Saturday 29 June 2024

Things Could Be Better

In less than a week citizens of the United Kingdom go to the polls and and have an opportunity to change the course of the way in which much of our society functions. We can all point to many aspects that appear hopelessly broken and there appears to be a widespread and growing belief that different approaches are needed and urgently. As we are all acutely aware, the probation and prison service are in crisis, things are getting worse not better and like it or not, the bullet must be bitten and so called reunification under HMPPS has had its day. 

It should be noted that the Labour Party manifesto promises a Review and many stakeholders who passionately believe in the distinctive probation ethos believe that this opportunity could provide a route to saving a vital public service from being increasingly part of the problem and return it to being part of a sustainable solution. 

With impeccable timing, here we have a film prepared by the Probation Board for Northern Ireland that serves to remind us that England and Wales are now outliers in how probation is delivered. Of course there is the strong likelihood that the service in Wales will be devolved leaving England unique and alone in progressing down a completely unsustainable path linked disastrously as it is to HM Prison Service and the command and control requirements of the civil service. Things could be very different and they could change for the better.     

Changing Lives: The Inside Story of the Probation Service


On 26 June 2024 we launched our film “Changing Lives: The Inside Story of the Probation Service”. This film shows the positive impact Probation has on those we supervise, those we support and in the Justice sector. This film is an opportunity for our Probation Officers, a Service User, an Academic, a Victim Of Crime and a Judge to tell you the story of Probation and its impact. Our work is about Changing Lives for Safer Communities.

13 comments:

  1. Yes things SHOULD be better, how on earth is HMPpS recruiting people? Surely checks and good interview should have shown something wrong in this case? I’m sick and tired of reading about illicit relationships with prisoners ( yes this in the daily fail but every local newspaper, many nationals and non print media accounts exist) surely senior management who are selecting these people must be held accountable? I’m ashamed as well as overworked and taken for granted. PO https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13581551/female-prison-officer-sex-inmate-wandsworth-prison-swinger-channel-four.html

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  2. Even Johnson wasn't vetted as PM, because if he was, he would have been rejected given his poor character and proven history of lying and having low morals, also asking someone to beat someone up on his behalf. The Daily Mail called HMP Wandsworth a Cat A- great research! It shows that when staff shortages are so great, processes are reduced. Police BIU checks are similar: probation needs them, but they rarely deal with Low and Med Risk cases. Either it needs to be done or it doesn't. There should be no half measures when it comes to checks. Mind you, ECSL cases seem to be let out on a whim which feels like the probability of a toss of a coin as to whomever gets a lucky early release. It's no wonder the inmates think they're running the asylum. As for the prison officer at Wandsworth. 5 years possibly in custody for 4 minutes of rough and tumble for alleged corruption. Husband also aware, he must beside himself. A moment of madness with long-term consequences. Also, that video reiterates again that nice guys finish last. As it has always been. But like most prison officers, most probation officers uphold being in public office and don't abuse it. We're rarely acknowledged for the great work we try to do, whilst this grabs the headlines. If it bleeds, it leads, as the old newspaper saying goes. There's no increase in sales of newspapers for the positive stories. We're fascinated by scandal and the flawed make-up of the human condition. It's why True Crime sells so much. But most of us in Probation work our backsides off to do the best we can.

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  3. From Twitter:-

    "Our most experienced PO has been qualified for 2 years, then the next is 18 months and then a year. We did have a colleague who'd done circa 20 years but he left."

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    1. exactly what romeo, hmpps & whatshername (the putative probation boss) wanted. Eliminate the obstacles to dumbing down, i.e. pre-existing knowledge, longstanding experience & established skills, & replace them with staff trained in the ways of their "new" probation vision.

      Its a well known means of imposing fast-track organisational change. See also P&O Ferries, Thatcher & the UDM, Fire & Rehire...

      Also of note are the shit conditions hmpps impose upon staff:

      https://www.russellwebster.com/prison-and-probation-officers-leaving-in-droves/

      "Yesterday (18 August 2022), Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) published its latest quarterly workforce statistics, showing staffing levels at the end of June this year. They make for pretty grim reading. The main concern is a big jump in the number of staff leaving both services. "

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  4. You know it’s a simple truth but every time we think it can’t possibly get any worse, it somehow does. It feels like we are in a race to the bottom of any ethical and moral purpose to our work. Our T and Cs are awful, working conditions are awful ( poorly maintained and often not fit for purpose probation offices) and management just awful.

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  5. https://magazine.unison.org.uk/2024/06/28/14-years-of-the-tories-police-and-probation/

    'Getafix

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    1. The 14 years since 2010 have seen catastrophic cuts to the police service, a rise in recorded crime, unmanageable police force budget deficits, the demise of neighbourhood policing and the near destruction of the probation service. No part of the criminal justice system has been spared from mismanagement. As a result, justice is not being served, nor seen to be delivered.

      In September 2010, the police workforce in England and Wales had 243,143 officers and staff. After four years of austerity, in September 2016, this number had shrunk by nearly 45,000. Over the same period, police community officer (PCSO) numbers were cut from 16,376 to 10,551 – a decline of 36%. The government claimed that there was no link between cutting police numbers and rising crime, but they were wrong.

      In the year ending June 2016, the Office for National Statistics figures for police-recorded crime in England and Wales over the previous 12 months showed public order offences up 28%, violence against the person offences up 24%, sexual offences up 14%, knife crime up 9% and firearms offences up by 7%.

      Police cuts had consequences and they were being felt in communities across the UK.

      By 2019, rising crime had left the Conservative Party’s reputation as ‘the party of law and order’ in tatters. It promised to recruit an additional 20,000 police officers in England and Wales when everyone knew it was really just replacing those it had cut over the previous nine years. Nothing was done to stem the cuts to PCSO numbers which continued to fall to 7,651 in September 2023 – an overall reduction of 53% since 2010. Police staff numbers remain 2,000 below their 2010 levels with police officers regularly having to backfill police staff roles.

      An analysis of police financial forecasts by UNISON in 2023 revealed forces in England and Wales could face a combined budget shortfall of £720m by 2026, putting public safety at risk as forces cut back on some services.

      The Scottish Government is cutting £1.1 billion from police budgets by 2026 – and the protection of police officer numbers means that police staff like control room operators, crime analysts, and criminal justice staff are losing their jobs.

      UNISON believes we need a modern, balanced police team – with the right people doing the right jobs – not only for a better, safer Scotland, but for England and Wales too.

      Prior to 2014, the probation service was a high performing, award-winning service rooted in local communities. The service was run by 35 independent probation trusts, each with its own chief probation officer.

      But in 2014, the Conservative government pushed through Chris Grayling’s disastrous ‘Transforming Rehabilitation’ reforms, which split probation in two and centralised high-risk work in the ministry of justice and privatised the rest. Despite being told that the reforms were unworkable, the government forced the changes through.

      The reforms were a complete disaster and resulted in the government having to bail out the failing private companies, one of which ended up going bust, to the tune of £500m. Although the service was re-unified in 2021, it remains centralised in the civil service. This continues to damage the ability of probation to work with local partners, and probation staff suffer unmanageable workloads as a result of staffing cuts made previously by the private companies.

      Between 2010 and 2020, probation staff salaries rose by only 1% as a result of pay freezes and austerity. Wages are no longer competitive, which compounds the workloads crisis.

      This is why UNISON is campaigning for probation to be removed from civil service control and re-localised – run by chief probation officers again and democratically overseen by police and crime commissioners and elected mayors.

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  6. Despite all of the positive rhetoric, despite all of the calls for ‘change’, very little will……..for us……..them however will, as usual line their pockets, make sure their children, their spouses will get the jobs that the rest of us never see advertised and generally do very well out of a change of government the older I get the more I see what Mr Longhorn- Clemons was referring too…….

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  7. Some interesting stats in the Guardian sourced from the MoJ.
    Maybe the next SFO should be kicked further up the food chain?

    https://amp.theguardian.com/society/article/2024/jul/01/prison-rehabilitation-numbers-down-74-since-2010-moj-data-shows

    'Getafix

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    1. The number of prisoners completing rehabilitation programmes in England and Wales under consecutive Conservative governments has fallen by 74%, according to research.

      Nearly 12,000 fewer prisoners took courses designed to change and improve their behaviour and reduce reoffending in 2023 compared with 2010, when David Cameron became prime minister.

      Offender management programmes are designed to “change the thinking, attitudes and behaviours which may lead people to reoffend”, according to the Ministry of Justice.

      The courses encourage goals for the future and are designed to help people develop new skills so they can prevent recidivism. These include problem-solving, managing relationships and self-management.

      The range of programmes include ones to address specific offences, for example sexual offending and domestic violence, general patterns of offending behaviour and substance misuse.

      Data shows that between 2010 and 2023 – the latest figures available – the number of offenders completing all accredited programmes fell by 74%, from 16,099 to 4,135.

      The figures come after the Guardian disclosed that prison governors were told by civil servants that the government was expected to be plunged into a new overcrowding crisis in July. In a separate development on Friday, a women was arrested over a social media video allegedly showing a member of prison staff having sex with an inmate in a jail cell.

      According to MoJ data, more than 60% fewer prisoners completed “general offending” programmes, while 11% fewer completed “thinking skills” programmes.

      Over the same period, 19% fewer prisoners completed sexual offending programmes.

      Last year, 400 offenders – 53% fewer than in 2010 – completed violence programmes, while statistics show that the prison estate is getting more violent.

      Serious assaults have risen by 90% in 10 years, while prison staff faced assault nearly 180 times a week last year. Violence is also rising outside the prison estate.

      The number of prisoners who join accredited programmes also fell by 75% between 2010 and 2023.

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    2. The government blames the decline in programme completions on the fact that ownership of substance misuse programmes has transferred to the NHS and are therefore not covered by HM Prison and Probation Service statistics. In an answer to a parliamentary question on accredited programmes, the prisons minister, Edward Argar, said that “more offenders are completing programmes run by the NHS, rather than HMPPS”.

      However, analysis of data published by the Department of Health and Social Care still shows a decline in the number of adults in secure settings who are in alcohol and drug treatment programmes.

      Since 2015-16, the number in alcohol and drug treatment has declined by nearly 13,500 (22%). New presentations to such programmes fell by 23% in the same period. Nearly 11,000 fewer people started programmes in 2022-23 than in 2015-16.

      Meanwhile, the Metropolitan police said they began investigating on Friday after being made “aware of a video allegedly filmed inside HMP Wandsworth”, adding that a woman had been arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office the same day and remained in custody.

      It is not known when the footage, which showed an officer initially in full uniform, was filmed.

      The arrest comes less than two months after the prisons watchdog wrote to the justice secretary, Alex Chalk, with an urgent notification for improvement at the jail.

      Andrew Neilson, the director of campaigns at the Howard League for Penal Reform, said the fall in the use of rehabilitation programmes was linked to a growing prison population.

      “Overcrowding and staff shortages make it more difficult for prisons to engage everyone in activities that help rehabilitation, such as exercise, education, employment and training.

      “It is imperative that the next government comes forward with sensible measures to reduce the prison population and support services that help people move on from crime,” he said.

      Chalk said reoffending rates had fallen from 31% to 25% since 2010 and that an extra £155m a year was being invested in the probation service.

      “We are also harnessing the latest technology to tag a record number of individuals, monitoring offenders’ movements and enforcing tough unpaid work orders to drive down reoffending and repay criminals’ debt to society.

      “Under Labour, reoffending rates were higher and all those on sentences of less than 12 months roamed free without probation supervision, showing Labour will never take the tough decisions to keep our communities safe,” he said.

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    3. Telegraph. Paywall.

      At least one murder, sex assault or crime of violence is committed every two days by convicted criminals under supervision of the probation service after being released from jail, research has revealed...

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  8. What the tories aren't telling us because they've reduced covid ukhsa/nhs/ons surveillance data & they want to keep it quiet:

    https://www.aol.co.uk/news/know-summer-covid-uk-case-125857475.html

    The latest government figures, published last Thursday, showed there was a 33.5% weekly increase in cases of coronavirus in England, amid concerns of a summer spike.

    Mark Woolhouse, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the University of Edinburgh, said “The surveillance of Covid cases in the UK is far less intensive than it once was, so it is difficult to track the rise and fall of waves of infection, or to assess the severity of different variants... Even so, there is a widespread impression of a growing 2024 summer wave, much as we saw in 2021 when – coincidently perhaps – there was also a Euros football tournament, and evidence that this contributed significantly to the spread of infection."

    We know deaths with Covid mentioned on the death certificate have slightly increased: 146 in the week to 14 June, up seven – 5% – from the previous seven-day period.

    We also don’t know how the situation is currently playing out in hospitals. The UKHSA’s most recent data for hospital admissions only goes up to 29 May, when 1,567 people were admitted over a seven-day period...

    A new group of coronavirus variants, known as FLiRT, has recently emerged, and in May the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said it was "normal for viruses to mutate and change".


    The fuckers have normalised covid - 1500+ a week hospitalised & nearly 150 a week dying is now "normal" & not worthy of any kind of public monitoring.

    Just like prison staff fucking prisoners in the prisons estate is now 'normal'.

    Remember the words of netanyahu's champion, Dodgy Bob Jenrick, the man who hates childrens' murals?

    "Its all perfectly normal"

    https://centralbylines.co.uk/politics/robert-jenrick-a-perfectly-normal-cabinet-minister/

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