it is so unseasonably warm that I am getting by with a jumper. The planet seems to be heating up, I trust that while he is neglecting the domestic carnage, our newly annointed PM is off to broker some progress on that. Oh, no, he's attending to the domestic cargage he says, so back to the top and repeating the same mistakes.
Who's going to fight the corner then. I don't blame COVID . If we stayed Europe we would be sharing euro energy. Our money would be worth more and our standards would be aligned. The Boris bullshit bus money lie has drained our funds and lost subsidies. Exports gone in many good markets fish meat. Border control fiasco in Northern Ireland the can't form a government over it. Anyone voting for brexit screwed us all over . They still don't feel stupid yet but they will.
DeleteThe only bright spot in the hellscape that is probation right now is that privatisation is off the menu for a while
Delete@09:01, you misunderstand where probation is - it IS effectively privatised, but within the confines of HMPPS. It is run on dictatorial lines, pay is performance-related, there are strict codes of behaviour, nepotism is rife, control & command is the functional model, unions have been all but neutralised & financial considerations trump any notion of good practice. You are working for the tory MoJ plc.
DeleteExactly right in my view. I just discovered the Tories have been bailing out by funding an energy company. Not that it should it's a business and it should go busy but not the Tory chums it can't so they funded it billions to now sell to British gas . Both private and yet we pay that bill and the gas cost. Tory criminal conduct they won't fund a decent service into billions how are we stuck with the dishonest sunack now.
Delete@12.09. Good point. I’ll take that.
Delete"...But I wonder if the YOT model of locally autonomous services, often fully integrated into the local authority, with a wide range of embedded specialist staff (mental health, speech and language, ETE, drugs workers) is also a significant factor in the improved quality of supervision and support they offer and the resilience they have shown through the pandemic." looks like the inspector is edging towards the "irredeemably flawed" moment and might eventually arrive at a reccommendation to extract Probation from the civil service and HMPPS. At which point the great majority of probation staff will raise their heads wearily from their keyboards and groan, "that's what we've been saying all along". And then some MoJ mandarin with no clue about or genuine interest in Probation will formulate another overhaul.
ReplyDeleteFrom Twitter August:-
ReplyDelete"If you’re a Probation Officer or have been one who doesn’t treat people well then you really don’t deserve to be in the role. You need a genuine interest in the people you work with. Probation robots will come and go. The genuine POs will stand the rest of time."
I disagree. Many probation officers have different approaches and styles. I’ve rarely met those who “don’t treat people well”, and as with any job there will always be a few. Our problem is lack of staff as a result of low pay and every changing Probation policies and deteriorating working conditions. If this were not the case we’d outshine as we once did.
DeleteFrom Twitter:-
Delete"I can see redundancies at HQ, redeployment of staff into operational vacancies they are not qualified to do and they’ll call it “levelling up”.
Probation used to be much better than Youth Offending Services. We seconded Probation Officers into the YOS and worked better with the older ones. YOS and Social Workers used to be proud to come and work for Probation. These days it’s Probation Officers that are scrambling to join the YOS, and the Social Work trained running back to Social Services.
ReplyDeleteIt’s gone the other way because HMPPS and the MoJ wrecked the Probation Service. It’s annoying that the YOS, Police, IOM, St Giles, St Mungo’s and all others previously crap or non-existent at rehabilitation are handed what was historically Probation work, contracts and £funds, and tell us with a patronisingly sympathetic smile “we’ll do it for you because you’re so busy and don’t have the staff”.
Wake up and smell the coffee. We’re being phased out, blatantly and not by stealth anymore either.
… and the National Association of Probation Officers changed its name to Napo, buddied up with Senior management, NOMS and HMPPS, then sat back and lived pretty off our subs while we all suffered from TR to Unification and One HMPPS.
DeleteFrom Twitter:-
Delete"I remember our NAPO rep often being at HQ and appeared far too close to management, that was when they used to have MUL meetings (management union liaison). inappropriate imo."
From Twitter:-
Delete"Who the hell do you think NAPO (National ASSOCIATION of Probation Officers) are? The members run the association. The Officers are our employees. If you don’t like that leave .. please. Being united as one is the key, if you don’t agree just leave & go and represent yourself."
Many of us have done just that. Ian Lawrence runs Napo as a sham . Poor quality GS he has never managed to lead or mount any challenge nor recommend a fight to members. He favours the cowardly line of best we can achieve. That means nothing. It has been said before but his distasterous time in post he actually thinks his collegiate group is the management not the membership. For this reason alone can the officers on behalf of the members appoint anyone into the role as soon as his contract is up for interview. Anyone else would be better.
DeleteNapo now stands for Napo. It is no longer, and hasn’t been so for about 15-20 years, an abbreviation for National Association, etc, etc, as this change was to account for its role in supporting Family Court employees.
Delete“Napo is a trade union and professional association representing thousands of members working in probation and family courts.”
Members do not run Napo. In fact the General Secretary himself has never been a probation employee.
Napo regularly pits different Probation grades against each other. Napo exec and regions also in-fight against each other.
FYI from Wikipedia. Napo means Napo, that’s it. Hasnt been the National Association of Probation Officers since 2001.
Delete“Napo was formed on 22 May 1912. It was a member of the Standing Conference of Organisations of Social Workers from 1962, but decided not to join the new British Association of Social Workers in 1970. In 2001, it opted to change its title to "Napo–the trade union and professional association for family court and probation staff".[1] It holds an annual general meeting which is open to all members of the union.”
Did IL write this cheeky exaggeration himself?
“On 13 June 2020 Napo celebrated a major victory following the announcement by the Lord Chancellor that probation services would return to public ownership and control in June 2021. This news followed a long and sometimes attritional campaign which commanded widespread support from many politicians and groups who had also predicted major problems following the ill-fated reforms that were implemented by the then Secretary of State for Justice Chris Grayling.”
Who cares what he writes it's meaningless. It was said the actual decision to end the contracting and return to Nps was influenced by COVID. That simple. Nothing to do with the coming up short on everything Napo.
Delete@06.41. Nah don’t think so. What changed TR was the constant drum beat of appalling inspections from HMIP and the massive increase in sfo’s. Was talked about long before Covid
DeleteProbation has become a processing plant. It's no better then the passport office or the DVLA.
ReplyDeleteIf there's anything to distinguish a difference, it's that people need passports and driving licenses.
Probation is a fraudulent trader, with too many employed within the service that belong to a call centre culture.
If probation is ever going to be seen as a professional service it needs 'rooting out'.
There's too many in the service that have no place being there.
'Getafix
I disagree. Yes Probation has become a processing plant. No not all Probation Officers ascribe to this. Many do what they can to provide help and support, and despite the uphill struggle against red tape, high workloads and scarce resources.
DeleteI think much of what needs rooting out is in the management, training, performance, effective practice and SFO investigation teams.
I agree everything we do means another form to fill in. What is even worse is the companies that were formed from the reunification who we have to refer to. It's a shame they are not inspected because I am unsure what they actually do, apart from creating more work for us.
DeleteToo many criminology graduates who are frustrated police officers , probation doesn’t exist it’s a sausage factory
ReplyDeleteIn all my years in probation I have never met a probation officer that was both an ex-police and a criminology graduate.
DeleteEx-police and Sociology/Politics graduate. Feel much more at home in Probation. Police were full of vipers and bullies and condoned by 'the top table'. Interesting comparisons with knowing the value of information and the judgement to use that information. Not a frustrated police officer, but a frustrated probation officer that is sick of filling in forms or trying to save director level jobs by writing a tedious entry for everyone of my community cases for OSAG. Not that i'm not busy and exhausted enough. Being 'punished' for others' mistakes is the stuff of school discipline. One did it, but can't be pinpointed, so everyone has to suffer. I might apply for the overtime to get this over the line, but as the pay rise organisation was a car crash, I don't think I can face the humiliation of chasing up payments because of an apathetic organisation with a payroll sysem from the days of the brown pay packets. Everyday there's an elephant in the room about a multitude of perennial issues and he's just sitting there getting fatter but no one is noticing. I mean they say hello to him, but then get on with their day.
DeleteGetafix nails it again! What a very, very sad state of affairs. A PROFESSION decimated ,pillaged and torn asunder. The cost to the public will likely never be known, and I do not mean the financial cost.
ReplyDeleteProbation has lost its heart to those running this shit show with so little experience on the front line. There are managers who have never even held a Mappa case! How can u know what will make the wheels turn properly if u lack understanding in how to ride properly? Too many sitting behind their desks calling people on the phone because they’re too scared to see them in person. It’s lost its true perspective and the reason those with the most experience are leaving is because we’ve become completely undervalued and misrepresented in the service. So much so that people on probation are getting a disservice and the public are in no way protected. Those at the top need to work out how to value their staff and to retain them or else officers will keep leaving. If their only plan b is to recruit inexperienced youth to manage highly complex cases then the service will continue to fail. The ‘old school’ trusts worked - since then it’s been an awful environment to work in.
ReplyDelete