Probation: An Extension of the Prison?
“Probation officers will be given self-defence training, bleed kits, body-worn cameras, knife arches and metal-detecting wands.”If HMPPS applied the same principles to itself that it routinely applies in Serious Further Offence investigations, security measures would have been implemented across England and Wales the moment the Preston incident occurred. Instead, the consequences of systemic inaction and leadership failure are being handed back to us to manage. We are already responsible for supervising, rehabilitating and supporting people with nowhere near enough resources; now we are apparently expected to search, scan and physically protect ourselves as well. Probation is being dragged in two fundamentally incompatible directions at the same time.
Let’s not pretend otherwise: this service has been reshaped into a top-down bureaucracy obsessed with enforcement, metrics, referrals and compliance. That is the inevitable product of an increasingly authoritarian leadership culture within HMPPS, one reinforced by a workforce that lacks diversity in age, race, gender, thought, and credible professional experience. This is hardly surprising when probation remains a chronically underfunded and underpaid profession, if we can still call it a profession at all.
But the latest expectation, that probation practitioners will function as security guards or de facto prison officers, is a profound and dangerous misstep. Yes, some staff thrive in the current enforcement-heavy culture because it aligns with their preferred approach. But suggesting this represents the whole profession is fiction. Many probation officers did not join to search, scan or restrain people. They did not sign up to be enforcers, monitors or “risk managers” in the narrowest sense. They entered this work to help, support, and guide, and many are still offering thoughtful, trauma-informed, principled support every single day. That reality simply doesn’t fit the image being imposed from HMPPS, endorsed by the Chief Probation Officer, the Justice Minister, & Co.
We also need honesty about the wider context of poverty, violence, drug markets, knife crime, housing insecurity, racial divisions and acute mental health crises, which now permeate every corner of the UK. Probation offices are not insulated from this landscape, nor should we pretend that turning practitioners into quasi-security staff has anything to do with addressing it. The reality is simpler: the country is in crisis, the justice system is fractured, and probation is being forced to absorb the fallout with inadequate staffing, unmanageable workloads, poor leadership, and no professional security support.
It is devastating to imagine that the colleagues attacked in Oxford and Preston were almost certainly offering support at the very moment they were harmed. Every serious threat I have faced in this job has emerged during attempts to help, not confront. No knife arch or body-worn camera would have prevented those moments. Many of the people we supervise are in crisis, traumatised, or navigating health, justice and community services, that have already failed them. When people are imprisoned without meaningful rehabilitation or support, or pushed through courts without regard to their needs or humanity, the outcomes are predictable. The probation officer becomes the one who absorbs the consequences.
To be absolutely clear: nothing justifies the attacks on probation practitioners, but the government’s response is the wrong one. Probation offices need actual security: properly trained personnel, clear protocols and modern safety systems. That is not controversial, it is common sense. We also need access to functioning support services: mental health care, housing pathways, addiction treatment, crisis provision, employment support. Without these, probation becomes the default service for everything the rest of the system is unable, or unwilling, to deal with. Ironically, I recently read this perspective in a quietly published 2025 MAPPA report outlining the “Voice of the Practitioner”
Every day, people enter probation offices seeking help we do not have the means to offer, others expecting decisions that may be devastating. Probation offices and probation practioners are not perfect, but transforming them into an extension of the prison, with metal detectors and practitioners trained to physically intervene, is dangerous and completely out of step with “what works”. There is no shortage of insight, research and professional expertise pointing toward a better model. Much of it has been shared, published and lived. Much of it has been ignored.
Despite the dire findings of the HM Inspectorate of Probation over the past decade, there is evidence of probation working as it should, although I’d rarely describe it as “magic”: This from the Probation Institute. But this is not universal. It is clear that the public and political narrative about probation urgently needs to change. This from Revolving Doors charity.
And we have been repeatedly told that our once world-renowned probation service is now an international “outlier”, and it’s identity drastically needs to be shaped and changed. 'Outlier England' published in July on this blog.
Fixing this is not complicated. We could upgrade probation qualifications to the standard of social work tomorrow, restore professional status, and pay salaries that reflect the responsibility of the role as referenced by 'Important Read - Part Four' of an article by Prof Rob Canton re-published on this blog.
We could even restore the ethos of probation’s past, because that worked too and we could actually listen to those with lived experience; there are credible voices who know what support, supervision and reform look like when they work.
Responsibility for fixing this crisis lies squarely with senior probation leadership, HMPPS and the Justice Minister. For starters, they could easily divert a chunk of that £700 million hoarded for tagging and AI that won’t improve frontline outcomes. Secondly, our unions should be collectively demanding urgent safety measures, the immediate separation from HMPPS, and not quietly accepting the further conversion of probation into a poorly paid, deprofessionalised service that is being dragged into being a low-status enforcement arm of the justice system dressed up as “public protection” and “risk management”.
As we continue to process the shocking attacks in Oxford and Preston, we have to accept they may not be the last. We have waited years for meaningful action to keep staff safe and to recognise the real value of our work. What we are being offered is superficial, performative and dangerously misguided. Some will relish the opportunity to wield search wands; others will walk away. The rest of us will carry on doing what we always do: absorbing the consequences of decisions made far above us, quietly working, quietly worrying, quietly waiting… for safety, for change, for pay, for leadership, for a way out… just waiting.
Probation Officer
Helen Schofield writing in Probation Quarterly from the Probation Institute:-
ReplyDelete"I must first and foremost say how shocked and
sorry we are at the Probation Institute to learn
of the assault on a trainee probation officer in
the Oxford PDU just last week. We understand
that this, like the Preston incident, was a
stabbing, and whilst both victims have survived
we all understand that the outcome could have
been very different. The psychological impact
on the survivors will be enormous and all who
witnessed the event will also be affected. We
remind ourselves of our own difficult personal
experiences with service users and of how
often potentially very serious incidents occur
on a smaller scale. We are all concerned to
know what is the most effective way to prevent
harm without losing the parameters of
professional practice. The safety of staff across
all organisations working in rehabilitation must
be a priority for us all."
It is more than “a priority for us all”. The guest blog says all that needs to be said, the probation institute would be smart to follow this lead.
DeleteThe institute my arse it's a collection of hangers on who helped TR in and is some of the shittiest ex chief officers ever. Apart from Robbie bourgot who was in Napo and had a reputation . The rest are not what anyone could regard as probation friendly. They like the title not the graft. This group are hardly a institute just a lot of high scale pretence.
DeleteI’d agree. If Robbie is the Canadian sounding old school po, I’ve met her, she’s a good’un.
DeleteThe same forward reads;
DeleteA couple of myth busters however – we are a charity so we must not be overtly “political” and we are completely independent so we rely heavily on membership fees to fund our work.
I agree with the thrust of this piece — but it’s grim that we’ve ended up here. We’re bolting metal plates onto a ship that’s already taking on water. Yes, better security may now be inevitable, but if we focus only on hardware, we’re treating smoke while the fire burns on.
ReplyDeleteThe real safety system in probation has always been people — experienced staff with the time and trust to use proper professional judgement. Strip that away and no amount of scanners, buzzers or barriers will save a service that’s been hollowed out.
Investing in the “soft” side of security — relationships, support, skill, and actually helping people turn corners — is the engine room. The hardware is just the handrail. Without fixing what’s underneath, we’re only decorating the cracks.
It makes no sense us being expected to search and pat people down. That’s what prison officers do when I visit prisons. I’m not a prison officer.
DeleteBut will Hellen put this blog in probation quarterly?
DeleteAnon 10:04 I doubt it very much.
DeleteJim your excellent blog work has initiated a regen in people mindset. Fear shock anger no surprise. However you are independent charge nothing yet support influence and encourage debate. I read the blogs and can see the anguish and frustration yet despite all the direction here solution exploration I have seen nothing worthy valuable or protective from any unions. In particular Napo purports to be the members union of probation but has not appeared to be doing anything to combat the incredible reading of fear and concerns littering this blog. I would not mind if Napo asked some questions survey anything. Worse some stages have been written on here Napo ought to be taking. Is that anything on here Napo sees as not doing that because of the blogs popularity. Is it they don't read it. More over what is it they should be doing to protect the staff.
Delete10:04 I’ve made a request for you - cheers.
DeleteDear Probation Institute,
You may have seen Guest Blog 107 from a Probation Officer on the On Probation blog:
Probation: An Extension of the Prison?
https://probationmatters.blogspot.com/2025/12/guest-blog-107.html?m=1
I strongly believe this piece deserves space both in your news section and in Probation Quarterly. It captures the real, unfiltered views from the frontline—views that rarely make it into official publications precisely because we can only speak honestly under anonymity due to civil service restrictions.
I hope you will give this serious consideration. While I’m not convinced the Probation Institute will publish this kind of authentic, widely-shared perspective, the opportunity remains open to demonstrate that frontline voices matter.
Yours,
Another anonymous Probation Officer
https://www.probation-institute.org/contact
Thank you for your enquiry, a member of the Probation Institute team will be in touch soon. Any queries please email admin@probation-institute.org
Wishful thinking.
Delete“we are a charity so we must not be overtly “political”
There’s so much to agree with here. I didn’t join probation to search people either. The £700 million could be used for much more than being wasted on tagging and IT contracts. I disagree about probation losing its rehabilitation ethos, we didn’t lose it, it was taken from us.
ReplyDeleteWill colleagues stop say 700 it's actually 220 a year over 3 years. This means 4 in fact. Divide that nationally deduct the increase in staffing admin and some desk space. There will be very little impact if when inflation has its bite and the bulk of it will be tags ai and probably increase our work.
DeleteTo those in leadership, I want you to hear this honestly. Reading pieces like this brings up a sadness and an anger that has become far too familiar. Many of us joined probation when it still had a soul. When the work was hard but meaningful. When relationships mattered. When professional judgement was respected. When the service still recognised itself.
ReplyDeleteWhat we are living through now feels like standing inside the ruins of something that once meant a great deal. The culture has shifted so far from what probation used to be that some days it barely resembles the service we committed our careers to. You talk about public protection, about risk, about operational needs, but you never seem to acknowledge the depth of what has been lost along the way.
We are watching probation become more hollow, more defensive, more enforcement-led, more afraid. And the burden of that shift always falls on the front line. We are the ones absorbing the fallout from collapsing services, rising crises, unrealistic expectations and decisions made far above us that bear no resemblance to the reality we work in. Each time the system fails, it is practitioners who are left to carry the consequences.
What makes it harder is the feeling that leadership either cannot see this or has chosen not to. You respond to tragedy with equipment. You respond to pressure with instructions. You respond to risk by telling us to be more resilient. But you do not respond to the truth. The service is unsafe because the structure around us has been stripped back to the point where staff themselves are the last line of protection.
That is not resilience. It is exhaustion disguised as professionalism.
I am angry because probation did not need to become this. And I am sad because the ethos that once defined us is slipping away in full view. The people who still believe in it are doing everything they can to keep it alive, but goodwill is not an infinite resource, and it should never have been the foundation the entire service rested on.
If leadership genuinely wants probation to recover, then listen to the people doing the work. We are telling you what is wrong every single day. Listen to the sadness in our voices when we say this is not the probation we joined. Listen to the anger when we say we are being asked to carry risks we cannot manage safely. Listen to the quiet honesty when we tell you that the service is losing its purpose, and that we feel we are losing ours with it.
Probation deserves more than equipment and slogans. The public deserves a service rooted in purpose, skill and support. And the staff holding this together deserve leadership that finally accepts what we already know. Something fundamental has to change.
And so let me say this plainly. Probation is not being held together by strategy, policy or leadership. It is being held together by exhausted practitioners who still care enough to keep turning up. We are the safety net, the scaffolding and the shock absorbers of a system that has forgotten its own purpose. If leadership continues to look away, if nothing meaningful changes, it will not be staff who have failed. It will be those who were trusted to protect this service and instead presided over its slow, avoidable decline. We deserve better. The people we supervise deserve better. And the truth is no longer quiet.
I totally agree. Leadership has to start by listening to the people holding this service together. Give practitioners back their professional judgement, cap the workloads that are burning them out, and invest in the support, supervision and reflective practice—not just more kit. Stop imposing fixes from above and co-produce a recovery with the staff who live the consequences every day. And before anything else, acknowledge what’s been lost. Trust won’t rebuild until leadership finally names the truth and acts on it. Only then does probation have a chance to find its purpose again.
DeleteThere is no ‘leadership’ because there are no leaders. This is endemic of the public sector in general, they are not leaders but managers. Leaders lead from the front, have the experience and qualifications to challenge and represent their teams when in challenging situations, to make decisions and provide guidance even when the instructions are doomed to fail, but they will challenge it not just wander along as naively as some of those in the junior management roles and upwards do on a daily basis in the service.
DeleteThank you for sharing Probation Officer and to all those who will add commentaries, speak truth to power and continue to add to a groundswell of increasing public awareness and possible debate. Those able, I hope we also share with our social media followers and also make available to our local MP’s. Although, my own has shown no inclination to respond the veracity and volume of comments over recent weeks all give credence to the absolute depth of feeling/opinion and may bring about a response. Best wishes for the week ahead IanGould5
ReplyDeleteRecent Testimonies From the Front Line (2024–2025)- taken from published sources:
DeleteFormer Probation Officer (after Preston stabbing)
“I left because the abuse and threats became constant — and management treated it as background noise.”
Probation Staff Union Representative (after Oxford stabbing)
“There is a palpable fear in the service now. People are scared to come to work, and that should never be normal.”
Senior HMIP Inspector (2025 national review)
“There are too few staff, with too little experience, managing too many cases. It is an unsafe model for everyone involved.”
Newly-Qualified Probation Officer (HMIP case audit 2025)
I’m holding risk I don’t feel equipped to manage, but there’s no one senior enough to take it. We’re stretched past safe limits.
Middle Manager, Community Supervision Team
Every escalation feels like a fire we put out with our bare hands. There’s no capacity left for real probation work anymore.
Practitioner quoted in Russell Webster’s review of public protection failures
“We’re expected to protect the public with caseloads that make proper supervision impossible. Something will give — and it’s usually us.”
Officer after a high-risk incident in an understaffed PDU
“We raise safety concerns over and over. The response is always: ‘Be more resilient.’ We’re not short on resilience. We’re short on staff.”
Senior PO reflecting on culture change
“Probation feels hollowed-out. We used to have relationships. Now we have audits, deadlines, and fear.”
NQO, 18 months in role
“Most days I’m practising beyond my training. It’s not professional development — it’s survival.”
Former CRC-era employee now in the unified service
“It’s the same mistakes on repeat: underfund, reorganise, blame the frontline. Meanwhile risk keeps climbing.”
-------------
The testimonies tell one story: probation is running on fumes and frontline staff are the fuel. Violence is rising, workloads are unmanageable, and inexperienced officers are being handed risks they can’t safely carry. Leadership responds with kit, checklists and slogans — but not with the structural change or professional trust staff are begging for. The service that once had a soul is now surviving on the backs of exhausted practitioners who face fear, burnout and blame while still trying to protect the public. Exactly as the 2003 study warned, the system remains reactive, defensive and dangerously fragile. Nothing fundamental improves until leadership finally listens to the people doing the work
I’ll be sharing this too. You mention Russell Webster but I doubt he’ll be sharing this. It’s a shame we have very few champions. Too many like to speak about probation but never when it counts.
DeleteProbation is largely staffed by women and expecting them to search and subdue very strong and violent men, quite possibly under the influence of drugs, doesn't strike me as being a good idea.
ReplyDeletesox
I will not be searching any PoPs.
ReplyDelete“Probation officers will be given self-defence training, bleed kits, body-worn cameras, knife arches and metal-detecting wands.”
ReplyDeleteHave to wonder, if this is the initial response to the two recent attacks, just how far away are stab vests, pepper spray, and uniforms?
'Getafix
This is from 2003, but maybe it recognises the future given the path probation has been forced down since then?
Deletehttps://de-escalate.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Violence-to-Prbation-Staff-Patterns-and-Managerial-Responses.pdf
'Getafix
Good find as usual 'Getafix! From the conclusion:-
Delete"One of the interesting questions raised by Smith is the possibility that "old-style" probation work was valued by offenders, providing a possible reason for compliance with probation orders (Smith 2000). New, more punitive approaches to probation could transform what was a traditionally more consensual approach to probation into coercion, thus increasing the potential for violence against probation officers."
It’s what we’re all saying - "old-style" probation work was valued by offenders. The blog post says it too, we can restore this, but only if those above are willing.
Delete@12:53 Re "It’s what we’re all saying - "old-style" probation work was valued by offenders."
DeleteWhat I experienced and practiced 1973-2003 - traditional style probation work as it had evolved by 1970s was practiced with and for clients on behalf of a supervising court or in parole/ACR cases on behalf of a Secretary of State, where the supervisees encouraged not to see themselves as an "offender" for evermore.
Andrew, it’s flipped entirely. We’re told not to call the people we supervise “offenders,” yet we’re still required to subject them to risk management, enforcement, monitoring, and every other form of control. That isn’t probation work, and it certainly isn’t rehabilitation. Nothing will change until the service decides which side of the rehabilitation–punishment divide it actually wants to stand on.
DeleteYears pass on Animal Farm, and the pigs become more and more like human beings—walking upright, carrying whips, and wearing clothes. Eventually, the seven principles of Animalism, known as the Seven Commandments and inscribed on the side of the barn, become reduced to a single principle reading “all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”
Deletehttps://www.unison.org.uk/news/2025/12/unions-lobby-lammy-to-speed-up-probation-pay-rise/
ReplyDelete'Getafix
UNISON, the GMB and Napo have written to the deputy prime minister and justice secretary, David Lammy, calling on him to accelerate the pay offer to probation service members that has been promised since April.
DeleteMembers of UNISON and Napo delivered the letter in person to the Ministry of Justice on Friday (pictured above.)
UNISON’s national officer for probation, Ben Priestley, said today: “UNISON members in the Probation Service deserve their 2025 pay rise after a year of unprecedented demands and unachievable workloads.
“The delay to this year’s pay offer is completely unacceptable. We have made the case to David Lammy that he should use his influence to end this delay, and allow our members to be consulted on the final pay offer without waiting any longer.”
The unions submitted their pay claim in January this year, and the award was due on 1 April.
In July, the previous justice secretary, Shabina Mahmood, told them that she was seeking a ‘flex case’ to make a pay offer above the 3.75% allowed in this year’s civil service pay remit guidance.
“We simply do not understand why is has taken nearly five months, to date, to expedite this case with treasury and cabinet office,” the letter says. “2025 will go down on record as one of the worst pay offer delays ever under HMPPS [probation and prison service] control.
“We express our grave concern at the damage this unacceptable delay… is having on staff morale and on the ability of HMPPS to recruit and retain skilled and motivated probation staff.”
The letter also refers to the last meeting between the unions and Mr Lammy, on 17 November.
It says: “We appreciate your support for the work that is going on behind the scenes to enable HMPPS to be able to make a formal pay offer. However, the on-going delay and absence of any clarity on when the offer will eventually be made leave our members financially in a very difficult and worsening position.
“We ask you again to please use your good offices to expedite a pay offer which we can recommend to our members.
“As discussed when we met, we understand that HMPPS has an underspend this year of over £100 million. Rather than lose this money back to the Treasury, we make the simple request that you redirect this cash to supplementing this year’s pay offer for probation staff.
“This would be money well spent and would go some way to restoring our members’ belief that HMPPS is an employer with their best interests at heart.”
There was a notification came out from HR about this on Friday. I think with everything going on the new probation workforce planning and the OMiC review the employer needs to come up with an appropriate pay deal or the most experienced staff will continue to head for the exit. I expect though there will be nothing gained once our taxes are taken to pay the feckless and work shy.
DeleteA minor point, but an important one... it might help if they spelled the former justice sec's name correctly.
Deletesloppiness abounds.
Napo useless priestly just as useless but now doing lettergram stunts this is a waste of time as we all know lame lammy cannot read or add up.
Delete“This would be money well spent and would go some way to restoring our members’ belief that HMPPS is an employer with their best interests at heart."
Delete* the missing final paragraph from that letter:
"Indeed, to show our good faith in your judgement & to bigly you up we've attached a handwritten scroll advising that you, david lindon lammy, Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Lord Chancellor [appointed by the monarch], minister of justice for england & wales and the highest-ranking Great Officer of State in Scotland, are hereby awarded the unison/napo peace prize (not least because you've been so extraordinarily quiet)."
Lammy had more to say on mastermind. Pass. Pass. Pass. Pass. Pass. Pass. Pass.
DeleteAny faith in lame is wasted he is a career assisted positive action beneficiary and his intelligence shows. His parliamentary performance illustrated highlighted his unsuitable for the role so any sympathy to offender needs will be happily ignored. The idea Napo and unison give him a letter means FA they should have handed a legal write of complaint for the employers breach of agreed terms and conditions. Instead it's the Lawrence lick rhetorical grovel. 100k for no action but he takes an annual pay rise on time.
Delete“accelerate the pay offer” - so we even know what the offer is?
DeleteThey keep talking about “above 3.75%” so what is that, 5%, 15%, 25%????
And why are they asking Lammy, shouldn’t they be demanding?
Yes exactly cowards can't lose anything by taking the stand on the member behalf.
Deletehttps://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201012/cmselect/cmjust/519/519i.pdf
ReplyDeleteHouse of Commons, Justice Committee, The role of the Probation Service
Eighth Report of Session 2010–12 - selected text from...
It is a concern that probation trusts have laboured under a tick-box culture, and we call on NOMS to provide trusts with greater autonomy.
The creation of NOMS was described to us as a “takeover” of the probation service by the prison service.
It has not led to an appreciable improvement in the ‘joined-up’ treatment of offenders; its handling of the community payback exercise has not inspired confidence; and it has not proved itself proficient at running effective national contracts.
The responsibility for delivering the sentence of the courts should belong to a single offender management local commissioning body.
Probation staff also prepare pre-sentence reports for sentencers to enable them to choose the most appropriate sentence. In 2009, the Probation Service prepared 218,000 such reports.
The derivation of the word probation is from the Latin probatio—a time of testing, or proving. That derivation remains relevant because, at their best and most robust, community sentences run by the probation service will test offenders, challenging them to change their offending lifestyles and to confront difficult issues.
The lack of probation staff at a senior level in NOMS suggested a lack of advocacy on behalf of probation for better resources. There was no evidence to suggest that bringing together prisons and probation had yet had a positive impact; in fact the available evidence on the financial outcomes of the merger pointed to the contrary.
In November 2010, Cabinet Office Minister Francis Maude proposed that the public sector, including probation services, should develop co-operatives and mutuals to “challenge traditional public service structures and unleash the pent-up ideas and innovation that has [sic] been stifled by bureaucracy”...
(*** by happy coincidence: Following the 2010 United Kingdom general election and the subsequent formation of the Cameron–Clegg coalition, Antonia Romeo transferred to the Cabinet Office as the Executive Director in the new Efficiency and Reform Group under Francis Maude. The group was responsible for reforming the government's governance and board model, as well as working with businesses ***)
Martin Narey, the first head of NOMS: “What I wanted to do was give probation officers much more authority and influence over what happened to their offender when they were in prison, rather than the Prison Service, which I led for seven years, taking them over and doing what they thought was best. I thought that from the moment someone arrives in prison, unless they were a very long-term prisoner, the probation officer as the offender manager should be preparing for their release and making sure that the things that happen to that prisoner while inside, as far as the resources allow, contribute to a successful release.”
So the role of offender supervisor was created in custody and in probation offices, fulfilled by prison officers in prisons and probation service officers in the community.
1/2
2/2
DeleteIn all of the submissions which refer to end-to-end offender management there is an implicit acknowledgement that it has not been successful. With some exceptions, the probation officer has been unable, practically, to direct the management of individual offenders whilst in prison. Martin Narey ascribed this to prison overcrowding.
NOMS undermines the ability of the probation service to achieve its aims. Senior managers in NOMS now create policy and strategy in relation to the probation service while their background and bias is exclusively in the prison service and they have little experience of working with offenders in the community.
In 2001 the requirement for magistrates’ courts committees to hold regular liaison meetings with their local probation service ended… It was eventually acknowledged that ending this formal relationship had been a mistake. In 2008 Lord Justice Leveson, then the Presiding Judge, issued, in conjunction with NOMS, a binding set of guidelines for magistrates and judges as an appendix to probation circular 06/2009, Determining Pre-Sentence Report type.
“The goal of rehabilitation in working with offenders has had less emphasis than previously, as was inevitable with the shift to a law enforcement ethos. Compliance with the requirements of supervision is now a key objective for the service.”
*** a compassionate gem of understanding from a past chief probation officer:
Sonia Crozier observed: “the reason that people are offenders is because they don’t follow rules and they don’t always comply, so there’s that challenge of working with this really difficult group. Let’s not forget that by the time they’ve got to the Probation Service, they have often been failures in every other Government organisation.”
In England and Wales the total number of Pre-Sentence Reports (PSRs) was approximately 99,000 in 2024.
DeleteApril to June 2025 = 25,928
DeleteJanuary to March 2025 = 25,687
October to December 2024 = 24,797
July to September 2024 = 24,478
quarter ending September 2015 = 39,929
quarter ending December 2014 = 36,159
The number of court reports prepared by the Probation Service fell by 33% from 2010, with the 2014 total = 141,932
Anon at 12:03
ReplyDeleteSeriously that’s a good point. If NAPO were so union focused in fighting in the interest of people why have they not saying anything or contributed to this blog instead of keeping lip tight. I thought we were all in the fight together. A proper union looks to everyone to rally support and resist the onslaught of bureaucracy.
Anon 17:17 I'm afraid there's zero chance! Those with long memories will recall the days of the Napo Forum which contained very similar spirited debate and, err, crticism, which was ruthlessly moderated-out. Not suprisingly it was dumped.
DeleteLawrence got worried he would be exposed then. He is certainly worried by this blog anyway and the fact it's has flourished while 12 staff in Napo on full pay working from home for years can't be bothered to manage a website or update any reporting from their specific roles tells me they are not working for Napo. They are taking the pay though. This balloon has got to burst shortly because this blog is littered with actual matters the union should have automatically taken up in response the failed safety of those staff being attacked. I stead we have a Napo involved cover up by compliance of non disclosure or immediate national support for offices at risk. The idea blood spill kits are to be issued to office reflects the level of decline in staff protection and the role we do. They should be calling for a return to working practice whereby offender come for support help and care. Not management and control. Napo are being seen now as dire and wanting this sort of issue illustrates clearly the sham is going to get called out to use a Lawrence pub. Come on Napo what are your really doing. Come on NEC let's see the work monitoring forms the structured staff supervision targets milestones achieved. Where's a photo of the staff at their working desks office space come on Lawrence what's being described from fee paying members where is the officers what are they doing and what branch regional reports have they published. Accountability is needed now we are discovering your are not doing the job.
Delete1717 Lawrence thinks he is an anointed figure head and has no capacity for strategy or tactics. Excepting for taking legal advice on protecting his own position. This guy needs exposing or we face oblivion.
DeleteIt’s a shame Napo Gs, exec and reps do not come here and comment. We’re all in it together, and if this blog is saying what needs to be said then Napo should be happy with that !
DeleteNot a chance I know for a fact Lawrence hates Jim . He is jealous of JB approach and genuine popularity with colleagues. Lawrence is not grounded in our work but he is not a real trade unionist either. He drifted in a gofer for pcs seeking breaks and fell on his feet when Napo gave him a big tile . He was wetting his pants when his boss literally fu%k?& Up and got the push. Sex scandalised Napo. He strolled into acting GS and foolishly we had been stuck with the clown ever since he is limited and has fiddled his tenure by manipulation selection of the officers group. Some of the national reps knew all about him so he has them dismantled. He has a shady performance conduct record .
DeleteUnder what power will we have the right to search someone. What if the person refuses. Enforce it? This sets a dangerous precedent. What exactly is this body worn camera being attached to? Clearly a vest. I can’t carry on. It’s unrecognisable. I have devoted so much of my life and time to this job. I have made so many sacrifices, not spent time with my kids to do a job I used to love. I know so many who do the same. It’s so upsetting witnessing what it’s become.
ReplyDelete@17:30 - never fear - you'll be granted powers by lammy in the next bill & told if the failed human (see crozier above) refuses a search, you simply breach 'em.
DeleteFully loaded stab vests will be available in all offices (sm, med, lg, xlge) to incl disposable gloves, camera, pepper spray, baton, wound compression kit, etc.
BREAKING: Sources inside lammy's head say that hmpps are introducing a certificate to practice exam for probation staff. Alongside IT & tagging skills, candidates must achieve a minimum of a PASS for the C&R (control & restraint) test. Its believed that the treasury have approved funding for a national breach achievement award in a bid to incentivise staff, ensuring the new prisons will be overpopulated, thereby guaranteeing growth in the prison building industry.
17:56 Very good - This is turning into the probation equivalent of Private Eye
Deleteaye, and no so bad for it, Jim. Good stuff all round.
DeleteIt is indeed. And whoever wrote this blog we need to get em onto a platform to speak for us. It’s cutting.
DeleteRobots will love having a wand be another reason to breach
ReplyDeleteI think the strength of feeling against this is more than people realise. I know many colleagues that left the prison for probation to avoid these types of hands on security procedures.
Deletefor the record, before existing moj data is 'lost' (deleted):
ReplyDeleteNumber of prisoners released in error
Year ending March, England and Wales
2006/07 52
2007/08 31
2008/09 63
2009/10 68
2010/11 63
2011/12 42
2012/13 44
2013/14 50
2014/15 49
2015/16 64
2016/17 72
2017/18 66
2018/19 64
2019/20 50
2020/21 46
2021/22 54
2022/23 81
2023/24 115
2024/25 262
91 were released in error between 1 Apr & 31 Oct 2025 PLUS a further 12 as at 1 Dec 2025, making it 103 year to date (& counting)... so we're on target for 150+ releases in error to end March 2026.
There's quite a wide debate going on in the webosphere:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.reddit.com/r/unitedkingdom/comments/1pdvh7b/probation_officers_in_england_and_wales_to_be/