Fortunately Napo Cymru has provided the roadmap in the form of their Motion 18 and thanks must go to the reader in Wales for sending me the following, recently circulated to all Napo members in Wales:-
This is for Wales, but it is about the whole of Probation in England and Wales. Devolution away from Westminster can be and should be achieved in England too. I plead with my English Napo colleagues to get this motion well up the order paper for conference: solidarity with your Welsh comrades, who have a route map out of the nightmare that is Probation in HMPPS, and who might well then pave the way for the rest of the service, so two good reasons for English Napo members to vote for this motion to be heard at AGM.
Members can vote for 7 motions, so this doesn't have to eclipse other important debates, but this really ought to be one of them.
The motion itself is a short history of a heck of a lot of campaigning: the text is below and we could write a chapter on each of the bullet points about the work done, over years, under each heading.
So please, Napo members in England and Wales, get on the Napo website, go to the AGM page and when you vote for motions to be heard at AGM, put an x in the box for Motion number 18 as one of your choices:-
18. Out of Westminster, out of the Civil Service, separate from Prisons: Probation in Wales can show a better way
Conference notes:
Proposer: Napo Cymru
This is for Wales, but it is about the whole of Probation in England and Wales. Devolution away from Westminster can be and should be achieved in England too. I plead with my English Napo colleagues to get this motion well up the order paper for conference: solidarity with your Welsh comrades, who have a route map out of the nightmare that is Probation in HMPPS, and who might well then pave the way for the rest of the service, so two good reasons for English Napo members to vote for this motion to be heard at AGM.
Members can vote for 7 motions, so this doesn't have to eclipse other important debates, but this really ought to be one of them.
The motion itself is a short history of a heck of a lot of campaigning: the text is below and we could write a chapter on each of the bullet points about the work done, over years, under each heading.
So please, Napo members in England and Wales, get on the Napo website, go to the AGM page and when you vote for motions to be heard at AGM, put an x in the box for Motion number 18 as one of your choices:-
18. Out of Westminster, out of the Civil Service, separate from Prisons: Probation in Wales can show a better way
Conference notes:
- the Thomas Report (Commission on Justice in Wales) recommends the devolution of justice;
- the Gordon Brown Report to UK Labour “A New Britain” specifically recommends the devolution of Probation and Youth Justice;
- First Minister Mark Drakeford, addressing Napo Cymru recently, said “this is for real”: concrete practical planning is underway, but the necessary legislation must be passed by a UK government;
- the insistence of Welsh Ministers Mark Drakeford, Jane Hutt, Mick Antoniw on collaboration with Justice Unions;
- the work of the Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice (WCCSJ), specifically its Probation Development Group, and its collaboration with Napo Cymru;
- Napo Cymru has worked with WCCSJ, Justice Unions and Welsh Minsters to establish the need to remove Probation from the Civil Service and uncouple Probation from the Prison Service;
- the argument for the devolution of Probation has been won in Wales, but must be passed by a UK government to proceed.
Proposer: Napo Cymru
--oo00oo--
It's worth noting that the campaign to influence an incoming Labour Administration at the general election is assisted by the following composited motion endorsed at the TUC conference last week:-
Received from: NAPO, POA
Motion 66 with amendment and 67
Congress recognises that in society there needs to be a criminal justice system that is fair, accessible and decent for all the public. Since 2010 the whole criminal justice system has fallen into disrepute whether it be access to legal aid, or a right to a fair trial. Congress also notes that for 13 years there has been major cuts to the Prison service, Policing, and Courts system
Congress is seriously alarmed at the continuing lack of effective investment in the Probation Service since its reunification into state control in 2021.
There is increasing evidence to demonstrate the disastrous impact of this scandalous situation by way of:
- Unsustainable workloads and unfilled vacancy rates, meaning that it is not uncommon for practitioners to be holding case allocations of anywhere between 101-200% against recognised capacity.
- Service delivery, as evidenced by the cancellation of specialised programmes for those convicted of sexual offences and a huge backlog of clients awaiting placement on Community Service projects.
- Public safety, where numerous reports from His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation have been critical of Probation Senior Management for not implementing past lessons and failing to develop systems that will create safe workloads and assist practitioners in protecting our communities to the standards expected.
Closures of courts throughout England and Wales has seen a major backlog of trials; Wales has seen a major backlog of trials; cuts to the Prison Service has seen a demise in rehabilitation with overcrowding now the norm and we are still seeing unacceptably high levels of assaults on prison officers and staff across the justice, immigration and custodial sector – with well over seven thousand incidents in the last twelve months.
The above issues, which are the subject of a joint probation unions campaign known as ‘Operation Protect’, are compounded by the proposed One HMPPS’ restructuring programme and its threats to jobs.
Congress seeks public support from the General Council for ‘Operation Protect’, and for the GC to lobby the Official HM Opposition to clearly map out their future plans to restore Probation into a gold standard service within the wider Criminal Justice System.
Congress recognises that there is an urgent need for a root and branch review of the whole criminal justice system from policing to prisons our court system and probation service with emphasis on creating a justice system that is fully funded with improved terms and conditions so that we have a system that is fair, accessible and decent for all.
Conference therefore instructs the general council to campaign for a Royal Commission with all political parties so that these aims and objectives can be met.
Mover: POA
Seconder: NAPO
Supporter: Community
Good to see some solid campaigning. I wonder if Wales will pull it off, and what shape a probation service in Wales would look like.
ReplyDeleteSeeing as all of the horses are now many, many furlongs away from their stables:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.gov.uk/government/publications/escape-and-abscond-policy-frameworks
Wonder what this onehmpps career civil servant thinks about Wales' motion?
Chris Jennings
Executive Director HMPPS Wales & Public Protection
Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Chris took up the role of Executive Director Wales for HM Prison and Probation Service in April 2019.
Ministry of Justice UK
Executive Director HMPPS Wales & Public Protection
Feb 2019 - Present
Interim Director
West of England Combined Authority
Feb 2017 - Feb 2019
(The Combined Authority was set up in 2017 to make decisions and investments that benefit people living and working in Bath and North East Somerset, Bristol and South Gloucestershire.)
Ministry of Justice UK
Deputy Director, HMCTS
Feb 2013 - Feb 2017
Deputy Director, Crime HMCTS
Aug 2011 - Feb 2013
Wales is in the best position, First Minister is a former PO, so at least some understanding politically of Probation, I hope. This looks really positive and wishing them success.
ReplyDelete" will not and cannot be fixed".
DeleteThat's the brutal truth in my opinion.
Probation has become far too polluted by years of political interference, privatisation and prison service dominance to be saved. Couple that pollution with the exodus of experienced staff, the lowering of entry criteria, and the large influx of new staff that are being selected and trained to fit the current delivery model then I really can't see how a fix is possible.
Probation needs to be regrown from scratch/ resurrected.
As for motions that would have a significant impact both on probation, prisons, courts and all across the CJS, I'd suggest the removal of the 12mth and under from the compulsory 12mth probation supervision period.
That was part of the TR debacle, its created a merry go round that grows bigger and faster all the time, costs more and more money, resource draining, and achieves absolutely diddly squat for anyone.
'Getafix
There is NO will to fix it, except by a handful of 'dreamers' who think 'probation' is a concept that can be retrieved, like a stick thrown for a labrador.
DeleteThe fuckers intentionally & wilfully broke it.
It was done with political malice aforethought.
And it was done in a manner which made it an irretrievable concept.
The ONLY option is for a new government to be prepared to dismantle & redefine the Ministry of Justice from top to bottom; for a Justice Minister to feel able to decouple the current understanding of probation from public protection. It was easy to incorporate it; but now try to argue it back again.
Not a fucking chance. Not in a country that is febrile, & volatile with a tetchy polarised media quick to respond with pile-ons. The first PO to 'get it wrong' would - metaphorically or otherwise - be publicly lynched by the mob.
The moment has passed. For now.
If Wales can make a start, good on 'em, BUT... Westmonster won't allow it, regardless of the colour of the flag flying above the HoC.
I think the realistic option for the next decade or so is the growth of a new organisation from scratch in the voluntary sector, something that can morph into a 'new probation service' in the late 2030's (if we're all still here).
As Roaring Stewrat says about government: "I had discovered how grotesquely unqualified so many of us, including myself, were for the offices we were given."
That aint gonna change.
Actually I think Wales could pull it off. Devolution of the probation service from the civil service wouldn’t be fixing probation, more an opportunity to realign and restart it as what it should be.
DeleteMr Splinterpants has finally climbed off the fence as he prepares to leave:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/media/press-releases/2023/09/annual-report-2022-2023/
"The outgoing Chief Inspector of Probation, Justin Russell, is calling for an independent review of whether the Probation Service should return to local control, two years on from unification into a national service."
"Probation is, and always has been, a locally delivered service, working with local partners like the police, children’s services, and NHS trusts."
"My main concern is public protection, which has been a consistently weak area for probation in my four years as chief inspector and has become worse since unification...
51% of police domestic abuse checks had not been completed where required
48% of safeguarding checks with local children’s services were not completed
58% of home visits were not undertaken where we felt they should have been."
"Ratings: The results of these 31 inspections have been disappointing:
only one PDU (South Tyneside and Gateshead) was rated as ‘Good’
15 PDUs were rated as ‘Requires improvement’ and 15 rated as ‘Inadequate’
the average (mean) score of these inspections was five out of a possible 27."
AND FINALLY, HE'S ACTUALLY SAID IT...
"Only one PDU was rated ‘Good’ on our leadership standard and 13 PDUs were rated as ‘Inadequate’ on our services standard – with a strong correlation between these 13 and the services rated ‘Inadequate’. "
full report here
ReplyDeletehttps://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2023/09/2022-2023-HMIP-Probation-Annual-Report-v1.0.pdf