Friday, 6 October 2023

More On Prison Crisis 3

I'm going to resist saying much about the extraordinary Conservative party conference we've all had to witness, safe in the knowledge that both the current Prime Minister and his really nasty party will be swept aside next year, along with all the bullshit policies he announced on Wednesday. I'll leave it to plain-speaking James Mitchinson, editor of the Yorkshire Post and as quoted on Twitter:-
"13 years. 13 years of being robbed. Apparently, we need change. And Rishi is the man to lead that change. Shut up. Go away. You’ve snatched away our only chance. You posh, privileged, rich, disconnected egotist."

Meanwhile, here we have the Howard League's take on the barking idea of exporting our prison capacity problem:-  

Renting prison cells overseas

Broken promises. Embarrassing delays. Spiralling costs. A colossal planning failure that will hold the country back.

Most of the headlines from the Conservative party conference have been about HS2, but these stinging criticisms better describe the mess that the government has got itself into with prison overcrowding. The last three decades have seen many desperate and disastrous excuses for prisons policy, but Alex Chalk’s announcement that ministers are planning to rent cells abroad represents a new low.

How did we get here? Last Friday (29 September), there were 87,793 people in prison in England and Wales, and the number keeps rising. In March 2021, the population stood at 78,058; the government’s own projections indicate that it could climb to as high as 106,300 by March 2027 – that would be a 36 per cent increase in six years.

Already, the system is bursting at the seams. Official figures show that 77 of the 120 prisons – almost two-thirds – are holding more people than they were designed to accommodate. In the past year, two severely overcrowded prisons – Exeter and Bristol – have been issued with urgent notifications by HM Inspectorate of Prisons, requiring the Secretary of State to respond within 28 days with an action plan for improvement. A recent escape from Wandsworth prison in London shed light on the fact that it was holding more than 1,600 men when it only had room for 950.

The number of people in prison on remand – awaiting trial or sentence – is at its highest level for at least 50 years. Ministers’ meddling, which for a time included restricting moves to open prisons, has left people languishing in the system. Almost 3,000 people remain in prison on IPP sentences, which were abolished more than a decade ago (but not retrospectively). Probation services are overburdened and under-resourced, and too often people released from prison find themselves being recalled to custody. All while sentences continue to get longer and longer.

And the government’s attempt to build its way out of this crisis – at a time when there are insufficient staff to run the prisons we already have – has failed miserably. Hundreds of police cells have been handed to the prison service to create more space. Five Wells prison, which opened last year, is already attracting negative headlines. Problems in prisons spill out into the towns and cities around them, and, perhaps understandably, many people do not want new jails built on their doorsteps. As planning inquiries linger on, and the flow from the courts gets faster, ministers have resorted to Plan Z.

Renting cells abroad is not new, although we have only seen such arrangements in a handful of places. In the last decade or so, both Norway and Belgium have for a period rented prison cells from the Netherlands. Denmark is currently seeking to transfer some prisoners to Kosovo. But these are not simple arrangements and the governments involved have faced many practical problems – for example, ensuring that staff from the ’home’ nation are transferred along with prisoners, or in ensuring that relevant domestic legislation applies on foreign soil. Tellingly, both the Norwegian and Belgian experiments only lasted a few years before being quietly dismantled.

This will not stand. Here are some of the questions that the government must answer urgently:

How many cells are to be rented?

On Friday 29 September, the prison population in England and Wales stood at 87,793. According to the Ministry of Justice’s own measure of safe and decent accommodation, it ought to be no higher than 78,568. ‘Doubling up’ – requiring two people to share a cell designed for one – has become the norm in many prisons.

Where will they be?

In his conference speech, Alex Chalk said that the government was in discussions with European countries. The Times has reported that one of these countries is understood to be Estonia. In May, the Ministry of Justice announced that it had signed a “groundbreaking” prisoner transfer deal with Albania.

Who will be sent there and how will people visit them?

Many people in prison and their families will be anxious about this announcement. The government must provide more detail about who might be affected. The charity Prisoners Abroad, which supports British prisoners held overseas, has criticised the government’s proposal and spoken about the “isolation and trauma” that people experience when “imprisoned so far away from home and family, not understanding the language and being excluded from opportunities to work and participate in effective rehabilitation programmes”.

When will this happen?

It is understood that new legislation will be included in next month’s King’s Speech to allow for the transfer of people in prison to overseas jails. When does the government intend for transfers to begin? And for how long? There was a time when ministers would promise to replace crumbling Victorian jails with new prisons, only to find that they had to keep the old jails open because the population rose during the construction phase. Few politicians make those promises today; if overseas cells are rented, there must be concern that the arrangement will carry on indefinitely.

How much will it cost?

The government’s prison-building programme is already costing £4billion that would be better invested in hospitals, schools and other public services. Transfers to prisons abroad will only add to this colossal burden on the taxpayer.

What safeguards will be in place?

Most prisons in England and Wales are struggling with staff shortages, so it seems safe to assume that the rented cells will be staffed, at least in part, by officers trained in the host country. Such an arrangement is unlikely to be without challenges, and the prisons will have to be inspected regularly. This will have knock-on implications for the prison watchdogs. HM Inspectorate of Prisons already carries out overseas inspections as part of its work in immigration facilities. But independent monitoring boards (IMBs) – the teams of volunteers that visit prisons more frequently – also play an important role as eyes and ears on the ground. Could we see the creation of an IMB in Tallinn or Tirana?

Clearly, this list is not exhaustive. Perhaps the most important question is this – what will it take for politicians to change course and recognise that we must take sensible steps to reduce the prison population? As the criminal justice system grows larger and larger, even extending its tentacles overseas, so do the problems that we all have to solve.

Andrea Coomber

18 comments:

  1. If the Bahamas and the Maldives are on the list, then I can’t wait to do Prison visits. That’ll be an 8000+ mile return journey with an average cost of £2000 on probation expenses.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "In May, the Ministry of Justice announced that it had signed a “groundbreaking” prisoner transfer deal with Albania."

    Revenge politics? Or have tories promised Albania a shitload of UK taxpayer cash?

    https://news.sky.com/story/singling-out-albanian-migrants-very-disgraceful-moment-in-british-politics-says-countrys-pm-edi-rama-12840659

    ReplyDelete
  3. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-and-albania-agree-groundbreaking-new-arrangement-on-prisoner-transfers

    The total cost of the deal for the MOJ is expected to be in the region of £8 million over 2 years, equating to £32 per prisoner per day, compared to £109 per day to house them in prisons in England and Wales. Home Office funding of around £4.4 million will also support the arrangement.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No room at the Inn in Scotland either.

      https://www-bbc-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-67004354.amp?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQIUAKwASCAAgM%3D#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16965788727625&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com

      Delete
    2. Scotland's prison population could hit an all-time high of 8,700 inmates, BBC Scotland News has learned. The number of prisoners is rising after falling during the pandemic. The previous high was 8,300 in 2019 but officials have predicted it could reach unprecedented levels next year.

      The Scottish government has not confirmed or denied the projection and said it was trying to get the prison population down. The rise is driven by increases in prisoners starting their sentences and increases in those being held on remand before trial.

      Other factors contributing to the rise include more members of serious organised groups being caught and receiving long sentences and a rise in the number of individuals convicted of violent and sexual offences.

      The chief inspector of prisons, Wendy Sinclair-Gieben, said she was aware of the 8,700 figure. "I was shocked when I heard that," she said. "We seriously have to think about how we treat justice in Scotland if we incarcerate so many people. The system can't cope with the numbers where they are now. We'll see an increase in self-harm, we'll see an increase in violence and more to the point, we'll see an increase in recidivism."

      Delete
  4. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/estonia-prisoner-pack/information-pack-for-british-prisoners-in-estonia

    Prison: conditions and daily life

    Prison conditions are generally good in Estonia. The following information refers to a remand prison:
    Accommodation

    Sentenced prisoners and those on remand are held in separate facilities. Persons on remand are suspected (but not sentenced) of having committed a crime. He/she is not yet sentenced and should be considered as innocent until proven guilty. Prisoners might have to share cells with another inmate during busy periods. Cells are approximately 10 square meters, and most have a private toilet. Bedlinen and towels are provided.
    Food and diet

    Cooked meals are served every day. If you are a vegetarian, allergic or unable to eat certain foods due to religious beliefs you have the right to ask for food that you can eat. Clean drinking tap water is available in the prisons.
    Hygiene

    You will receive bedclothes, towels and hygiene products. The detention centre’s staff can also offer you clothes and shoes. Laundry is to be changed regularly. You are responsible for keeping your room in order.
    Work and study

    You might be able to work while on remand. What kind of work you can do depends on whether you are allowed contact with other prisoners, and whether you are on restrictions. Sentenced prisoners have the possibility to study while in prison.
    Contact and languages

    Some of the prison guards usually speak good English. Contact with other inmates will be allowed unless the Prosecutor has decided otherwise (restrictions). You are allowed to listen to the radio, watch TV and read daily newspapers at the detention centre unless the prosecutor has decided otherwise. You can buy newspapers at the kiosk and borrow books from the book trolley or the library. You can request local language materials through the post from Prisoners Abroad (including language textbooks and dictionaries).
    Exercise

    You have the right to spend time in the detention centre’s exercise yard for at least one hour every day if there are no special reasons against you doing so
    Climate

    In Estonia the winters are long and quite cold, and summer temperatures are similar to those in England.

    Glossary of terms

    Useful legal terms
    English Estonian
    Kinnipeetav a prisoner
    Arestialune a detained person
    Vahistatu a person in custody
    Lühiajaline kokkusaamine short-term visit
    Telefonikõne telephone call

    ReplyDelete
  5. "The British government has been in discussion with various European countries on the possibility of renting out surplus prison cell spaces, Secretary of State for Justice Alex Chalk, who visited Estonia in the summer, told the Conservative Party conference taking place in Manchester this week.

    This would entail a legislative change in England and Wales, to enable prisoners to serve terms outside of the U.K.

    Rait Kuuse, the Ministry of Justice undersecretary for prisons told ERR's Russian-language news that the rental option in other countries such as Estonia would run in parallel to new prison construction in Britain.

    Kuuse noted that the number of inmates in Estonia is falling, while cell occupancy rates are already among the lowest in the EU."

    https://news.err.ee/1609121837/uk-investigating-possibility-of-moving-inmates-to-estonian-prisons

    ReplyDelete
  6. https://rm.coe.int/09000016809e44ac

    The UK prison system is in deep crisis, says European anti-torture committee

    Strasbourg, 30.04.2020 – The United Kingdom’s prison system is in deep crisis, according to a report published today by the Council of Europe’s Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) following a targeted visit to the country in May 2019.(see executive summary)

    The CPT delegation found that the three male prisons visited (Doncaster, Liverpool and Wormwood Scrubs) were violent, unsafe and overcrowded, with many inmates enduring limited regimes and/or long periods of segregation. A similar state of affairs was found in the Feltham A and Cookham Wood young offender institutions.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Responding to the nonsense just not allow organisations like the Howard league justify their existence but effectively wastes resources, especially time and energy from folk developing more creative schemes like probation workers were allowed and able to do in their localities early in my era (1973-2003)

    ReplyDelete
  8. June 2023, Hansard:

    Andy Slaughter
    (Hammersmith) (Lab)

    If the Secretary of State were doing a good job of returning foreign prisoners, we would expect to see overcrowding coming down, but on a recent visit to Wormwood Scrubs prison I found, increasingly, that two people were occupying a one-person cell without a shielded toilet, and that time out of cell was between one and two hours a day. If the Secretary of State is proud of his record, will he collect and publish those statistics? At the moment, his Department is refusing even to collect the time out of cell figures.


    The Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice
    (Alex Chalk)

    Those statistics are not published, but I thank the hon. Gentleman for going to HMP Wormwood Scrubs, because I think it is important for Members to visit prisons.

    When it comes to the additional numbers in custody, the key element is the number of people on remand, which, as I have said, has risen by between 4,500 and 5,000 since the period before the pandemic. That is important, not only because those people have not necessarily been convicted of any crime and all Members should have some concerns about people being in custody for a long period, but because some have been recalled. Of course we will work to drive down the number of foreign national offenders, but, as I have said, the principal issue that we are facing at present is that of remand prisoners.


    Interesting that chalk regards those subject to recall as 'people on remand'. Surely, if they've been recalled, they were convicted & subject to a prison sentence at some point?

    Incidentally, wasn't there recently some hmpps diktat that no-one should publicly use the term 'people on probation'? Or is 'people on remand' okay because they're the unconvicted prison population?

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

    June 2023 - nationality of prisoners

    uk nationals 75,181
    foreign nationals 10,321
    not recorded 349

    "the key element is the number of people on remand" - Really?

    TOTAL @30 JUNE 2023 = 85,851
    PEOPLE ON REMAND @30 JUNE 2023: = 15,523
    Approx 18% of the prison population

    Aug 2009
    Total prison pop = 84,179
    Remand Pop = 13,348
    Approx 16%

    Aug 2010
    Total prison pop = 85,173
    Remand pop = 13,028
    Approx 15%

    June 2019
    Total prison pop = 82,710
    Remand pop = 9,145
    Approx 11%

    TOTAL @6 OCT 2023: 88,016
    There are no current figures for people on remand (unless I'm looking in the wrong place)

    https://data.justice.gov.uk/prisons/offender-management

    ReplyDelete
  9. We have prison officers now being recruited at 18 years old. Old enough to patrol the landings of prisons they would be too young to be incarcerated in if they were offenders.
    We have offenders filling up prisons because they're caught up in a constant cycle of release and recall.
    The whole system is broken and the best answer our government can come up with is to send prisoners abroad to be locked up.
    At some point they'll need to start thinking about the consequences that come with such idiotic ideas.
    Theres a shocking statistic reported in todays Guardian, but what does 100,000 children do when dads serving his sentence in Albania?

    https://amp-theguardian-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/amp.theguardian.com/society/2023/oct/06/over-100000-children-in-england-and-wales-have-parent-in-prison-analysis-shows?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQIUAKwASCAAgM%3D#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=16965859839783&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theguardian.com%2Fsociety%2F2023%2Foct%2F06%2Fover-100000-children-in-england-and-wales-have-parent-in-prison-analysis-shows

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. More than 100,000 children have a parent in prison for the first time since records began, according to analysis of government figures.

      The figures have been released as Estonia’s justice minister confirmed that his officials were in talks with the UK government over plans to accept UK prisoners amid an overcrowding crisis.

      Data disclosed by the Prison Advice and Care Trust (Pact) shows that the prison population stands at 87,793.

      An official Ministry of Justice estimate says that each male prisoner has, on average, 1.14 children, meaning that an estimated 100,084 children have a parent in prison, the charity said.

      Many children with a parent in prison go on to lead positive and fulfilling lives. However, research shows that the children of prisoners are more likely to get involved in crime, suffer from mental health problems, homelessness and poverty later in life, Pact said.

      Andy Keen-Downs, Pact’s chief executive, said the government should reconsider its prison expansion programme.

      “This is a grim milestone. By imprisoning record numbers of parents we are storing up a whole raft of problems, the impact of which will be felt for decades to come.

      “In a rush to get ‘tough on crime’ and imprison ever greater numbers of people, ministers seem to have given little consideration to the long-lasting damage this policy will wreak on children and families,” he said.

      Delete
  10. The prison population has risen by 80% in the last three decades and has grown substantially in the last few years, returning to levels not seen for over a decade. It is projected to rise by a further 7,400 by 2024.

    The average custodial sentence has increased by 57% since the Conservatives entered power in the coalition government in 2010.

    A £4bn plan to build 20,000 additional prison places by the mid-2020s is not expected to be completed until 2030 because of planning delays. As of last week, only 768 places were available in jails across England and Wales.

    The UK government is in discussions with other European countries to rent spare prison cells, Alex Chalk, the justice secretary, said in a speech to the Conservative party conference on Tuesday.

    In a further development, Rait Kuuse, Estonia’s deputy secretary general for the ministry of justice, told reporters that his officials have held talks with the UK government over a possible “rental option”.

    Kuuse told ERR News that the talks were at a preliminary stage, and would have to be approved by Estonia’s legislature.

    The number of inmates in Estonia’s three prisons – with places for a maximum of 3,200 – is falling, while cell occupancy rates are already among the lowest in the EU.

    A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: “While courts already take into account the impact custody can have on dependants, we appreciate the challenges faced by the families of offenders and are improving our understanding of the number of children affected by parental imprisonment.

    “This includes new screening processes to better identify offenders who have caring responsibilities and investing £20m into a cross-government data programme to improve support for people with complex needs, including those with parents in prison.”

    ReplyDelete
  11. You want to read the PSRs completed by your profession , that’s why the jails full , putting the boot in.

    ReplyDelete
  12. some post-ww2 prison population figures (Eng&Wales)

    1945 - 14,708
    1950 - 20,474
    1960 - 27,099
    1962 - 31,063 *effectively 2x in just over 15 years*
    1970 - 39,028
    1980 - 42,264
    1985 - 46,233
    1990 - 44,975
    1995 - 50,962
    1997 - 61,114 *more or less 2x in 36 years*
    2000 - 64,602
    2005 - 75,979
    2010 - 84,725
    2015 - 85,626
    2020 - 80,366
    Most recent - 88,016 (2x in 40 years~44,000 in 1982)

    The only time there was any significant drop was during the two world wars that UK was involved in.

    ReplyDelete
  13. It just hit me like a gunshot. The Tory’s are bringing back penal transportation. Is Australia in the list?

    ReplyDelete
  14. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-surrey-67034851

    "Mr Grayling's political career has not been without criticism, during his tenure as Transport Secretary he was dubbed "Failing Grayling" by opposition MPs.

    It followed a series of transport policy mishaps including his handling of rail timetable changes and a £33m Breixt payout to Eurotunnel."


    Even the beeb have eradicated probation from history

    ReplyDelete
  15. Stop bullying managers from forcing us to recall then! Give the power back to Probation Officer grade and give us an alternative to recall such as intensive drugs rehabilitation services, half way houses with 24 hour staffing, in house mental health and wellbeing support, good old fashioned attendance centres and decriminalisation of drugs to break up the drugs gangs. Would also help if HMPPS stopped employing 18 year old Prison Officers who are actually recruited by the drugs gangs to work in prisons and bring in drugs. We know this because when covid hit and visitors were not allowed in the amount of drugs remained the same. Everyone knows it's the drugs gangs who control the prisons and not HMPPS who need to get real.

    ReplyDelete