Thursday 14 September 2023

Praise For ROTL

A few days ago the Daily Mail published a photographic undercover piece about a female prisoner on day release (ROTL) from HMP Askham Grange, working a shift at the local McDonald's and returning correctly to the prison. Absolutely nothing unusual or newsworthy about a routine process designed to assist rehabilitation, but intended to stoke negative comment and hysteria from the paper's largely right wing readership. 

Sadly I suspect we can expect loads more of this as we head towards a general election with crime and punishment yet again seen as a promising battleground for attracting votes. Interestingly, it prompted this reflective piece from the politically conservative Spectator, reminding me of the days when crime and punishment was quite rightly not regarded as a political football:-  

Don’t condemn McDonald’s for giving prisoners a day job

In the aftermath of Daniel Khalife’s escape and recapture, prisons are in the headlines. Even the most commonplace events, like a prison stabbing, are being widely reported. So, too, is the revelation that ‘prisoners are working in McDonald’s’: that was the gist of an article in the Daily Mail which revealed that a female prisoner was flipping burger and serving customers. But rather than condemn this initiative, we should praise McDonald’s for taking on inmates and giving them another chance.

The female McDonald’s worker, who returned to Askham Grange in Yorkshire after her shift, is far from alone in being let out for the day: approximately 100,000 Releases on Temporary Licence (ROTLs) occur every three months. These releases mostly take place from Category D or ‘open’ prisons. Open prisons are low security establishments for inmates in the last three years of their sentence who are deemed to pose a minimal risk. They’re also one of the few bright lights in our prison system, which offer genuine opportunities for rehabilitation.

Not every prisoner at an open prison will be eligible for ROTL. Before such a privilege is granted a ‘board’ of senior prison staff will interview the prisoner and further checks must be satisfied. The local police will also be made aware and each prisoner’s licence will carry specific conditions which must not be breached.

Prisoners may be allowed out to attend a local college or university, spend time re-establishing family ties or to work for local employers. Release for work purposes represents about two-thirds of all ROTLs. Prisoners recognise that ROTL is a great privilege, and know a breach of conditions will probably mean being returned to a closed prison for the rest of their sentence. As a result the failure rate of ROTLs is just 0.2 per cent.

Prisoners working via ROTL often perform difficult and unpleasant jobs which employers struggle to recruit for. While I was serving time at HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison on the Suffolk coast, large numbers of prisoners left each day to work in local slaughterhouses, kitchens and warehouses. They worked hard, long hours, rather than wasting their sentence staring at a cell’s walls.

Each ROTL worker pays tax and NI on their income, just as anyone else would. On top of that they pay a further portion (typically 40 per cent) of their net income to the Victim Surcharge fund, compensating victims. These prisoners also have to pay for their own travel to and from work, and fund their own food when they are absent from the prison during meal times. Taxpayers and victims are better off as a result.

More importantly we know, as the Ministry of Justice points out, that having ‘a job on release helps to support people leaving prison rebuild their lives, reducing reoffending and preventing future victims of crime’. The MOJ’s analysis suggests that prisoners who have any work at all in the year after release are between 5 per cent and 10 cent less likely to reoffend.

Prisoners typically either save what income they have remaining or send it to their families. As a result, when they leave prison they are more likely to be able to afford to live and have a supportive family to rejoin. Matthew, a former prisoner I spoke to who asked for his name to be changed, told me:
‘During the last 18 months of my sentence I worked via…ROTL…the wages that I earned enabled me to pay back my victims using the 40 per cent levy prisoners have to pay out of their wages and…I was able to support my wife and daughter who financially struggled due to me being incarcerated.’
Employers too are full of praise. James Timpson, chief executive of Timpson Group, speaks highly of the scheme:
‘ROTL is a fantastic route to long term employment for prison leavers, and for us at Timpson leads to an 85 per cent success rate. We have over 100 colleagues today leaving their cells and working in our business, and they are very valued colleagues, treated the same as everyone else.’
Many prisoners also use ROTL to get meaningful qualifications at colleges or universities. This access to education can transform lives. Jerry, whose name has been changed, left school at 16. In his mid-30s he was sentenced to five years in prison. At an open prison and with two years left to serve he applied successfully for a degree at a local university. Jerry said this ‘allowed me to develop my skills, rebuild my discipline and focus after years behind a cell door, and taught me commitment. I also met my employer through the university which led me to a new career path and a positive future after prison.’

Jerry now works full-time for that employer, and is aiming to finish the final year of his degree. A man who thought his life was over is now a hard-working, taxpaying member of society.

It’s harder to measure, but I’ve seen work on ROTL transform attitudes too. At Hollesley Bay, many of my fellow prisoners had never worked in an honest job. For decades they’d lived with the knowledge that if, or when the police caught up with them all their money would be forfeit as proceeds of crime. Earning honest, taxed wages showed them another path, to money that was really theirs.

Instead of being shocked that employers like McDonald’s are helping prisoners to reform and rebuild their lives we should applaud them.

David Shipley is a film producer who served time in HMP Wandsworth for fraud

33 comments:

  1. I think David Shipley is Chris Atkins who has written a new book on why offenders re-offend called Time After Time. It's quite critical of Probation and is a bit overgeneralised, but there's a lot of things that resonate.

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    1. Although behind a paywall, I think this further article from the Spectator confirms this:- https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/whos-really-to-blame-for-the-wandsworth-jailbreak/

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    2. Those of us of a certain age might remember PRES.
      Pre release employment scheme, where many closed and Cat B prisons had a hostel or a designated area on the prison grounds where longer term prisoners were allowed to go to work in the community each day as part of their reintegration process.
      Wormwood Scrubs was built with much prison labour, with prisoners being released from Brixton each day to attend that work.
      North Sea Camp was built on reclaimed land that was reclaimed by prisoners that camped on site after the governor of Stafford prison marched them their on foot.
      Reintegration, giving someone a stake in society, allowing them to experience and explore their own possibilities and potential, and allowing them to interact with people who have a completely different understanding of society then their usual peer group can only be a very positive thing.
      You don't rehabilitate people by just assessing their risk and keeping their OASyS up to date.
      You have to invest in them, help them grow themselves, create opportunities where they can discover different routes through life, and above all you have to try and give them a stake and a sense of worth in the community they live in.
      The whole concept of rehabilitation has been distorted if not lost in recent years, but if offenders are not being afforded the opportunities to rehabilitate and provided the tools necessary, then everybody's time is being wasted.
      Three cheers for Timpsons, Maccy D's, and all the others that understand that.

      'Getafix

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    3. Yes 'Getafix, am indeed of that age and recall the PRES hostel just beyond the perimeter wall at HMP Wakefield.

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    4. Brixton, Scrubs, Nottingham, Hull, Bristol, they all seemed to have a PRES.
      Another great and forgotten loss to the CJS.

      'Getafix

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    5. BBC news: "Atkins, who spent nine months in Wandsworth for tax fraud, told BBC Radio 5 Live that the escape was waiting to happen."

      Same article: "David Shipley, another former inmate and now a prison reform campaigner, questioned why Mr Khalife was allowed to work in the kitchens."

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    6. MSN: "Chris Atkins, who was an inmate seven years ago, told the outlet that the prison has "nowhere near enough resources" and there are "far too few officers with very little training."...David Shipley, an ex-inmate of Wandsworth and film producer who was imprisoned between February 2020 and December 2020 for fraud, corroborated Atkins' claims"

      Hmmm, both 'Atkins' & 'Shipley' were serving time for fraud... could they also be alter-egos of the mysterious Michael Green, Corinne Stockheath or Sebastian Fox, aka Grant Shapps?

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  2. When are the three unions going to visit offices to rally current members and recruit new members ?

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    1. Hahahahahahaha brilliant

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    2. Are you a member of a Union? If you are, start recruting in your own workplace. If not, dont wait for someone, just join and then start recruiting others.

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  3. This would be a great idea - be good to have more Reps to do this - hard to cover large areas when limited number of reps

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    1. Napo is badly run poorly managed a d under Lawrence has become a trench of toxic self promoting no marks. It cannot achieve.

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  4. Danny Shaw on whatever musk calls it:

    Meanwhile… the prison population pressures continue…

    Today’s figures show:

    87,423 prisoners in England/Wales

    That’s up 295 in 7 days

    There are only 799 spare places across entire prison estate.

    With courts working at “full throttle” it means the pressure is intensifying
    _______________________________________________

    100,000 isn't that far away - "The latest prison population projections were released in February 2023 and project a rise to 94,400 prisoners by March 2025 and between 93,100 and 106,300 by March 2027."

    Here's a gem from the tory govt in 2013 using stats to lay the blame squarely at Labour's door - and they might have a point:

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/218185/story-prison-population.pdf

    "Between June 1993 and June 2012 the prison population in England and Wales increased by 41,800 prisoners to over 86,000"

    "The sentenced population increased after 1993 because the courts sentenced more offenders to prison each year between 1993 and 2002..."

    "From 1999 to 2011, the average time served in prison increased from 8.1 to 9.5 months... This was due to an increase in the average custodial determinate sentence length handed down by the courts between 2000 and 2005, and a decline in the parole release rate from 2006/07"

    And a more recent piece of work for HoC library:

    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN04334/SN04334.pdf

    "According to the Eurostat data, England and Wales had 144 prisoners per 100,000 head of population, the 8th highest rate among EU countries and the highest amongst western European jurisdictions."

    "The Ministry of Justice has several different methods of estimating the average cost per prisoner [no surprise there!]. The 2021-22 figures show that in England and
    Wales:
    • The average direct cost per prisoner in was £31,476 but taking into account all resource expenditure the overall cost per prisoner was £47,434."

    "As at the end of June 2023, the most frequent length of determinate sentence being served was ‘4 years or more’. 14 Around 56% of the sentenced population were serving this length of sentence. About a quarter of prisoners (23%) were serving sentences ranging between 1-4 years and around 15% were serving indeterminate sentences."

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    1. https://insidetime.org/ipp-jump-in-recalls-where-no-new-offence-committed/

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    2. Because in the first place they’re being released to quickly due to political pressure instead of being ready for release.

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    3. Arguing to incarcerate what an idiot. People need to released and managed through supportive opportunity. Works money home responsibility value. You can fu88 off keep them in

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  5. And they're off... the race to recruit has begun:

    "PCSOs deal with a wide range of crime and disorder problems. PCSOs share some, but not all of the powers of police officers... SFJ Awards Level 4 Diploma in Community Policing Practice... The level 4 diploma will be delivered and assessed through a mixture of taught blocks, supported in area tutor phase and operational deployment, over a twelve month period... The qualification provides PCSOs with the knowledge, skills and competence to undertake the role of Police Community Support Officer. In the future this experience could also be used to mentor and train new PCSOs... Starting Salary £23,289"

    Andrea Albutt on news today: "we're competing with the police & the border force agency for staff, but we're not offering anything like the same terms & conditions, salaries or career prospects"

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  6. What would it take for probation POs and PSOs ie those who actually deliver the work, to be valued?

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    1. Nps have thousand staff off. They are partly privatised bow by using a private company to manage all HR function. You are kusta number on a payroll . If you don't get it your lacking in assesment skills. They number you so as to delete you as soon as you get unwell . If your absent they formalise you chase you and threaten you. Then your made to feel worse and fearful. They bully you back or to resign . They are a tier of self elitists the rest of us fodder. No one is going to value staff ever again.

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    2. They’ll be “valued” when they stop waiting for others to value them.

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  7. 08.48 one way for them to be valued would be for them to value themselves and stop working for nothing. I know of colleagues who work up to twenty hours per week in excess of their contracts for free. Not even cheap Labour, free Labour!

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    1. Probation staff are valued. Their value is to provide their labour for an average wage. Excessive workloads, stress, pressure and unpaid overtime are part of the job. Bullying, harassment, scapegoating, scaremongering and JFDI are part of the culture. To the Probation Service this is all staff value will ever be.

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  8. This seems to be an emerging problem, colleagues working well over contracted hours to “prove” themselves. This then places unintended consequences for colleagues trying to work to contracted hours. This situation suits management just fine. I am of the latter group and I will not work beyond contracted hours unless it is to benefit service users or colleagues. It is too simplistic to judge the former group, especially if they are early in their career. The divide is a challenge and without a senior management who really, really want their staff to have a healthy work life balance, they will exploit this. I can only speak for my lived experience in the North East where this is widespread but neither group is fully in the right as all of our personal circumstances are different. It is the callousness of the new managarism that is our foe, not each other. Sadly it appears that the bulk of the newly qualified POs that suffer most in the current climate would have thrived under the advise, assist and befriend era, but sadly they are the ones we are losing. At this rate we will only need data imputters, but maybe that’s the intention.

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  9. There's an interesting book on Probation from a former director of it in the U.S: 'Mass Supervision: Probation, Parole, and the Illusion of Safety and Freedom'
    by Vincent Schiraldi

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  10. Praise for Russell

    "a crowd of 2,000 of his fans were at the Troubadour Wembley Park Theatre... the 48-year-old had been accused of rape, sexual assaults and emotional abuse in a joint investigation by the Sunday Times, the Times and Channel 4's Dispatches... Brand walked on-stage to the track "You Don't Own Me", a 1960s feminist anthem performed by American singer-songwriter Lesley Gore... he forged ahead and the show ended with a standing ovation lasting a few minutes... Brand's fans could be heard expressing their hatred of the mainstream media, using language that is unpublishable here..."

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-66835222

    If only it were so simple.

    There are consequences to our behaviours; usually for other people in the cases of charismatic, deluded narcissists (not that they'd know or care about that).

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  11. https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.theguardian.com/society/2023/sep/16/staff-shortages-prison-deaths-coroners-inquests-suicide?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQIUAKwASCAAgM%3D#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16949404255782&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theguardian.com%2Fsociety%2F2023%2Fsep%2F16%2Fstaff-shortages-prison-deaths-coroners-inquests-suicide

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  12. 16.47 - Yes I am a union member and an ex rep who resigned as a rep aprox 5 years ago. I resigned over the very issue that i highlight - the unions do not do enough to recruit new members in offices when numbers are dwindling, they cannot get anything over the line, powers of persuasion do not work with this employer(s) I pointed this out for years at branch meetings and eventually walked out.

    Have you ever heard the phrase ' A union is only as good as its members ? ' well it is ( its easy to be Mick Lynch ) but this only works if you have sufficient membership in the first place, we don't and the unions know this.

    I am not talking a few months or a few years, it has been a serious long time since I seen any union official in our offices, yet the place is awash with new staff, none of them a union member.

    I read this blog regularly and I have come to the conclusion that nothing, i repeat nothing will change in regards to pay, conditions, terms, culture, profession until we are in a position to be ' stronger together' and get the basics right.i.e. enough of us for them to take any notice.
    and if you think they will, well i am sorry.
    If Jim allows, I will keep publishing my plea, maybe you could join me ? and to 12.18 more members mean more reps mean more facility time mean more ability to push for positive change ?

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  13. "I felt we had collectively failed to respond adequately to every major challenge of the past 15 years. I realised this most starkly when I understood that many of my colleagues still did not know what a customs union was two and a half years after the Brexit votes. Many of the political decisions I had witnessed were rushed, flaky and poorly considered: the cuts to the military paired with the purchase of ruinously expensive aircraft carriers, the lurches in health policy, the privatisation of the probation services. The lack of mature judgment was palpable, the consequences frequently terrible. But to put an egotistical chancer like Boris Johnson into the heart of a system that was already losing its dignity, restraint and seriousness, was to invite catastrophe."

    A round of applause for anyone who can identify who said this.

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  14. Here's another clue as to the identity of our mystery warbler:

    " I had discovered how grotesquely unqualified so many of us, including myself, were for the offices we were given. (I held five different ministerial portfolios in just over three years and was put in charge of all the prisons in England and Wales knowing nothing about prisons, the Prison Service, the law or probation.) It was a culture that prized campaigning over careful governing, opinion polls over detailed policy debates, announcements over implementation."

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    1. Rory Stewart

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    2. I trust you could hear the audience's appreciation.

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    3. worth a read

      https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/sep/16/rory-stewart-tory-mp-decade-incompetent

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  15. Oh how I wished I'd discovered this quote from Iain Banks' The Quarry earlier in my life:

    “I’m not arguing there are no decent people in the Tory party but they're like sweetcorn in a turd; technically they kept their integrity but they're still embedded in shit”

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