Saturday 31 July 2021

Rhetoric and Reality

Channel 4 news has for me always stood out head and shoulders above other news providers and of course it's no great surprise that it's attracted the ire of the Tory party for doing its job so diligently. I note Kathy Newman has decided to expand on the piece the other day about a rehabilitation charity closing housing provision due to government funding cuts. It's a familiar pattern of course, but somewhat at odds with party political rhetoric:-   

Boris Johnson’s crime slogans might win votes, but taxpayers will foot the bill if offenders end up on the streets

Six houses in southern England have for more than four decades provided a home for thousands of the most vulnerable people. Vulnerable, and dangerous. Because the houses run by a charity – Change Grow Live – have offered accommodation over the years for around 2,000 former prisoners who have committed serious offences.

But on Friday, as my colleague Jackie Long reported on Wednesday’s Channel 4 News, those houses will close their doors. The charity blames funding cuts. They’ve been bankrolled by West Sussex County Council since 2003, but with central government grants cut by 38 per cent in real terms over the decade to 2019, the money has run out. For four months, Change Grow Live has funded the housing project itself. But now it can do so no longer.

By an unfortunate quirk of timing, this comes in the same week that the government announced its blitz on crime. On Wednesday, the Ministry of Justice also announced that criminals would be guaranteed accommodation when they left prison as part of a £20m plan to reduce reoffending.

It sounds like a good idea, but according to Change Grow Live, it’s a “quick fix”. The charity warns that without a long-term, well-funded solution, ex-offenders are more likely to end up on the streets – where they could pose a threat to the public – or back in jail, where they’ll end up costing the taxpayer more.

“Beating Crime” risks being little more than a slogan if the criminal justice system in its entirety is under-resourced. This journalist-turned-prime minister is, like a hack on a deadline, a true pro at coming up with an attention-grabbing phrase. His critics fear it’s the details that sometimes elude him.

Boris Johnson certainly captured the headlines with his pledge to make ex-offenders join “fluorescent-jacketed chain gangs”, or slap GPS ankle tags on burglars. But it’s hard to treat either policy as ground-breaking when both have actually been announced or trialled years ago. Labour tried the hi-vis jackets in 2008 and abandoned it after the offenders were abused by members of the public. The expansion of electronic tagging was first announced in 2011, and was originally supposed to have been rolled out across England and Wales in 2019. This week’s announcement was scaled back to just 19 police force areas.

And what’s underpinning these eye-catching pronouncements? Across the criminal justice system – police, courts, prisons and probation – years of spending constraints are now beginning to be reversed. But those at the sharp end say budget cuts of such magnitude should never have been made.

There has been a tacit – though not public – admission that cutting 20,000 police officers since 2010 was a mistake. The prime minister says the government is now half way to restoring those numbers, but when I asked the policing minister Kit Malthouse if the original cuts had been an error, he cited financial pressures at the time. It’s telling that despite the huge burden of pandemic debt, the government now sees fit to make the investment.

On prisons and probation, too, ministers insist they’re starting to boost expenditure, though the details are murky. The Ministry of Justice saw spending fall by 25 per cent between 2010 and 2020. Prison and probation minister Alex Chalk was unable to tell me on Channel 4 News on Wednesday whether the promise of an extra 2,500 probation officers restored the numbers cut since the Conservatives came to power, nor how much lower probation funding was now than then. He was, he said, “99 per cent sure” it was higher.

And while Johnson waxed lyrical on “chain gangs”, I didn’t hear him explain how he planned to clear the record crown court backlog of sixty thousand cases – a relic not just of lockdown constraints but budgetary ones too, leading barristers say. Nearly two decades ago, when I was still a newspaper hack myself, I remember the then Tory shadow home secretary Oliver Letwin setting out a big new idea on law and order, and a startling break from the party’s “prison works” policies of the Thatcher era. He wanted to end what he called the “conveyor belt” of criminality.

It didn’t win the Conservatives power. And perhaps that’s the point. No doubt the hi-vis jackets and the ankle tags will be popular. But will they stop people re-offending?

And if that doesn’t give you pause for thought, consider this: a year in one of the houses run by Change Grow Live costs £18,000. A year in prison costs £44,000. Put like that, the failure so far to address long-term under-investment in the criminal justice system could end up becoming a greater burden to the taxpayer in the long run.

Cathy Newman presents ‘Channel 4 News’, weekdays, at 7pm

--oo00oo--

The origins of Change Grow Live will come as no great surprise to probation officers of a certain vintage because such initiatives were commonplace during the enlightened times when magistrates ran the probation service, not politicians:-

A pattern and a plan

We got our start back in 1977, when a group of magistrates in Sussex noticed a pattern. They saw people going to prison, being released with no home to go to, re-offending and being sent back to prison, over and over again.

So they decided to do something about it.

Recognising that homelessness was the basis for the pattern, they pooled their resources and bought a house. From there, they started offering accommodation and support to people leaving prison. They called their charity the Sussex Association For The Rehabilitation of Offenders, or Saro for short.

Seeing the whole person

In those early days, volunteers did all the work. They saw their approach had a big impact, so they opened more houses across Sussex to support people leaving prison.

They also noticed that drugs and alcohol played a role in the cycle of homelessness and offending. So they started to look for ways to provide support with those issues too. It might sound obvious, but taking a holistic approach that looked at everything going on in someone’s life was pioneering.

It proved to be just what people needed. To keep up with the demand for our services in the 1990s, we merged with other local organisations, including a domestic violence charity and a residential rehabilitation unit, and hired our first paid members of staff.

We also started a groundbreaking project: Get It While You Can. One of our members of staff - who started out using our services - had a great idea to put peer support workers in police custody rooms. The thinking was that right after someone’s arrested is the ideal time to get support. We also thought speaking to someone who’d been through similar experiences would help them see that there was a path forward.

It was an innovative, effective idea. It wasn’t the norm to make a connection between drugs and crime, use early intervention or peer support, but it worked.

Going nationwide

Get It While You Can was so successful that we wanted to roll it out nationwide and help as many people as possible. But the name ‘Sussex Association For The Rehabilitation of Offenders’ didn’t feel right now we weren’t just operating in Sussex. It was time for a change, so we chose a new name: Crime Reduction Initiatives.

As we started running projects across the country, we noticed another issue that was playing a role in the cycle of drug addiction and crime. People couldn’t get access to drugs like methadone fast enough to help them tackle their addiction, and that made it harder for them to make the changes they wanted to see in their lives. We developed new ways to make access to treatment quicker and better, like in-house prescribing, day programmes and counselling services.

Becoming Change Grow Live

In 2012 we merged with Sova, another charity working to help people change their lives and fulfil their potential.

Around the same time, we also noticed another change in our service users. We saw that more and more of the people we were supporting hadn’t committed a crime. Our name - Crime Reduction Initiative - was a barrier, because they felt like our services weren’t for them.

So in 2016 we changed our name again, to Change Grow Live. We took the name from the phases of our recovery programme: foundations of change, foundations of growth, foundations of life. It showed how we worked and helped tackle the stigma around seeking help.

2017 was also a year of change and growth for us. A charity called Lifeline was in crisis, and the vital services it ran were at risk of closing. We stepped in and took over some of those services to keep them running for their users.

The future

Since we first started, one goal has driven everything we do: to make a difference in people’s lives. That’s still what drives us now. We know that what we do works, so we want as many people as possible to benefit. That’s how we’ll make our vision - to change society for the better - a reality.

15 comments:

  1. Thank you Cathy; thanks Jim. No matter how obvious it may be, governments can't seem to understand how 'probation', 'rehabilitation' or just plain & simple humanity works.

    Still, when one's own interests (cash, freebies, power & control) are far more important than anything else on the planet it must be hard to consider others' needs.

    ReplyDelete
  2. EVERY govt is the same, regardless of colour or leadership. Same shit, different data:

    https://www.crimeandjustice.org.uk/sites/crimeandjustice.org.uk/files/Prison%20and%20probation%20expenditure%201999-2009.pdf


    https://www.whitehavennews.co.uk/news/17149876.probation-budget-reduced/

    "Nationally, £29.3 million has been sliced from the probation budget this financial year... Mr Straw insisted the probation service has enjoyed a 70 per cent real-terms increase in funding over the last 12 years."


    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/814650/economic-social-costs-reoffending.pdf


    Guardian Oct 2011: "The budget of the prisons and probation service fell 11% to £4.2bn"


    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CDP-2019-0217/CDP-2019-0217.pdf

    "2.2 Probation
    In 2013-14, the probation system was split in two, with the public sector National Probation Service (NPS) managing high risk offenders and providing services to the courts, and the new, privately-run Community Rehabilitation Companies (CRC) managing low and
    medium risk offenders. By 2017, it was being widely acknowledged that the reforms had not
    had the desired result."

    ReplyDelete
  3. There are any number of sources giving conflicting info about MoJ/probation budgets.

    https://www.theyworkforyou.com/wrans/?id=2013-01-23d.136548.h

    Figures in £million (rounded):

    2007/8: 845
    2008/9: 897
    2009/10: 899
    2010/11: 875
    2011/12: 821
    2012/13: 814


    https://www.ons.gov.uk/aboutus/transparencyandgovernance/freedomofinformationfoi/probationservicebudgetbetween2010and2015

    "You asked: I am looking for budget/real spends on the probation service in years 2010 to 2015.

    We said: Thank you for your request.

    Unfortunately, we do not hold expenditure data at a level that allows us to separately identify spend by the probation service. We have consulted with statistical colleagues in HM Treasury who inform us that they also do not hold expenditure data at this level of detail."


    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CDP-2018-0162/CDP-2018-0162.pdf

    "The MoJ’s budget from central government reduced each year between 2010/11 and 2016/17.
    The MoJ’s Total DEL (Departmental Expenditure Limit) in 2016/17 was 29% lower in real terms than in 2010/11."

    "2.3 Probation costs: In 2016-17, the MoJ spent £414 million on the NPS and £410 million on contracts for CRCs, adding up to a total spend of £824 million. Note that this may not reflect the total cost of the probation system since it may not include a) administrative and staffing costs associated with the contracting process, and b) overhead costs for the running of any relevant infrastructure."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The Govt that never stops lying. Its a pathological condition endemic within the UK government. It just can't help it. It lies about anything & everything. Without fail.

      "we do not hold expenditure data at a level that allows us to separately identify spend by the probation service."


      "In 2016-17, the MoJ spent £414 million on the NPS and £410 million on contracts for CRCs, adding up to a total spend of £824 million. Note that this may not reflect the total cost of the probation system since it may not include a) administrative and staffing costs associated with the contracting process, and b) overhead costs for the running of any relevant infrastructure."

      Delete
    2. "Prison and probation minister Alex Chalk was unable to tell me on Channel 4 News on Wednesday whether the promise of an extra 2,500 probation officers restored the numbers cut since the Conservatives came to power, nor how much lower probation funding was now than then."

      https://www.statista.com/statistics/319255/number-of-probation-officers-in-the-uk/

      Delete
    3. Alternatively the lazy bastard Chalk could simply have visited the Govt's own web pages:

      https://data.justice.gov.uk/probation/additional/probation-staff-in-post

      National Audit Office figures state:

      "15,475 average FTE staff were employed by the National Probation Service (part of NOMS) in 2009/10"

      So:

      15,475 in 2009/10

      10,020 in Mar 2021


      2,500 new recruits will barely cover half of the lost numbers of staff.

      Delete
  4. House of Commons library:

    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-9252/CBP-9252.pdf


    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN01841/SN01841.pdf


    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CDP-2019-0217/CDP-2019-0217.pdf

    ReplyDelete
  5. From Politics.co.uk

    "In January of this year, the government announced a one-year funding pot of £20 million, to be invested in short-term accommodation for prison leavers. This money is being spread across five out of the 12 probation regions across England and Wales and was launched last week.

    But the fact remains that seven of the probation regions will not see any increased funding. And with the funding available for only one year, we don’t yet have the long-term solutions that will make the impact that we want to see."

    Just wondering if the Simon Community still operates in England?

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
  6. Via email:-

    Hi,

    I would like to remain anonymous. I follow your blog and its so accurate. Sadly I resigned this week after 10 years in probation, 18 in the CJS. I have given my all to the point of burn out! I have had amazing emails from the police thanking me for my work and from other partners. Sadly not reciprocated by NPS leaders. I received an anonymous exit questionnaire - insulting. I was seconded to a project for the last few years but this was also under resourced and the officers on the ground under valued and treated like the underclass even though we were doing the bulk of the work.

    I finally had an epiphany this week and decided that I needed to leave for my own wellbeing and resigned. I'm sad in lots of ways mainly because I leave a number of amazing colleagues and probation has been my life. It concerns me that the service has stopped caring about their more experienced staff and retention of PQiP's is poor and they are out of their depth. The trust days were amazing and I have fond memories of those days. Senior leaders are more bothered about appearances and twitter and the organisation is now run like a business, ruthless, uncaring and totally out of touch.

    Thanks

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So sad to hear.

      Continue to make positive choices for you & yours.

      Do not let the useless bullies steal any more of your life.


      "Senior leaders are more bothered about appearances and twitter" - because the shallow fraudsters know fuck all about anything else.

      "the organisation is now run like a business" - BUT to be clear, a really shit business that would have failed many years ago if it wasn't for the public funds that prop it up & line the pockets of the shit-lickers who have the brass neck to call themselves "excellent leaders".

      Delete
    2. I think they are all like that twittering about their tucky in
      Dinner and photo. Or like some on coastal territory a glass of way too big wine and 40 fags a day habit. They are piss poor leaders but excellent bullies and get the kick from duffing up people. Can't wait for 60.

      Delete
    3. Hey there "By Email"
      Well done for getting out, good luck to you and I wish you the best. Well done for sticking in there as long as you did, and it's so awful to hear of, and see, experienced and committed Probation staff leaving without any recognition or appreciation. I think we should form a club. It is SO DAMN HARD to have given your all and then just limp away. I always thought I would leave this profession in a better shape than when I joined it, and maybe I would be in better shape. I am nearly there too. Neither is going to happen. This is raw, and very difficult to navigate

      Delete
  7. Prepare for clients/service users to be even more disenfranchised/fucked over by new DWP cuts effective as of today, in addition to the removal of the £20 pandemic-related uplift. This relates to the reinstatement of the 'minimum income floor':

    https://www.thecanary.co/uk/analysis/2021/08/01/the-dwp-just-snuck-out-another-universal-credit-cut/

    ReplyDelete
  8. Here's the contract for the operators of Boris's chaingangs:

    "On 31st March 2021 a request was received from the Department for Transport (DfT) asking how Highways England could provide long term opportunities for MoJ NPS to enable probationers to carry our community payback activities on or around our network.

    5 month contract, ends Nov 2021

    award: Arup
    £75K"


    Other probation-related contracts are presented here:

    https://bidstats.uk/tenders/?q=probation+services&scope=keyfields

    Including:

    "The supply of Probation agency staff into the National Probation Service.

    1 year contract, ended May 2021

    award: Servoca Resourcing Solutions
    £8.9M"

    and:

    "The supply of Probation agency staff into the National Probation Service.

    1 year contract, ended May 2021

    award: Red Snapper Recruitment
    £7.6M"

    Over £16m handed to two agencies to provide staff in a single year, 2020/21.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Had enough of shit pay while being bullied as a probation employee?

    "Care home operator HC One is offering a £10,000 “welcome bonus” on two jobs for registered night nurses, both in Scotland, as private health care providers battle with a shortage of workers partly caused by EU citizens returning home.

    HC One’s offer is particularly high. But, elsewhere, mental health group Elysium Healthcare is offering a welcome bonus of £5,000 for registered nurses, while the Priory Group is offering £5,000 for mental health nurses.

    The hefty fees emerged after a survey by job search engine Adzuna found almost 5,000 vacancies across the UK currently offering signing-on bonuses for in-demand roles such as care workers, chefs and nursery staff.

    It also found that supermarket group Asda had joined Tesco in offering a £1,000 signing-on fee for HGV drivers amid a shortage in qualified workers that prompted dairy group Arla to offer a £2,000 bonus."

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/aug/01/employers-offer-golden-hellos-of-up-to-10k-amid-worker-shortage

    ReplyDelete