Thursday 8 July 2021

Well Worth Waiting For

First Minister of Wales Mark Drakeford was due to deliver the Bill McWilliams Memorial lecture last year, but Covid put paid to that and it had to be delivered via zoom 12 months later for the same reason. Boy it was worth waiting for though as he made a compelling case for Wales taking devolved responsibility for a Welsh Probation Service. All in the virtual audience were left in no doubt that it would be a very different beast to that operating now. 

As a former Probation Officer, academic and author, Mark Drakeford is particularly well-qualified to speak on the subject and unlike many politicians, it's quite obvious he 'gets' what probation is about and that it needs to be locally organised and focussed on acting as advocate and champion for dealing with the causes of criminal behaviour as much as getting alongside and working with clients to improve their life chances. 

He tells an interesting story from the riots that swept many urban centres of Britain in the 1990s and a pamphlet published by a northern probation service entitled 'The Dog That Didn't Bark' essentially offering humble pie for not having spoken out more forcefully regarding what they knew only too well was the plight of many clients. Just let that sink in for one moment. That is where we've come from, an independent service that has a view, a conscience, can speak up, not a bunch of brainwashed government functionaries who toe the line. 

The video will no doubt be published in due course, but I wanted to pen something before the memory fades, but I can assure you, the whole speech is so very well worth watching. 'Good government is good for you' is just one of the memorable phrases I came away with, particularly because it's so patently obvious that its been so clearly lacking for so long. 

On such an important occasion and for all those who believe passionately in the probation ethos, for the life of me I have no idea why the organising committee wasted valuable time giving a platform to former CRC CEO and current NPS management clone Alex Osler. In 15 minutes she must have recited every bloody command and control diktat and initiative that I'm sure would have had Bill McWilliams revolving in his grave. 

It was an insult in many ways to compare her 'message' and that of the occasion and pretend they were in any way similar. This virtual question to her was a belter though. Unfortunately we didn't hear Alex's answer because of course it's the MoJ official line!

"A question then for Alex. What is the impact of the tone and language used by MoJ in their communications last week that consistently used the word offender, focused on surveillance and monitoring and attempted to present practitioners as crime fighters? How can this dissonance be countered effectively?" 

Richard Garside on the other hand from the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies was well 'on message' with the dissident probation view that all reasonable folk desperately hope can eventually re-emerge when we can break free from HMPPS control and the bloody civil service. On answering the question as to where the effective probation voice was nowadays and the demise of ACPO, he was particularly pointed in his remarks on the missing Napo voice, citing the sad passing of Harry Fletcher, 'although I'm sure good work is going on behind the scenes'. Yeah right. 

In winding things up, Professor Mike Nellis gave Mark Drakeford an exceptionally warm and heartfelt vote of thanks and in the process made an interesting observation. He said that although Bill McWilliams didn't say it, he felt he would have eventually made the point that probation that we would recognise as being true to its ethos can only function effectively in a socialist environment, or at least a functioning social democracy. Well of course we don't have that here in England do we and come to think of it, how can you be a Tory and a Probation Officer worth the name anyway?          

13 comments:

  1. That was great. Very energising and inspiring. A section which sang to me: (I may not have this verbatim, I was scribbling and listening) "Probation should not be simply a giant referral engine, with the role just to hand the person on to someone else. It should convince and demonstrate to one human being that another human being is genuinely interested in them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Glad you picked that out from Mark Drakeford - I forgot to mention it! I think he said probation should actually do something not just bloody signpost. Well that was the gist anyway.

      Delete
    2. Hallelujah! I've been saying similar on this blog for some time now...probation really has just become one big referral machine, with the role of the officer belittled to monitoring if the person attended, and the odd bit of "information sharing". What exactly do people get from these "checking in" appointments we tend to offer them? Where has the time and effort been spent in equipping us, the practitioners, in therapeutic skills to meaningfully engage? And I don't mean stepping stones manuals and painting by numbers offending behaviour programmes that we all know don't work.

      Delete
  2. https://www.ccgsj.crim.cam.ac.uk/mcwilliams/lectures

    They've got some catching up to do. The most recent recording is of the 2018 lecture.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you for reporting that - sadly it has not been picked up by any media that reaches me - one might have hoped that with no less a person than a current First Minister of a UK National Assembly delivering a leading speech on the media hot subject of crime, that among politicians in ny UK Government he is probably uniquely qualified to comment about - none have so far seen fit to pay any atttention.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I rather think there's very few 'probation officers' left now, and that the service is now dominated by 'parole officers'.
    I think they're very different things with very different mindsets.

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes you have nailed it gtx that is the way to put it. No professionalism left. Just drones and low will follow. Inevitably all pos will be phased out as we are now a very marginal aging group.

      Delete
    2. We signpost to other agencies and frequently those agencies then signpost again. It is one big revolving door with no-one actually doing the work that needs to be done.

      Delete
  5. Fancy joining Justin in heaping praise upon the 'excellent leaders'?

    Final week! Apply by 16 July for a role as a HMIProbation Inspector (three-year secondments).

    Full details: http://ow.ly/3xzB50FruZN

    ReplyDelete
  6. Courtesy of Jolyon Maugham - an excellent read, albeit off-piste:

    https://www-blaetter-de.translate.goog/ausgabe/2021/juli/die-politik-der-luege?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-GB&_x_tr_pto=ajax,nv,elem

    ReplyDelete
  7. Also off-piste (your call, Jim, but I think its important to have it recorded for context as to where we are today) - this time courtesy award-winning journalist Carole Cadwalladr:

    "It’s taken until now for the country to catch up with what Independent SAGE was saying very clearly a week ago. And we’re still not calling it by its name. Britain is the first country in the world to go full herd immunity by mass infection. We should be terrified. I am."

    ReplyDelete
  8. It is very disappointing to hear that the Institute doesnt get out a recording of the lecture promptly. This lecture sounded to my ears like a clarion call to arms for the profession. An articulate and authoritative argument for the probation service future I would sign up to.
    I took random notes Jim. Would you like to have them?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes I agree - very disappointing as it could/should form the basis for a spirited debate. By all means pass on your notes if you wish, or better still, can I encourage you to pen your impressions?

      Delete