Isn't life amazing. Nothing much seems to be happening and you begin to lose heart again. Absolutely no enthusiasm to post anything for a fortnight, but no sooner than the Guardian piece on prisons jolts me into action, manna from heaven descends as reported by the BBC:-
Prison and probation staffing dangerously lowPrison and probation staffing in England and Wales is approaching dangerously low levels, the Ministry of Justice has said. The comments were published by mistake on a government website as part of an £8m year-long contract awarded to a London company, PeopleScout, to manage the ministry's recruitment marketing. The wording was spotted by the Labour Party.
The BBC understands the comments were not meant to be made public. The contract blames "government commitments on prison expansion and high staff attrition levels" for the shortages. It warned 15% of prisons are expected to have fewer than 80% of the prison staff that they need. And on the probation service, a third of regions in England and Wales have fewer than 80% of the necessary probation officers.
Shadow justice secretary Steve Reed said the whole country would be alarmed at the warning. "Thirteen years of Conservative incompetence have left our probation service in tatters. Violent criminals are left to roam the streets without proper supervision, placing the public at serious risk," he said. "If a third of the country has 'dangerously low levels' of probation officers, we risk seeing even more cases where violent criminals who never should have been released from prison in the first place are left unsupervised to strike again."
Earlier this year, the Chief Inspector of Probation, Justin Russell, said the service had failed at every stage to assess the risk of Damien Bendall, who murdered his partner, her two children and their 11-year-old friend. The failings meant Bendall was deemed suitable to live with his pregnant partner Terri Harris and her two children when he could, instead, have been sent to prison after being sentenced for arson just months before the murders. Relatives of the victims were said to be "shocked" by the failings.
Mr Russell also found failings in the case of Jordan McSweeney, who sexually assaulted and murdered law graduate Zara Aleena nine days after he was released from prison on licence.
McSweeney, a man with a history of violence, was wrongly assessed by staff as a "medium risk." They were said to be under mounting pressure at the time, and one worker faced disciplinary action over the case. Ms Aleena's aunt, Farah Naz, accused the Probation Service of having "blood on its hands" and said her niece "would have been alive today if probation had done their jobs better".
In February, internal figures, seen by the BBC, showed that some probation officers in England and Wales had workloads twice as large as their recommended capacity. A whistleblower warned the risks to the public are "significant".
A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "We have hired a record 4,000 probation officers since 2021 and we will recruit up to 5,000 more prison officers by the mid-2020s to steer offenders away from crime and keep people safe." The comments have now been removed from the website.
--oo00oo--
It's probably appropriate to remind ourselves of what HM Chief Inspector of Prisons said about the situation in his blog last week:-
Why the prison population crisis is everyone's concern
As prison population numbers continue to rise, Charlie Taylor considers the implications and warns there will be consequences for all of us.
There is nothing particularly surprising about the growth in the prison population. The prison service itself predicted back in 2018 that the prison population would reach over 86,000 by March 2023. However, the potential consequences are far-reaching. Just last week, we issued a second Urgent Notification for HMP Bristol, citing overcrowding as one of the key reasons. Almost half of prisoners were living in double cells designed for one man, with a significant minority in single cells with no internal sanitation. Despite this, the capacity of the prison had in fact been increased on several occasions since the last inspection.
The fall in crime during the pandemic reduced demand temporarily and, at its lowest, the number of prisoners fell to 77,859 in April 2021. Since then, with levels of offending returning to pre-pandemic levels and courts catching up with their backlogs, the prison population has grown once again. The barristers strike between June and October last year led to more congestion as remanded prisoners – prisoners who have not yet been tried and are therefore unconvicted – could not get to court. Prisons like Belmarsh and Birmingham, that used to hold a mixed population with a substantial proportion of prisoners coming back to their local prison in preparation for their impending release, now almost entirely contain men on remand. The remanded population has risen from around 11,000 in June 2020 to 14,591 in March 2023. Inspectors increasingly find prisoners who have been waiting for their trial for many months and I recently came across a man who had been stuck on remand for more than three years. This means that reception prisons across the country are now busier than ever, with constant pressure to accept new arrivals and ship those who are sentenced off to their next jail.
At times numbers coming in have been so high that Operation Safeguard has been enacted, a protocol that means prisoners are held in police cells because there is no available space in nearby jails. What was meant to be an emergency contingency, has become routine in the North West of England. The police are not equipped to provide for these prisoners, many of whom are detoxing from drugs or alcohol and have mental health difficulties. It also means prison vans, that should be going from the jail to the court, now have to pick up prisoners from police stations and take them to prison, before they can collect those due in court. As I was leaving Birmingham prison, I met a van of prisoners from Manchester being unloaded, because there was no room at Forest Bank. This does not just put pressure on van drivers, of which there is a national shortage, but also means that prisoners are being placed further from home in unfamiliar surroundings with less likelihood of getting visits from family or friends, which for some prisoners is essential to their well-being and in supporting their chances of success on release. When they are taken to court, because the jail they came from might be full by the evening, they may start and finish the day in different prisons. One governor told me that some men will refuse to go to court because they do not want to end up in a different prison – they would rather face the wrath of the judge than the strain of settling into a new jail.
While the most immediate pressure comes from this backlog of remanded prisoners, in the medium and longer term, the most sustained increases will come from a rise in the longer-term population. In March 2023 the government hit its target of recruiting 20,000 more police officers; the assumption is that this will lead to more arrests and ultimately to more prisoners. Average sentence lengths have increased for many offences, despite public perceptions of sentencing often suggesting otherwise. Experienced governors tell me that in the past it was unusual to come across prisoners who were serving four years or more – as of March 2022 they now make up 55% of the population and the average tariff imposed for mandatory life sentences for murder has risen from 12.5 years in 2003 to 20 years in 2020. These prisoners have less incentive to behave and, particularly early in their sentences can be hard to manage.
The new category C prisons, Five Wells and Fosse Way, both in the East Midlands, will, when full, provide 3,395 more places. Millsike in the North East will yield a further 1,440. This, however, will not be enough to meet even the lowest projected growth and the number of prisoners is predicted increasingly to outpace the number of places. Governors will be under pressure to take more prisoners and already we are seeing children who turn 18 continuing to be held in under 18 young offender institutions until their 19th birthday, adding to the existing challenges in these establishments.
When we inspected Dartmoor in September 2020 we praised the fact that all prisoners, most of whom were long-termers, were being held in single cells. On our return in July this year, there were already 46 cells that had been doubled up in an ancient prison that was already unable to provide enough activity places. This jail and those like it are likely to be under pressure to cram in more prisoners in what may well be a vain attempt to accommodate the surge. Some prisons have been able to open up prefabricated cells and here and there refurbished wings will become usable, but these will not be enough to meet demand. Open prisons, for some time underpopulated, have now filled up, but many who end up there are right at the end of their sentences, unlikely to be able to take advantage of the opportunities for day release to go out to work.
In prisons like Bullingdon, Woodhill and Swaleside, the prison service has had to close wings because there were not enough staff to run a regime safely, and many other prisons are under considerable strain either because they have not recruited enough officers, or they cannot hang onto the ones that they have got.
Since I became Chief Inspector in November 2020, the biggest concern that we have repeatedly highlighted in our reports has been the lack of purposeful activity. Despite one or two outliers, most prisons are providing less time out of cell, education, work and training than they were before the pandemic. Evening association – important for prisoners who have spent the day working – has all but disappeared. Our recent Weekends in Prison thematic showed that at weekends things were even worse, with most prisoners spending at least 21 hours a day locked up – putting those with already fragile mental health at greater risk.
We criticise the lack of management ambition in driving forward more productive regimes, but if governors are going to be asked to take on more prisoners with the same amount of staff, then achieving desperately needed improvements in purposeful activity is made harder. More prisoners squeezed into already overcrowded prisons will mean more deprivation, squalor and the risk of further violence. HMPPS’s own safety in custody statistics are showing that prisons are getting less safe, with key metrics like the number of deaths, number of individuals self-harming and assault incidents all on the rise.
I am enormously concerned that prisoners who have spent their sentences locked in their cells or languishing on their wing are going to leave prison without having been given anything like the support that they need to successfully resettle back into the community when they are released. If they are not in the habit of getting up and going to work or college every morning, if they are not working part-time or if they are allocated to whatever activity happens to have spaces rather than the one they need or want to do, then it will come as no surprise if they commit more crime when they come out. This means neighbourhoods that are unsafe, fatherless children and more victims. The population crisis is not just a technocratic headache for ministers and the prison service; there will be consequences for all of us.
Charlie Taylor
HM Chief Inspector of Prisons
prisons
Yet another newspaper report of the scandalous state of prisons
During my thirty years working for penal justice I visited around 100 prisons in the UK and many more across every continent. I never found a place that I would be content to reside in, which must be the test for prisons. They are not intended to be places that inflict punishment as that is meant to be the deprivation of liberty, the most severe penalty. Yet once again a news paper has revealed the dire state of prisons in this country.
The Observer journalists did something that I used to do as a matter of course and indeed used to publicise, they reviewed the reports of inspections and found that three quarters of prisons in England were judged to be unsafe. If they had looked at monitoring reports by the watchdogs who go into prisons every day, as opposed to inspectors who visit once every few years, they would have found the same thing.
Dangerously unsafe prisons matter because they fester with violence, drugs and incivility. Prisons are part of our community and what happens inside seeps out into the wider community when people released from months or years in prison commit more crimes and often more violent crimes. It seeps out when staff are dehumanised by the violence and cruelty that see and that they have to inflict through the capricious disciplinary system that imposes solitary confinement and other punishments in response to unrest, resistance and frustration.
Governments for decades have used the dual mantra of increasing punishment inside prisons and increasing the number of prisons as a populist policy. They know this does not work to make prisons safer and by building more prisons they simply augment the problem, they don’t solve it. It’s the cheapest and nastiest expression of political leadership.
Like motorways or hospitals, the problem of over-use and crowding in prisons will not be solved by trying to build our way out of the chaos. Road traffic has to be curtailed and managed, healthcare has to take place in the community as far as possible, and sanctions for crime have to be based in prevention and the community.
It is disappointing that once again Labour and Conservatives are locked in this dead end competition. The public, and particularly victims of crime, deserve better. If government and opposition are not presenting a different vision, it is welcome that the some of the media are trying to create a different narrative.
--oo00oo--
I also notice that following a period of dignified silence since retirement from the Howard League, Frances Crook has been moved to say something on the subject:-
prisons
Yet another newspaper report of the scandalous state of prisons
During my thirty years working for penal justice I visited around 100 prisons in the UK and many more across every continent. I never found a place that I would be content to reside in, which must be the test for prisons. They are not intended to be places that inflict punishment as that is meant to be the deprivation of liberty, the most severe penalty. Yet once again a news paper has revealed the dire state of prisons in this country.
The Observer journalists did something that I used to do as a matter of course and indeed used to publicise, they reviewed the reports of inspections and found that three quarters of prisons in England were judged to be unsafe. If they had looked at monitoring reports by the watchdogs who go into prisons every day, as opposed to inspectors who visit once every few years, they would have found the same thing.
Dangerously unsafe prisons matter because they fester with violence, drugs and incivility. Prisons are part of our community and what happens inside seeps out into the wider community when people released from months or years in prison commit more crimes and often more violent crimes. It seeps out when staff are dehumanised by the violence and cruelty that see and that they have to inflict through the capricious disciplinary system that imposes solitary confinement and other punishments in response to unrest, resistance and frustration.
Governments for decades have used the dual mantra of increasing punishment inside prisons and increasing the number of prisons as a populist policy. They know this does not work to make prisons safer and by building more prisons they simply augment the problem, they don’t solve it. It’s the cheapest and nastiest expression of political leadership.
Like motorways or hospitals, the problem of over-use and crowding in prisons will not be solved by trying to build our way out of the chaos. Road traffic has to be curtailed and managed, healthcare has to take place in the community as far as possible, and sanctions for crime have to be based in prevention and the community.
It is disappointing that once again Labour and Conservatives are locked in this dead end competition. The public, and particularly victims of crime, deserve better. If government and opposition are not presenting a different vision, it is welcome that the some of the media are trying to create a different narrative.
Frances Crook
From BBC in February this year:
ReplyDelete"Probation officers play a critical role assessing how much risk criminals pose to us, during the sentencing process, during sentences served in the community, and after someone is released from prison.
Their jobs combine face-to-face meetings with criminals with writing reports and making checks to prevent them descending back into criminality.
The BBC has seen a snapshot of data from an internal Probation Service workload measurement system which monitors daily case numbers and warns if staff are operating beyond their capacity.
The numbers were collected this week and assess workload based on a points system which takes into account the complexity of cases.
In the 12 regions of England and Wales, 10 were operating at over 100% of capacity. Only Wales and the North East Region were just below.
Seven were "showing red" with average scores of more than 110%.
Justice Minister Alex Chalk said in 2021 that "anyone over 110% for a period of four consecutive weeks is deemed to have an excessive workload", adding that there were policies to help staff who meet this threshold.
London is under most pressure at around 127% of its capacity on average, followed by the Yorkshire and Humber and Eastern England regions at 118%.
Our analysis suggests at the moment the data was collected, more than 400 probation officers were working at 160% of their capacity or more, with some over 200%.
A whistleblower told the BBC staff were "burnt out" and "working late every night and weekends".
Another junior probation officer said they had dealt with caseloads "in the high 70s", sometimes seeing up to 12 offenders a day
The Ministry of Justice said "we have taken immediate steps to address the serious issues raised by recent reviews and are investing £155m more every year into probation to improve the supervision of offenders."
So what's changed since February?
As someone who is at 129% on WMT I'd love to know what support is available as I think that is a bigger fairytale than Cinderella
DeleteSadly Labour is going down completely the wrong path and is not going to be any friend of probation. How we miss the likes of Lord Ramsbotham. This from the Independent:-
ReplyDeleteA Labour government would deliver the prison places needed to ensure “dangerous criminals” are behind bars, the shadow justice secretary has said.
Steve Reed accused the Conservatives of failing to build the cells they promised, meaning “our prisons are turning criminals away”.
According to the Government’s own projections, the Labour Party said, the growth of the prison population is set to outpace the supply of prison places.
By this November, the Ministry of Justice projects the number of prisoners will hit 89,100, but there will be only 87,573 operational prison places – leaving a shortage of 1,527 places.
Appearing before the Commons Justice Committee last month, Justice Secretary Alex Chalk acknowledged prison places were under “intense pressure” but insisted there would be enough spaces within the prison system to “keep the British people safe”.
Mr Reed said: “Our prisons are turning criminals away because the Conservatives failed to build the cells they promised.
“The situation has become so chaotic that the Conservative Government has instructed judges not to lock up dangerous criminals, leaving them to roam the streets and seek out new victims.
“To make matters worse, criminals who do end up in jail have been allowed to run riot with violence and drug abuse spiralling out of control, driving up reoffending rates.
“Labour is the party of law and order.
“In Government it will get on and deliver the prison places we need to ensure that dangerous criminals are where they belong – behind bars. That’s how we will prevent crime, punish criminals and protect communities.”
Well blogged.
ReplyDeleteBut will it be a five minute wonder?
A search of today's (8th Aug 2023) Morning Star of the word "probation" returns NIL!
Similar search of Byline Times website - an article from 2020 comes up!
Daily Telegraph - 8th July 2023 - an article with an intriguing headline: -
"Plan foresees bishops looking after ex-convicts with Probation Service: Under proposals drawn up to deter reoffending, a diocese suggests linking up with Ministry of Justice officials releasing prisoners
By
Gabriella Swerling,
SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS EDITOR
8 July 2023 • 7:10pm"
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/07/08/bishops-look-after-ex-convicts-probation-service/
The Times - 5th April 2023 - in an article with an old chestnut : -
""CRIME
Probation service needs men and life experience, says new chief
experience, says new chief
Matt Dathan, Home Affairs Editor
Wednesday April 05 2023, 12.01am, The Times"
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/probation-service-needs-men-and-life-experience-says-new-chief-3flv0gg66
This blog is still VERY much needed -I did not check Napo, Unison, GMB or the Probation Institute websites - but presume if they had issued a press release it would have been picked up by the Times or the Telegraph
I note "A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: "We have hired a record 4,000 probation officers since 2021" "
ReplyDeleteI presume they have also hired a few Probation Service Officers as well - or whatever the latest terminology is for Probation Service Ancillary Officers
From Twitter:-
ReplyDelete"I’m so sick of MoJ quoting crap like: “We have hired a record 4,000 probation officers since 2021”. They never follow this up with how many have left. Just the same old crap: how many PQiPS they were recruiting - like that solved the problem, swapping 15yrs experience for 15m."
I agree with the Twitter comment.
Delete4000 new recruits since 2021 just adds to the problems rather then resolving anything!
How long was the probation officers probationary period when CQSW was a requirement?
'Getafix
From Twitter:-
Delete"It obviously is and we hitting that shit rather consistently! The service has gone it’s not what I joined it for it has lost its identity sold it’s soul and doubt it will ever recover. It’s a target driven culture which new officers accept. The relationship with cases has gone."
From Twitter:-
Delete"As a former NPS employee I don't believe we were a shit show back then. In our area we had somewhat of a manageable caseload and we're on top of it. However, fast forward now, we most definitely are a shit show with cherry on top. Our recruitment and retention rates are a joke..."
"Caseloads are no longer manageable. Staff crying out for help, SPOs not as supportive, it's the blind leading the blind to hit targets, staff morale is at its lowest, pays a joke, but hey whilst SM are fully aware of the issues have a few more cases due to a lack of staff left."
90,000 in gaol
ReplyDeleteHow many of those really *need* to be there to "protect the public" ?
Then there's this :
"To make matters worse, criminals who do end up in jail have been allowed to run riot with violence and drug abuse spiralling out of control, driving up reoffending rates."
To emphasise... "have been allowed"
So who, I wonder, does Reed hold responsible for "allowing" the reoffending rates to soar? Perhaps crappo napo or someone with the opportunity could ask him that question directly. It can *only* mean probation staff, of course. But will he join in kicking the frontline staff in the head or lay the blame squarely on the shoulders of the incompetent, deceitful & woeful 'leaders'???
Um, I submit there have been a number of Labour home/justice secs who readily bend with the wind - Reeds & Straws, m'lud.
Care in the community is now care in custody without the care.
DeleteUnfortunately Civil Service (and Probation Service is very Civil Service now) really don't give a damn about experience. Civil Service wants inexperienced, compliant Workers who above all hit their performance targets without complaining or pushing back.
ReplyDeleteSo true
DeleteI don’t know any PO who isn’t over 110% on WMT. Prison based POs don’t have WMT , where I am based we are 4 POs short. Retaining staff is a big issue. Introducing laptops allowed staff to work additional hours and created a monster with many feeling obliged to work extra to try and get on top. When did we accept this was normal or acceptable? Why are we not striking ? Why do we accept poor pay ? We have less of a voice than we ever did. As for prison officers many are young and look terrified on the wings they often trained by inexperienced staff. When gov calls whole meeting to remind staff they need to lock doors and gates and cells and be able to correctly maintain roll count it is unbelievable and shameful. If the basics are not met how on earth is anything built on that . The system is broken can’t get people moved for progs or expect them to go miles away from home . Very little progression for many and don’t get me started on ipp.
ReplyDeleteIPP (Imprisonment for Public Protection) was scrapped years ago but many individuals sentenced under this law still languish in prison....meanwhile the Government has threatened Judges lest they take a stand on these issues and point out the total and continuing lack of justice for IPP prisoners
ReplyDeleteIn the SE and London my caseload got up to 217% most of my colleagues were between 120% to 210%. My average about 140% to 170%. Utter mad world of brutal management and if anything goes wrong its your fault (PO or PSO). Managers had the empathy of a scorpion
ReplyDeleteThe momentum has been building for some years now but certainly since the coalition of 2010 the uk govt has been acting out & evangelising the worst traits of two worlds well known to probation staff - DV abuser & sexual predator.
ReplyDeleteAusterity, TR, Brexit, Patel, Johnson, Hancock, PPE, Truss, Sunak...
The bullying, gaslighting & grooming of the nation has escalated & accelerated to the point where 30pLee, Deputy Chair of the Tory party, feels able to publicly say that refugees should take a bed on the barge or fuck off back to France; and the justice secretary, when questioned on LBC radio, not only supports that view but states its party policy.
What a country. No healthcare because the NHS has been starved to death, no vaccines for flu or covid, no safe prisons, no effective probation service & no staff, stagflation, negative equity, no industrial base, a collapsing service industry, no meaningful HM Opposition - just a bunch of millionaire spoilt brats living out their fantasies by stoking the fires of hate, bigotry & injustice.
and we are all victims, silenced by our abusers, putting our £1500 treats in our pocket, too frightened to say what's happening to us, colluding with them because they are powerful & will hurt us if we upset them, so we keep quiet & take it.
DeleteThe damage is done. The daily abuse is now regarded as "perfectly normal."
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/lee-anderson-asylum-seekers-bibby-barge-b2389327.html
ReplyDeleteSenior Tories share fury as 20 migrants granted last-minute reprieve following legal challenges
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cxekmgjvpevo
A cabinet minister will face no action by police over a leaflet which asked voters if they wanted a Gypsy and traveller site near them.
The leaflet raised concerns about plans for a site in his Monmouth constituency.
The Conservative MP said he made "no apologies" for raising the issue.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-66444120
There is 24/7 security in place on board the Bibby Stockholm and asylum seekers are issued with ID swipe cards and have to pass through airport-style security scans to get on and off.
Asylum seekers are expected to take a shuttle bus to the port exit for security reasons. There is no curfew, but if they aren't back there will be a "welfare call".
"Many of us entered Britain nine to 11 months ago, by airplane. Some of us applied for asylum at the airport. We did not come by boat," the Afghan man said.