Wednesday, 12 October 2022

HMI Plea Falls on Deaf Ears

Even before we get to the subject of todays blog post - an extraordinarily blunt statement from HMI Justin Russell demanding more prison staff - I feel compelled to mention the fact that the government of Liz Truss must surely be close to falling. It's pretty clear every aspect of her policies, bar removal of the National Insurance increase, are about to fail. The BBC is reporting Tory MP's are talking to Labour about defeating a return to fracking; the pound is plunging and Bank of England will not carry on with its support beyond Friday; impending benefit cuts have no chance of getting through Parliament and Labour have just been put on a war footing with a General Election expected. The Economist does not mince its words:-

 There is no way for her to go back to the way things were before

Liz truss is already a historical figure. However long she now lasts in office, she is set to be remembered as the prime minister whose grip on power was the shortest in British political history. Ms Truss entered Downing Street on September 6th. She blew up her own government with a package of unfunded tax cuts and energy-price guarantees on September 23rd. Take away the ten days of mourning after the death of the queen, and she had seven days in control. That is the shelf-life of a lettuce. 

--oo00oo-- 

So, with inflation rapidly rising, mortgage interest rates set to soar, widespread industrial action taking place or impending and extensive public spending cuts expected, it's hard to avoid the conclusion that we are rapidly descending into potential chaos with very little hope of a positive response to well-argued pleas such as this from yesterday:-  

Chief Inspector's blog: short-staffing in prisons must be tackled

HMP/YOI Woodhill near Milton Keynes and HMP Swaleside on the Isle of Sheppey are similar-sized men’s prisons that are part of the long-term, high-secure estate. Both house prisoners mainly from London and the South East who are often serving long sentences. Both jails have recently been in the headlines: Woodhill has been forced to close temporarily its high security separation centre, where prisoners are moved to prevent them radicalising other inmates. Swaleside, meanwhile, experienced serious, concerted indiscipline requiring the intervention of specialist tornado teams to restore order.

In the last 18 months we have conducted full inspections of both prisons and, more recently, followed up with shorter independent reviews of progress. Both establishments were, and continued to be, seriously short-staffed.

So serious was the situation at Woodhill, that we considered making just one overarching recommendation – get enough officers.

This situation was not new. Reports going back many years describe a similar picture at the jail. In 2014, we said that the amount of time prisoners were spending out of their cells ‘was very limited and reduced by staff shortages’. Likewise, in 2018, we described the staffing situation as ‘underpinning nearly all the concerns raised in this report’.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, when we returned to Woodhill in April for our interim review, staff shortages continued to inhibit progress despite significant effort from the leadership team.

The lack of staff at Swaleside had also severely affected prison life. In our report in 2021, our first key concern was that: ‘Only around three-quarters of prison officers were available and there was a severe shortage of workshop instructors, programme delivery facilitators, health care staff, probation officers, operational support grades and caterers.’

When we returned last month for an interim review of progress, we found that the staffing situation was even worse, and the prison was still running a heavily restricted regime. Some staff and prisoners told us they felt unsafe, and levels of prisoner-on-prisoner violence had increased.

As at Woodhill, the problem of recruitment and retention was not new. The 2014 inspection report said of the offender management unit: ‘acute staff shortages had completely undermined this crucial function’ while in 2019 we said the unit was ‘chronically understaffed’.

Both prisons hold men who are serving long sentences, some of whom were in prison long before the pandemic struck. In many cases they have spent far more time in jail than the staff who are looking after them. They have also experienced past prison regimes that were less constricted with more time out of cell and better opportunities to work or attend education. Sentence plans, that set out what the prisoner needs to do to progress to less secure jails, often demand that they attend an accredited programme designed to reduce their level of risk, but shortages of staff to deliver this work mean that prisoners feel stuck and a key incentive for good behaviour is lost.

The risk for both prisons is that, as staffing levels fall, violence increases as prisoners become more frustrated. This can mean more officers leave because they feel unsafe, further adding to the difficulties at the jail.

The situation at Woodhill and Swaleside is particularly acute, with long-term, often high-risk prisoners becoming increasingly disgruntled. But we see similar difficulties with staffing in most prisons in the South East of England, where prisons have to compete with local businesses able to offer higher wages or greater flexibility, and there is competition from other prisons for staff. Jails in more remote parts of the country also struggle. Swaleside, of course, suffers from both factors.

Questions must be asked about the recruitment process, given that so many officers leave so quickly. Governors say that they can often tell very quickly which new recruits do not have the capabilities to be successful and some appear to have no idea what the job will entail. This suggests that not enough filtering is done by the prison service during the recruitment process. It also seems bizarre to me, as a former headteacher, that governors have no say over the officers who come to work in their prison and the first time they meet their new recruits is when they walk through the door on day one. The work of a prison officer is highly skilled, difficult, and at times dangerous. It also varies greatly between different prisons. Given the importance to governors of having the right team in place, this practice seems archaic.

Prison staff tell me that new recruits are getting younger. While, previously, many joined in their mid-twenties after working elsewhere – often in the forces – some new staff members have only recently left school. Prison leaders have begun to recognise that, although many of these recruits have the potential to become outstanding officers, they need more support than in the past. There is some promising work in jails such as Featherstone to put in place more comprehensive mentoring for new officers, with the aim of reducing the high numbers who currently quit within their first year.

Existing, experienced staff also need appropriate support. The prison service seems to suffer from high levels of staff sickness, with some jails particularly affected. On my visits I have been surprised by how little input officers receive, compared with their contemporaries in secure mental health settings who get weekly clinical supervision. Of course, prison officers need to be resilient, but I have been encouraged to see examples where more thought has gone into the effect that dealing with violence and aggression has on staff. In the segregation unit at Thameside, officers were given regular opportunities to talk with members of the psychology team, which they found invaluable, particularly after they had dealt with a serious incident.

Other prisons are trying out new ways of increasing and maintaining the workforce. For example, at Onley, another jail with some serious recruitment issues, leaders are piloting the recruitment of more part-time workers and considering ways to make the working pattern more amenable to family life. At Portland, the prison is putting officers who live near each other onto the same shift so they can save money by sharing a car to work.

There have also been pay rises for officers, which at some grades have been quite considerable. It is too early to see the effect, but it should at least help to stem the flow of resignations and maintain a reasonably healthy pipeline of trainees.

Drastic measures in prisons as chronically understaffed as Swaleside and Woodhill could involve temporarily reducing prisoner numbers, but that would mean housing inmates further away from home and puts pressure on other, already stretched prisons.

It seems clear that successful prisons that are running well have fewer issues with retaining their best staff. The behaviour of prisoners also has a direct effect on the morale of officers, so making sure that there is a more open and productive daily regime with genuine opportunities to learn and work will help to make prisons happier and safer.

I do not pretend that there is an easy solution here. The scale of the task is huge. But situations as dire as those in Swaleside and Woodhill simply cannot be allowed to continue.

Charlie Taylor, HM Chief Inspector of Prisons

Read the reports:

HMP/YOI Woodhill

HMP Swaleside

12 comments:

  1. https://www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprobation/inspections/sfo-2022/

    Probation Service needs to learn the lessons of Serious Further Offence reviews

    HM Inspectorate of Probation has published its first annual report looking at the quality of Serious Further Offence (SFO) reviews undertaken by the Probation Service after people on probation commit a serious violent or sexual offence while under supervision. These reviews, conducted by the Probation Service, aim to find out why these offences happen and reduce the chances of them happening again.

    Chief Inspector of Probation Justin Russell said: “Each year, around 500 serious sexual or violent offences are committed by people who are under probation supervision. Each incident will have a devastating impact on all those involved, which is why it is essential that the Probation Service learns from these awful incidents to improve the way it manages risk of harm and to support a reduction in reoffending.”

    Since 2021, at the request of the Secretary of State for Justice, HM Inspectorate of Probation has been inspecting the quality of 20 per cent of the SFO reviews undertaken by the Probation Service into the circumstances surrounding some of the gravest crimes committed by people under probation supervision.

    This inaugural publication reports on the quality of 64 SFO reviews quality assured by the Inspectorate between April 2021 and April 2022, across England and Wales. We have rated 69 per cent of the reviews as ‘Good’ or ‘Outstanding’, but almost one-third (31 per cent) were rated ‘Requires improvement’ or ‘Inadequate’.

    Mr Russell continued: “Too many Serious Further Offence reviews are falling below par, with services not sufficiently identifying the necessary learning. This is because they are focused on ‘what’ happened rather than the ‘why’. As a result, they are not analysing poor practice robustly, which limits the learning for probation practitioners about the factors underlying these often very serious crimes.

    “I have also some concerns about the grade and independence of those undertaking this work. Senior Probation Officers tasked with undertaking these reviews told us they would like to explore management and policy issues at a more senior level, but do not feel empowered to do so. They expressed concern that their ability to scrutinise and potentially criticise the practice of their own senior leaders could be limited by their own role, grade and links to the region concerned. Greater independence within the SFO review process and a more senior grade of reviewer might bring greater and more robust challenge.

    “On a more positive note, almost three-quarters of the reviews we looked at were rated ‘Good’ in terms of their accessibility to victims or their families. We are seeing a genuine effort to be open, transparent and sensitive to the needs of victims needs and their families. This is significant improvement and is to be commended”.

    From the SFO reviews we have quality assured our inspectors have identified the following key lessons for frontline staff:

    practitioners are underestimating the nature and level of risk of serious harm posed. In 64 per cent of the cases we reviewed, the practitioner had assessed the original risk of serious harm as only low or medium
    diversity is not always fully considered and there is insufficient liaison between prison and probation staff
    there is sometimes a lack of professional curiosity, with practitioners not using all available resources to support the management of the risks posed by people on probation in the community
    there is a recurring failure (also evident in our local inspections) to undertake adequate enquiries with the police and local councils about domestic abuse or child and adult safeguarding risks.
    high workloads and poor management oversight are having a clear impact on the quality of work to protect the public.

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  2. * practitioners are underestimating the nature and level of risk of serious harm posed. In 64 per cent of the cases we reviewed, the practitioner had assessed the original risk of serious harm as only low or medium

    The risk might have been low or medium at the time of assessment. That's not a failing. But, as the mantra of the risk entrepreneurs goes, "risk is dynamic". But who has the time to reassess risk every day/week/month?

    * there is a recurring failure (also evident in our local inspections) to undertake adequate enquiries with the police and local councils about domestic abuse or child and adult safeguarding risks.

    Not a lot you can do when social services, police & other agencies are also understaffed, underfunded & under stress, and do not respond.

    * there is sometimes a lack of professional curiosity...

    What can we expect of a workforce that is mostly burned out, worn down, bullied, exhausted, depressed, under-trained & de-professionalised by govt policy?

    "Too many Serious Further Offence reviews are falling below par, with services not sufficiently identifying the necessary learning."

    Of course they're not - it would mean they have to look at their own role as opposed to pushing frontline staff under the queue of buses they have lined up.

    Come on, Justin Russell, stand up for the probation practitioner for a change, get off the fence-of-equivocation & reveal the whole truth.

    The current probation service is screwed, twisted & broken beyond repair, with no truly independent oversight.

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  3. The state of todays prison system (as with all public services) is a direct result of Tory ideology since 2010.
    They've turned careers into just jobs, and professionals into employees.
    They've dumbed down and deskilled everything reducing the workforces bargaining power on pay and conditions, whilst engaging in huge vanity projects like HS2, a jet for Boris, and even charging the taxpayer £3.5m for Thachers funeral.
    What's really shocking however is the immense cost it's taken to get our public services into such a state of disarray.
    TR cost a fortune to implement, and another fortune to reverse it. The same for our prisons.

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sacking-prison-staff-cost-government-5187437?int_source=amp_continue_reading&int_medium=amp&int_campaign=continue_reading_button#amp-readmore-target

    I read yesterday that HMP Stocken Hall in Leicestershire is aggressively trying to recruit officers, and are offering £30k to anyone willing to sell their soul to the MoJ.
    Not sure how that works with impending deep cuts to public spending.
    If the Tories hadn't destroyed so much, they wouldn't now be panicking about how much it's going to cost to start repairing everything.

    'Getafix

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  4. It seems to me that collectively His Majesty's Parliament does not understand that it alone is responsible for the leadership and membership of His Majesty's Government or collectively they are incapable of understanding their role or they wish for the collapse of the system of the UK's system of governance.

    We need a national coalition government led by a level-headed MP, the only one I can think is up to the task is probably John McDonnell, though I expect that there are a few others, possibly on the Scottish benches. Representatives, from the nationalists would need to be members. I would like to see an amendment to the MPs oath so that elected Irish Nationals are able to take their seats. The main task would be to maximise stability, minimise poverty and to rapidly introduce a system of proportional representation and call a General Election. Hopefully it could complete its business very soon after the coronation, which should be organised as cheaply as feasible.

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  5. The inescapable fact is we send too many people to prison, especially on recall, and until that is fixed nothing will get better. Ludicrous new laws have seen the prison popoulation spiral out of control most of which have been aggressively campaigned for by carceral feminists. Probation staff have been spread far too thinly, you'll be asked to supervise the entire male population next, and viewing your bewildered 'Pops' through the lens of intersectionality helps nobody.

    To do this all sorts of social ills need to be fixed because when you think about it everything about statecraft is broken, I can't think of a single public body acting effectively, not one. Single issue politics have to go because as someone once said, everything connects.

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    1. Carceral feminists? Wtaf? Are you Jordan Peterson?

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  6. Any call for a general election is basically asking to endorse a system that is not fit for purpose and which only benefits certain elements of the population.
    As I said last month, I can remember Tony Benn, supposedly the big bad guru of the left stating, “ we do not seek to destroy capitalism, we seek to inherit it,” again, as I said last month, the ‘workers party,’ which has done nothing and will continue to do nothing to support working people believe that they can run capitalism better than the capitalists.
    If you look at the current shenanigans, the Tory government(whom I loathe, despise and detest,) are being told by the unelected ‘ market,’ that they cannot implement their proposals, so what price democracy?
    Please be reminded that as in so many other recent crises, the money hasn’t disappeared or been lost, it has been pocketed by the usual suspects. Your loss is their gain!

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    1. Kwartang it turns out is not a properly qualified economist at all he studied the classics and wrote something on coinage in ancient Briton. However you critique his policies the fact is he is not up to the job and so truss will either hang onto him and he brings her down with the pound or she has to decide can she sack him . She better had he's cost the country enough already and will eclipse the Johnston fiefdom

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  7. Conversations around the kettle (the water cooler having been axed) It became obvious that those, who in fact represent the majority, who dont take any notice at all of Politics (capital P) are now in serious and consensual worry, that Politicians are impacting on themselves, and their work on the probation frontline. I was reminded of an observaton from another discipline: the mark of good design is that nobody notices it.

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  8. Build prisons and they will be populated. Happening. Build prisons and recruit staff: issue. If there was any credability in this governments justice/prisons/probation agenda, there would be by now a clear path from prison to the community, but there is none. The investment is going into the profitable and politically popular inhumane warehousing of traumatised and very ill people, with no real attention or investment into the community, Their and our community. APs. Housing. Mental health. Drugs services. Underfunded agencies are doing their best but they will be even harder up soon.
    All on their knees. The sad reality is that in a winter , where "upright" pensioners starve and die of cold, and photogenic children go to foodbanks, the people its my job and my vocation to care about are at the bottom of the heap. I feel so sad, full of grief
    Pearly Gates

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  9. Politics stopped being a vehicle whereby the barely enfranchised could make a difference in 1979, since then the illusion of choice has been offered every four years or so to make you think you can make a difference......to quote Emma Goldman and Samuel Clemens.....if voting changed anything they’d make it illegal, the only way forward is to encourage the government to make voting compulsory......ironically by not voting for a few years.....show them what true democracy looks like

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    1. Australia operates a system where it's not compulsory to vote, but it is compulsory to turn up at the polling station to get 'ticked off'. Failure to attend gets you fined.
      If you've got to go to the polling station anyway, you may as well vote while you're there.
      I'd favour a similar system here.

      'Getafix

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