Tuesday 14 January 2020

TR2 In Trouble

Yesterday we heard through a number of tweets that reintegration of case management from CRCs to NPS has been delayed, and today we find out why, because there are significant problems with NPS under HMPPS control. Today's report by HM Chief Inspector of Probation only serves to highlight what the risks are should TR2 proceed without a major rethink and some urgent action. Here is the press release:- 

Chief Inspector urges action on National Probation Service staffing, workloads and facilities

The organisation that supervises high-risk offenders in the community is hampered by staff shortages, stretched middle managers and poor facilities, according to inspectors.

HM Inspectorate of Probation inspected all seven divisions of the National Probation Service (NPS) between July 2018 and June 2019, and found recurring problems with staffing and facilities. The Chief Inspector of Probation decided to conduct an extra inspection into HM Prison and Probation Service’s provision of central functions to NPS divisions.

HM Chief Inspector of Probation Justin Russell said: “Staff across the NPS are committed and hard-working and leadership is good at every level, but high workloads and a poor facilities management service means the NPS is not performing to its full capability. At the time of this inspection, there were 615 probation officer vacancies across the NPS. The service is especially short of this crucial grade of staff, who play a vital role in rehabilitating offenders and protecting the public. The problem is especially acute in London and the South East. HM Prison and Probation Service has overall responsibility for NPS recruitment across England and Wales. Since probation reforms were introduced in 2014, not one of the NPS divisions has been fully staffed. A steady state has never been achieved.”

The NPS is responsible for supervising nearly 106,000 high-risk offenders, and violent and sexual offenders subject to Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA). Inspectors found staff who are in post are often overloaded. Sixty per cent of NPS staff have workloads that exceed their expected capacity. Nearly three in ten have been allocated workloads of more than 120 per cent of expected capacity. Victim liaison officers, who work with victims of serious and sexual crimes, have an average of 215 cases on their books.

Mr Russell said: “Many probation officers have unacceptably high workloads. Staff are under pressure and this could compromise their ability to build effective working relationships with people under supervision and to manage all cases to a consistently high standard. NPS probation officers are working with people who have committed serious offences and who require intensive supervision and rehabilitation. We found staff shortages mean some newly-qualified probation officers are allocated complex cases that they do not have the skills and experience to handle competently.”

Inspectors did find “significant areas of positive performance”, including improved services for victims and women under supervision. Leadership is good at every level of the NPS, but middle managers are too stretched. More than two-thirds (68 per cent) of Senior Probation Officer managers said they ‘seldom’ or ‘never’ complete their management tasks each week. Nearly half (47 per cent) put in more than five extra hours per week.

Mr Russell said: “Senior probation officers should be supervising up to 10 staff. In practice, we found half of middle managers are supervising 11 to 20 members of staff, and often have extra corporate responsibilities. They told us they are frequently overwhelmed and do not have enough time to supervise their staff effectively.”

In May 2019, the government announced that the NPS will take over the supervision of all offenders from 2021, taking on nearly 150,000 low and medium-risk cases from Community Rehabilitation Companies. 

Mr Russell added: “HMPPS has made some progress on staffing issues, but they must pursue this work with a greater sense of urgency. Immediate steps must be taken to improve workloads. Senior probation officers should be freed up to provide oversight and guidance to junior colleagues; probation officers need enough time to manage their caseloads properly and to develop their professional skills. Greater investment is needed in ongoing training and development. I urge HMPPS to fill vacancies quickly and work to ensure that the probation workforce better reflects the population as a whole. This will help them to get the right workforce in place to ensure a smooth transfer of cases next year.”

The Inspectorate found HMPPS headquarters missed several opportunities to improve the quality of the NPS’s work. HMPPS has a role in ensuring probation staff learn from serious further offence reviews and complaints. The organisation also collects data about offenders and offences to inform the commissioning of offending behaviour programmes. 

Mr Russell said: “These centralised functions are not performing as they should, and this is preventing NPS divisions from doing their best work. HMPPS does not have a written strategy that sets out how lessons from serious further offence reviews and complaints will be shared. HMPPS should be stepping up to fulfil this role. There should be a comprehensive plan to ensure lessons from serious further offence reviews are captured and shared as quickly as possible. This will help probation professionals to improve their practice and avoid repeating past mistakes."

“Local NPS divisions are not making use of the services that have been commissioned from CRCs. HMPPS should do more to help NPS divisions understand the types of offenders and offences in their region, so they can commission the most appropriate services to meet local needs.”

Over the past year, inspectors have found a multitude of problems with NPS offices. These include: broken locks, faulty CCTV, vermin infestations, and poor plumbing and heating. Some facilities are in such a state of disrepair that they cannot be used. The Inspectorate rated the quality of NPS facilities as ‘Requires improvement’ in six out of the seven NPS divisions.

Mr Russell said: “NPS staff have told us repeatedly that facilities are not managed properly. Repairs are not fixed quickly and there are difficulties with escalating jobs. We looked more closely at the issue in this inspection. The management of NPS facilities is contracted out to four private sector firms, with a fifth company acting as the managing agent. The target is for jobs to be fixed within 10 working days. For the first six months of 2019, less than half (43 per cent) of jobs were completed in this timescale. Although this is an improvement on the previous year, it is still not good enough."

“Probation staff need appropriate facilities to do their job. In particular, it is unacceptable that outstanding repairs at approved premises mean staff have to find alternative accommodation for high-risk offenders because beds cannot be used. The Ministry of Justice needs to hold these companies to account to ensure they deliver the contract as intended. Probation staff deserve to work in safe and secure environments.”

The Inspectorate has made 24 recommendations to HM Prison and Probation Service and the Ministry of Justice to improve central functions to the NPS.

21 comments:

  1. From the Telegraph:-

    Criminals are able to manipulate probation officers too easily, say HM inspectors who have also called for more men to join the service.

    The inspectors said probation officers needed to be more inquisitive to prevent dangerous criminals and terrorists like London Bridge killer Usman Khan conning them into believing they have reformed.

    They are concerned officers are taking their claims to have renounced violence “at face value” rather than investigating their alleged conversions.

    In a report today (Tues) on the National Probation Service (NPS) which supervises some 105,000 high-risk offenders, the HM inspectors also warned it was struggling to reverse a gender imbalance where 70 percent of officers were women.

    They said there were criminals who could pose a risk to women or who would be more effectively supervised by men.

    Criminologists were divided over whether women were more likely to be less probing and more wedded to the idea that dangerous criminals could be redeemed.

    Khan, 28, murdered Cambridge graduates Jack Merritt and Saskia Jones at a rehabilitation event in London last November after apparently hoodwinking probation and police into believing he had renounced his terrorist ideology.

    The terrorist, who was jailed over an al-Qaeda inspired bomb plot, underwent a deradicalisation programme in jail and was judged of sufficient low risk that he was allowed to London for the conference unsupervised.

    Sally Lester, head of NPS inspection, said such “false compliance” by a criminal to give the impression they had reformed was a "real challenge" for probation officers who needed "very highly tuned skills and expertise" to interview and probe offenders effectively.

    Yvette Howson, who led the team of inspectors, said: "We need staff to demonstrate a more inquisitive approach when working with people rather than taking everything they say at face value - to have a more professional curiosity about what is going in people's lives.

    "Rather than asking the question 'Has anything changed since I saw you last?', [staff should be] taking a more proactive approach to investigating what's going on behind the scenes."

    Probation officers should work with people who are close to the offender, like relatives and other professionals, and have "good support, supervision from managers, training", she said.

    Having a workload that "gives you enough space and time to do that reflective thinking about what's going on in this case" was also important, she added.

    However, the inspection report warned that the NPS was struggling with severe staff shortages with more 600 vacancies - 10 per cent of the total which meant most staff were overworked while stretched middle managers did not have time to help their staff with cases.

    It also emerged last night (Mon) that Government plans for the NPS to take over the management of all offenders - including medium and low risk criminals - has been put back by six months until June 2021 to provide “stability” and to ensure “the continuation of vital frontline service delivery.”

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    Replies
    1. Simon Harding, professor of criminology and director of the national centre for gang research, said: “One of the founding principles of the probation service is what I would call the redemption narrative. That is something that is also favoured by women more than men.”

      Such a “professional and personal desire for redemption” could be exploited by criminals who traded and learned the techniques of “false compliance” in prison.

      “There is a form of self radicalisation in extremists or even around street gangs where they are deeply embedded and not going to shift from that stance,” he added.

      David Wilson, professor of criminology at Birmingham University, said the imbalance stemmed from the reliance of probation on degrees like criminology where as many as 80 per cent were women.

      But he disagreed that women were more susceptible to believing a offender had reformed: “That’s based on experience, on training and institutional specific matters such as how the deradicalisation course has been run in prison or the kind of supervision offered in the community.”

      Delete
  2. Not being recognised in the coverage is the importance of professional experience and development... the call to recruit more new staff is welcome, but we should not lose sight of the tragic loss of experienced staff through the TR debacle

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    Replies
    1. For which Napo should also be held to account with their disastrously eager agreement to arrangements for TR1 which incorporated pre-planned job losses.

      In respect of TR2 Napo recently said - "That a nationally negotiated Staff Transfer and Protections Agreement, together with the appropriate transfer orders, will be put to all union members in a consultative ballot in the Autumn."

      Did this happen? What was the result?

      Delete
  3. Nothing posted today surprises. Much of what is being said has been written on this blog over & over & over again, i.e. HMPPS are crap, the depth & breadth of experience & knowledge was thrown out by the arseholes who implemented TR, working conditions vary from disgraceful to dangerous, etc etc:

    * 615 probation officer vacancies across the NPS - a 10% vacancy rate
    * Since probation reforms were introduced in 2014, not one of the NPS divisions has been fully staffed
    * HMPPS has overall responsibility for NPS recruitment across England and Wales
    * Sixty per cent of NPS staff have workloads that exceed their expected capacity
    * centralised [HMPPS] functions are not performing as they should
    * HM inspectors also warned NPS was struggling to reverse a gender imbalance where 70 percent of officers were women

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  4. How much is it all this TR debacle costing? There are the £Billions promised to the CRCs, plus the £Millions for NPS, plus the £Millions for HM Inspectors, plus the £Millions for the facilities mis-management companies...

    Grayling, Romeo, Brennan, Spurr & all those who capitulated, collaborated and/or cashed-in should shrivel up & die out of shame.

    But sadly they are thriving & comfortable in a callous world that is without shame.

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  5. Some of the problems are just a failure to accept basic maths. Increasing the number of clients at the same time as reducing the number of staff will obviously increase workloads and stretch resources.
    There are far to many people being subjected to probation supervision at present, and Bills currently going through Parliament are likely to increase that number further.
    TR saw 40,000 under 12mth offenders being brought under the probation umbrella. The rethoric for doing so was good, but the reality was that they were really only to swell the stock to make the sales pitch for TR more attractive to the bidders.
    A brutal thuth is that probation is no use to most of that cohort, nor are they any good to probation.
    Is public safety and protection in a better place since they've been taken into the fold? Are they any better off now?
    There's too many people on probation, and for too long, and it creates no value to anyone.
    There's an interesting report on HMP Liverpool out today also. I highlight it not to bring prisons into the conversation, but it's good evidence to demonstrate that if you want to do things right, then you have to provide facilities and opertunity for those caught up in the CJS, and facilities, time, space and acceptable workloads for those working within the CJS to be able to do the work their trained for.

    https://www-independent-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/liverpool-prison-hmp-jail-population-report-inspectorate-a9282081.html?amp_js_v=a2&amp_gsa=1&amp&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15789990203867&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.independent.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fuk%2Fhome-news%2Fliverpool-prison-hmp-jail-population-report-inspectorate-a9282081.html

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
  6. https://www-express-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1228170/BBC-news-killer-prison-Michael-Hoolickin-Garry-Hoolickin-probation/amp?amp_js_v=a2&amp_gsa=1&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15790094334372&csi=1&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.express.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fuk%2F1228170%2FBBC-news-killer-prison-Michael-Hoolickin-Garry-Hoolickin-probation

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    1. A GRIEVING father whose son was killed by an offender out of prison on licence has called for heads to roll in the probation service. Garry Hoolickin’s 27-year-old son Michael was stabbed by Timothy Deakin, who was free on licence, during a mass brawl in Middleton, Greater Manchester, in October 2016. The father has now said he wants “heads rolling” in the probation service.

      It comes as a new report by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation has highlighted how public safety is being put at risk due to probation staff shortages and heavy workloads. Speaking on the BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire show, Mr Hoolickin said:

      “I want justice for my son and we need to get this. We’ve got help from the mayor at the moment Andy Burnham, he’s going to take it on, along with the deputy mayor. The councillors, the local councillors from Rochdale are helping us big style. The new MP Chris Clarkson has just been in touch with me this morning saying he is going to help us.”

      On the probation service, he added: “We know that the staff have not done there job, we’ve heard every excuse in the book, it’s not satisfactory. I want heads rolling I don’t think their fit for purpose these people who are in work.”

      Reacting on Twitter, one person said: “It looks like the top priority of the probation service is to keep these offenders out of prison, at all cost. Do we have a justice system or a baby sitting service?”

      Another Twitter user commented: “My heart goes out to this man who lost his son. These poor standards are rife throughout the public services due undeniably to austerity. Poor staffing high workloads lack of training and corner cutting has lead to loss of life.”

      Delete
    2. Heartbreaking for the family. Early release has to stop. Offenders should serve their full term and then be on Probation afterwards, like they do in the States.

      Delete
  7. Napo press release:-

    Napo welcomes HMIP report on National Probation Service; Staff shortages pose a direct risk to the public.

    Today Her Majesty’s Inspector for Probation has published a damning report on the functionality of the National Probation Service (NPS). With 615 staff vacancies across England and Wales the NPS is now struggling to cope with demand as staff experience ever increasing workloads.

    According to the Inspector 68% of staff said they failed to complete their weekly management tasks with 60% of staff reportedly over worked (i.e. above 100% on the workload management tool). Some staff such as victim liaison officers have over 200 cases to manage. As a result, the report highlights that inexperienced staff are being expected to manage complex cases with little support from over worked and over stretched managers. The report clearly states that although staff are trying their best to achieve they are being hampered. Alongside this the report states that staff are further hampered by a poor facilities management service resulting in poor working conditions.

    Ian Lawrence General Secretary said: “This report vindicates what Napo has been saying since the NPS was formed 5 years ago. It is not sustainable in its current form and as such we have seen an increase in Serious Further Offences, staff burn out and members reporting a lack of time to complete meaningful work with clients. The report also states that there is no strategic plan for following up on Serious Further Offences for lessons learnt to be shared with staff. This is wholly unacceptable. The NPS has chosen to treat its staff in a draconian way should an SFO occur yet are failing to put in place the vary basics themselves.”

    Napo is calling for an urgent review of the NPS and are campaigning to have it taken out of the civil service and to be fully reunified and brought back into public ownership. Ian Lawrence also said: “Probation is a vital service for protecting the public and rehabilitating clients back into society. Since it’s part privatisation introduced by Chris Grayling, it has been brought to its knees. The government must now listen to the Unions and the workforce and restore the service to the award winning status it was before.”

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    1. Napo calling for urgent review but do not say who they expect to be able to manage such a task. What would be the point anyway it is recognised TR1 is now failed. Hypocryticaly calling for wider amalgamation while endorsing the privatised companies illustrates the duplicity and failing of the NAPO position. They do not genuinely appear to have any clear strategy unfortunately the usual missed opportunity to embrace the report and exploit the dire failing of the NPS have been missed again by messrs Lawrence and co. This boring re hash of the past events is poor work for a professional association as they claim and an awfully childish we told you positioning. This does nothing for the debate offers no hope to readers of some enlightened contribution. While the scandal unfolds of the testimony in Wales where was the NAPO leadership when a campaign was critical to waged against workloads? Provide support for staff and make challenges to illustrate the rejection of those risks the whole deluded management were taking. What exactly were NAPO doing when their energies should have been visibly leading on multi level actions? Down the pub or on a junket somewhere most likely.

      Delete
  8. HM Govt Risk Register 2013 - There is a risk that an unacceptable drop in operational performance (during the [TR] programme) leads to delivery failure(s) and reputational damage

    Jan 2014 - The infrastructure is just not there and this will lead to real risks to the public as offenders will not be supervised adequately during the transition period.

    Mar 2014 - Probation Chiefs have calculated they will need to recruit 300 trainees just to stand still; and that’s just in the NPS.

    Mar 2014 - 80% of the Probation budget is made up of wages and other related matters, there is a presumption that either wages will be depressed or there will be a sharp reduction in the number of staff

    May 2014 - The service currently has 500 vacancies across England and Wales and the splitting of staff into two organisations is bringing the service to its knees.

    June 2014 - In an attempt to resolve the [staffing] issue the Ministry of Justice is desperately trying to recruit new staff. This week an advert was placed in the Guardian looking to recruit Probation Officers from New Zealand and Australia currently living in the UK. The MoJ is offering to pay up to £27 per hour for anyone with 2 or more years’ experience.

    Sept 2014 - 99% of respondents revealed they do not support the government's probation reforms, while 93% do not believe that the changes will provide value for the money for the taxpayer.

    Dec 2014 - High Court hearing had ordered Chris Grayling to hand over his safety evidence and proposals to Napo, the court today refused to allow Napo to share any of that evidence with its members or the public. Instead, Mr Grayling has been allowed to keep bidders and the public in the dark about the dangers that exist in the system and the steps he has said he is taking to resolve them.

    Feb 2015 - CRCs are handed over to new owners for £1 each

    Mar 2015 - CRC’s owned by Sodexo announce making significant redundancies:

    Cumbria/Lancs – reduction of approx. 123 staff = -30% South Yorkshire – reduction of 184.6 = -36%
    Beds/Cambs/Northants a reduction of 131 = –30%, Northumbria - a cut of 131 full time posts = -30%
    *** THAT'S A LOSS OF OVER 500 JOBS ***

    Mar 2015 - We have also been told officially that Sodexo do not intend to honour the Enhanced Voluntary Redundancy (EVR) Scheme. This forms part of the agreed National Framework signed by the Ministry of Justice and the Trade Unions. The Secretary of State Chris Grayling gave all CRC’s a lump sum of money that was underwritten by him so that they could pay staff EVR if they needed to reduce the workforce. Sodexo have said that they think this is too expensive and will not be honouring this agreement.
    _________________________________________________________

    These are all taken from Napo press releases. Did anything change? Has anything changed? Yet Napo seem to be pursuing an identical strategy for TR2.

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    1. Extract from Connor Marshall inquest today. Not much support from those at the top for the individual in the hot seat.....

      Terry Reddington was the deputy head of the delivery unit for Wales and said some staff had fallen behind.

      "It was a particular issue for some people in the Caerphilly office, but not all people," he said.

      "Some staff could cope. Staff had different experiences. "

      However, he said the backlog created by the transition had been cleared.

      He told assistant coroner Nadim Bashir there was enough staff for the number of cases.

      Asked by Emma Zeb, representing Wales CRC, if it was a chaotic time, he replied: "In terms of chaotic, it was a time of change.

      "You had people who had been working together in the probation service for 20 years and then they were starting to work for a new agency.

      "I think that led to people being at different places at different times."

      Diana Binding, former assistant chief executive of CRC denied it was chaotic there, but said she met with Braddon's probation officer Kathryn Oakley who was behind with her work.

      "I wouldn't take the view that Kathryn Oakley was very new to the role, she had been working in the probation service for well over a year," she told the inquest. 

      "It is a demanding job. Her situation was no different to any other staff member, but they were managing their workload."

      The inquest continues.

      'Getafix

      Delete
  9. False compliance? There's no such thing because the positive psychology approach and desistence model tells me so.

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  10. The extracts from the inquest reported at 1939 makes me feel physically sick , my heart absolutely goes out to Kathryn , I really hope her colleagues speak up in support and say just how impossible case management has become - the fact that the strategic management level state that being in service " well over a year " suddenly makes you am expert and fully skilled / trained CM is shocking but no suprise that's their attitude.
    I was an experienced PSO of 20+ years but it still didn't stop me within the CRC I worked in ( having to endure their unworkable models etc ) feeling at times ( in fact on a regular basis ) overwhelmed with work , staying all hours to try and meet impossible targets that had been set along with trying to effectively risk manage difficult,troubled people - all the colleagues in my office felt the same as did (and I'm sure still do as staffing levels appear to have gone worse ) officer's across all areas within Greater Manchester.
    I'm so glad I resigned when I did before it really made me ill , I feel for those of you that remain but would say stick up and speak up for each other as it makes it harder for management to create divisions between staff and to throw people under the bus as happens far too often and for management to deny TR has been an absolute disaster not just " a change " as described by management at the inquest

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  11. Can any Napo member answer this:

    Did Napo put a nationally negotiated Staff Transfer and Protections Agreement, together with the appropriate transfer orders, to all union members in a consultative ballot in Autumn 2019?

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    1. Perhaps the Trades Union Certification Officer should be consulted about how Napo seem to have - both actively and passively - enabled TR1, facilitated hundreds of job losses, failed to support members at critical times & are now embarking on a duplicate campaign in respect of TR2 in what appears to be a bid to completely embed & entomb the Probation profession within the civil service regime that is HMPPS.

      Delete
  12. … Over the past year, inspectors have found a multitude of problems with NPS offices. These include: broken locks, faulty CCTV, vermin infestations, and poor plumbing and heating. Some facilities are in such a state of disrepair that they cannot be used."
    MoJ have delayed TR2: it was always going to be too little too late, now its even later. Its not full reunification, and its in the civil service/MoJ which is clearly inept and not fit for purpose. Is it possible that transferring CRC staff to the shithole that is NPS in the HMPPS was likely to see the loss of the few experienced probation staff still standing?

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  13. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-51782284

    *** The girl also said she felt "angered and upset" by failings from the probation service.

    "It causes anger and so much upset for everyone that the probation service failed to keep us safe. He has previous for sexual abuse and nothing was acted on," she said.

    On Thursday, the Ministry of Justice said the chief inspector of probation, Justin Russell, would be asked to carry out an independent review of the National Probation Service's management of McCann and how the process of recalling offenders to prison was working. ***

    ReplyDelete
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    https://www.ft.com/content/38a81588-6508-11ea-b3f3-fe4680ea68b5

    Britain’s chief scientific adviser stoked controversy on Friday when he said that about 40m people in the UK could need to catch the coronavirus to build up “herd immunity” and prevent the disease coming back in the future.

    Defending Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision not to follow other European countries by closing schools and banning mass gatherings, Patrick Vallance said it was the government’s aim to “reduce the peak of the epidemic, pull it down and broaden it” while protecting the elderly and vulnerable.

    But Sir Patrick told Sky News that experts estimated that about 60 per cent of the UK’s 66m population would have to contract coronavirus in order for society to build up immunity.
    _________________________________________________________

    THE UK Government's approach to developing "herd immunity" among the public against Covid-19 has been questioned by the World Health Organisation.

    Spokeswoman Margaret Harris said not enough is currently known about the science of the coronavirus and while "theories" can be discussed, this situation requires "action".
    _________________________________________________________

    Social experimentation?

    ReplyDelete