Tuesday, 3 February 2026

The Inspector Speaks

Sentencing Act January 2026

I was pleased to see the Sentencing Act receive royal asset yesterday evening, together with the government’s reassurance that the reforms are supported by plans to rebuild the Probation Service – including investment of up to £700m over the next three years, increased ability to tag offenders, and new technology aimed at reducing administration, so staff can focus on work that reduces reoffending.

It is positive that the Act will not take effect immediately, giving the Probation Service time to prepare for the incoming changes. However, we know that some measures, including the extension of Suspended Sentence Orders and changes to Remand, will come into force in just two months, while implementation planning continues for more complex changes.

I have spoken recently about my support in principle for many elements of the Act and the opportunity it provides to transform the justice system.

However, I have been clear that there will be challenges in ensuring the gap between probation resource and the requirements of the Act are reconciled, and that difficult choices will need to be made around what to prioritise for maximum impact.

I have also warned that there is a danger of the reforms collapsing public confidence in probation unless they are implemented with great care and thought, and the right investment is made in the service in the short to medium term. Failing to address these point risks setting the service up to fail.

I look forward to continuing to work closely with the Department throughout 2026 to advise on how our inspection findings can inform next steps. In particular, I will be sharing the results of our Dynamic Inspection of Public Protection programme, which publishes its first report next week (29 January), with a focus on what improved probation practice can do to make the public safer and reduce harm to victims.

--oo00oo--

Dynamic Inspection of Public Protection in Kent, Surrey and Sussex

Chief Inspector’s judgement

This review of the Probation Service’s public protection across Kent, Surrey and Sussex revealed that, whilst there had been improvements since our last inspection, concerningly, work to keep people safe met the required standard in less than half the cases inspected for ‘assessment’ and ‘implementation and delivery’. In addition, just over half the cases met this standard for case ‘planning’ and ‘reviewing’.

The region’s public protection work had been made more challenging by large-scale national changes in response to prison overpopulation. We found that more support was needed for staff managing complex cases, particularly those involving domestic abuse, and work needed to be done to ensure consistency across all cases.

A primary concern was a lack of quality information sharing of the risks posed by individuals on probation, with probation service and police colleagues highlighting the challenges faced by both organisations to balance public protection with proportionate, compliant information sharing. We were encouraged to see work underway and resource allocated to strengthen relationships. However, there remained no centrally driven directive on what should be shared. This was a long-standing issue which continued to undermine the region’s ability to understand fully the risk posed by those they supervised. A national strategic approach to ensure consistency and compliance from both probation and partners was required to facilitate effective public protection work.

The region was affected by ongoing workforce challenges, with understaffing at both probation officer and senior probation officer grades at the time of the inspection. This inevitably affected capacity to manage demanding caseloads and risk to the public. Constraints including proximity to London, associated high costs of living, lengthy vetting procedures and limited autonomy in recruitment continued to compound these workforce pressures.

In response, the region had introduced a range of innovative strategies to optimise resources, including the use of technology and artificial intelligence, and was working to address training gaps to improve the quality of case management, despite limited resources.

While sufficient work to keep people safe was not evident in enough of the cases we inspected, following the region’s inspection in 2024, we also saw strategic progress in strengthening public protection work, improved staff accountability and engagement, and a commitment to building a culture that supported learning and psychological safety.

--oo00oo--

Inspection commentary
(highlights)

Case inspections highlighted that, for both assessment and implementation and delivery, less than half the cases met the required standard to keep people safe. Planning and reviewing met the required standard in just over half the cases. There were indicators that the sufficiency of work to keep people safe was on an upward trajectory in Kent, Surrey and Sussex across all the above areas. Practitioners were completing meaningful home visits and speaking to the families and support networks of people on probation where appropriate to improve risk management. MAPPA cases (multi-agency public protection arrangements) were also managed effectively. Planning for restrictions and monitoring was generally stronger than planning for interventions and programmes to address risk. Restrictions were consistently included in plans and compliance arrangements were clear, although there was less detail on interventions that would take place to address attitudes and behaviour.

Large-scale national change and responses to prison over-population, as well as delays in sentencing, had a destabilising effect on people on probation, making public protection work in Kent, Surrey and Sussex more challenging. Those sentenced and released on the day from court, due to time served on remand, meant pre-release planning could not be delivered in a meaningful way. The increase in people on probation due to early release from custody schemes also affected the time available to set services up to meet their needs and manage their risks. Short recall periods were at risk of disrupting continuity and partner agency involvement, often leaving probation practitioners as the only consistent presence throughout the sentence.

Although Probation Reset arrangements were outside the region’s control, they had a detrimental impact on public protection work. Planned service delivery including challenging conversations or interventions were often disrupted by reset, a concern that was most pronounced in complex domestic abuse cases. Regional leaders were implementing a model to transfer all reset cases to a dedicated hub, though this process was still being refined and audited. ‘Quick guides’ outlined eligibility criteria and checklists for pre-reset tasks, with guidance focused mainly on recording and concluding processes. However, casework inspections highlighted varied and inconsistent practices in which victim and risk information was prioritised at transfer, creating a sense of instability and lack of coherence. Reset hubs were in the early stages of implementation, with communication and monitoring mechanisms already in place, though their intended effect on consistency had not yet been fully realised.

Challenges faced in managing risk to the public were compounded by long-standing staffing challenges, influenced by proximity to London and the associated high cost of living. Since the previous inspection, the percentage of qualified probation officers in post had declined, with current staffing at approximately two-thirds of the target level. There was also understaffing of senior probation officers by over 10 per cent. This inevitably affected capacity to manage demanding caseloads. The region was actively implementing measures within its control to optimise resources, such as a focus on the retention of PQiPs, where significant numbers were resigning or withdrawing. However, additional constraints, such as vetting processes and limited autonomy in recruitment, continued to complicate efforts to address these workforce pressures.

In response to continuing staffing pressures, the region had introduced a range of innovative and accountable strategies to optimise resources. These included the use of technology, artificial intelligence, and the See the Way Forward approach, which streamlined complex or duplicate processes. Sometimes tasks were reallocated, to free practitioners’ time for meaningful work, including activities that promoted public protection. The region sought to identify gaps in training by conducting training needs analyses and exploring new ways to improve this activity. The region introduced a range of activities to strengthen staff capability and support informal learning. Examples included deploying quality development officers (QDOs) to provide specialist guidance and development in key areas and implementing pod structures to promote informal learning and peer-to-peer knowledge sharing. Technology had been particularly effective, offering practitioners practical support and reassurance that solutions were being developed to alleviate workload pressures. The region was proactive in engaging in trials from central HMPPS, designed to improve the recording and accessibility of information for practitioners.

Capacity issues with APs were identified in both weeks of the inspection, compounded by lack of available bed spaces, transfers, co-working arrangements, and contingency measures that were not always effective. The region was concerned about this issue and had pursued conversations with national AP colleagues, which they felt had reached a conclusion but with no resolution. People on probation posing the highest risk of serious harm in Kent, Surrey and Sussex were often refused an AP bed due to capacity issues or placed throughout the country. This contradicted public protection principles of developing stability through support networks and resettlement.

33 comments:

  1. There wouldn't be a lack of AP spaces with better thinking and contingency. With this dim-bubbled zeal to get more high risk offenders out of prison- so (yawn) prison-led, stuff probation, without contingency or temporary AP spaces (logistically difficult, understandably) this was bound to happen. You cannot do anything of these endeavours effectively without more investment and respecting the purpose of probation, rather than just be used as dumping ground. Mind you, what's the point in mentioning it.The powers that be don't care and nothing will change. Part of the reason they don't care is because they have no respect for probation. it's that obvious. Until you see tangible change, expect the same old. "this contradicts public protection principles" in conclusion to the post. The overriding concern is to put the public at further risk by concentrating on spreadsheets and targets. Dangerous times. Someone, many people, will get hurt. High risk of seriously stupid decision making. The public should be worried.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "there is a danger of the reforms collapsing public confidence in probation"

    That ship sailed long ago - it'll be on its third circumnavigation of the universe by now.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It’s almost impressive how much spin can be wrapped around numbers this bad.

    We’re told to feel reassured.
    “Investment.”
    “Transformation.”
    “Technology.”
    “Opportunity.”

    Meanwhile HM Inspectorate of Probation has just reported that less than half of cases are meeting the standard to keep people safe.

    Less than half.

    Apparently that’s what “rebuilding the service” looks like now.

    Two thirds staffing.
    SPO shortages.
    AP beds full.
    Pre-release planning collapsing.
    Reset disrupting risk work.
    Early releases dumped on already stretched teams.

    But don’t worry, we’ve got AI transcripts and tagging contracts.

    Because nothing says public protection like a laptop and an ankle bracelet.

    The language is the giveaway. “Difficult choices will need to be made.”
    Translation: cut contact, script supervision, move people through faster and hope nothing blows up.

    It’s not reform.
    It’s rationing.

    They’re not strengthening probation. They’re shrinking it and calling it innovation.

    And the real insult? This is all being sold as a success story, while the people actually doing the job are told to clap for 4% and be grateful.

    If this is what £700 million buys, I’d love to see what underfunding looks like!

    You can’t run public protection on PowerPoint slides and pilots.
    You can’t replace experience with “digital solutions.”
    And you can’t collapse standards to under 50% and still pretend the system is fine.

    This isn’t transformation.
    It’s a slow managed decline with better PR.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. yup, and the following is just cringeworthy bollox:

      "While sufficient work to keep people safe was not evident in enough of the cases we inspected, following the region’s inspection in 2024, we also saw strategic progress in strengthening public protection work, improved staff accountability and engagement, and a commitment to building a culture that supported learning and psychological safety."

      Riddle me this, jones: how the fuckity fuck fuck can "sufficient work to keep people safe was not evident" be construed as "strategic progress in strengthening public protection work, improved staff accountability and engagement, and a commitment to building a culture that supported learning and psychological safety."

      Its word salad; its meaningless drivel... its a sequence of non sequiturs throughout.

      But t'was always thus in hmiprobation reports, with areas/omu's scoring teen% yet leadership rated as strong. Gotta protect that pension pot (and the gong they promised if you behave).

      Delete
    2. It’s the classic inspection paradox, isn’t it.

      “Work to keep people safe not sufficient in most cases”…
      but somehow also…
      “strategic progress, strengthened protection, psychological safety, positive culture.”

      If this were any other profession, failing in over half of cases would be called what it is: failure.

      In probation it gets translated into management poetry.

      Because admitting the obvious, that the service is under-resourced and unsafe, would mean confronting the people who control the budget. So instead we get paragraphs of soft language and “green shoots”.

      It’s not analysis. It’s cushioning.

      When less than half of cases meet the required standard, that isn’t “progress”. That’s a red warning light.

      But red doesn’t look good in a ministerial briefing, so we get beige.

      Delete
    3. "It’s not analysis." Fucking too right... jones' lukewarm fudge would have been dismissed out of hand by a judge.

      I know I'm reaching back in time here, bear with me... if such equivocal nonsense had ever been submitted to a court in a full PSR (remember them, peeps?) the judge/magistrate would have had a dickie fit. On one occasion the crown court liaison PO told me "the judge asked me to tell you to make your bloody mind up. He's adjourned the case for a week to allow you time to have a good, hard think & re-submit something of value." Those were the days when a report would be read in advance by the sentencing judge and the CCLO quizzed about any discrepancies or outlandish proposals.

      I dread to think what passes as a report these days.

      Delete
  4. Let’s cut the crap. This sentencing act piles even more work onto probation …more community cases, more pressure from prisons to clear cells, while probation frontline pay and conditions stay in the gutter. The demands are already landing. What comes next is burnout, breakdowns, and more people walking out the door. New PSOs, trainees, and inexperienced SPOs are being thrown into a system made of straw and told to hold it up while it burns.

    https://www.russellwebster.com/why-probation-officers-quit-or-stick-it-out/

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The article references Hirschman’s Exit-Voice-Loyalty-Neglect (EVL-N) framework. Exit, Voice, Loyalty, Neglect.

      In probation it isn’t theory.
      It’s the job description.

      You start loyal.
      You speak up.
      Nothing changes.
      So you either leave or switch off.

      Management calls that “resilience”.

      Experience walks out the door.
      The rest stay late, work unpaid hours and carry the risk out of guilt. Burnout gets praised as commitment. Exhaustion gets rebranded as professionalism.

      Then we’re told we’re “extraordinary”.

      Just not worth paying properly.

      So they don’t fix pay.
      They don’t fix workloads.
      They don’t retain staff.

      They just recruit fresh optimism and let the system grind it down.

      Churn is cheaper than respect.

      Probation doesn’t keep professionals anymore.
      It consumes them.

      And when people finally leave, it isn’t disloyalty. It’s self-preservation.

      Delete
  5. “Extraordinary people doing extraordinary work” They want extraordinary work for below-ordinary pay. That’s not underfunding. That’s exploitation.

    ReplyDelete
  6. It is difficult to identify one thing that the Inspectorate has improved so the answer lies in scrapping it and start again. Their script of ‘ few staff, challenging policy, innovation’ is wearing thin now and repeated after each failure……pay is never mentioned as it’s …..’ out of their control ‘ yet is a crucial element in retention, and acknowledging what a difficult and increasingly dangerous job it is turning into.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Exactly this. Every report follows the same script:
      staff shortages, policy pressure, innovation underway, green shoots of progress.

      Yet the outcomes barely shift and the fundamentals never change.

      What you almost never see mentioned is pay, even though it is the single biggest factor in whether experienced staff stay or walk. It’s always treated as “out of scope”, as if you can talk seriously about capacity, resilience and public protection while ignoring the fact the workforce is paid less than comparable roles.

      You cannot inspect your way out of a retention crisis.

      Until HM Inspectorate of Probation starts calling out pay and workload as structural risks rather than background noise, the reports just read like polite commentary on managed decline.

      “Challenging context” has become code for “we know it’s failing but no one at the top wants to say why.”

      Delete
  7. Pay less then a prison officer police constable imagine that

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It’s wild when you say it out loud.

      Less than a prison officer.
      Less than a police constable.
      Yet somehow managing equal or higher risk in the community with far less protection.

      Same justice system.
      Same public safety rhetoric.
      Completely different value placed on the people doing the work.

      HMPPS calls probation “complex, skilled and vital” right up until salaries are mentioned, then suddenly we’re worth 4% and a thank-you email.

      Imagine asking people to hold life-and-death risk every day and paying them bargain-basement wages.

      At this point it’s not oversight. It’s a choice.

      Delete
    2. In the 90s, Probation Officers at the top of the pay scale were on the equivalent to that of a police inspector.

      Delete
    3. Fast forward to now and we’re paid less than a constable.

      So the issue isn’t that probation was “overpaid” back then. It’s that our pay has been systematically eroded while everyone else moved on.
      Twelve years of freezes, 1% caps and below-inflation deals means probation hasn’t fallen behind by accident. It’s been left behind by design.

      Funny how the risk, responsibility and accountability all went up… but the pay went backwards.

      Delete
    4. "So the issue isn’t that probation was “overpaid” back then."

      Surely, the question then must be what's gone wrong since then?
      What's changed? Why would it be overlooked?
      Why dosent a profession like a probation officer attract professional renumeration anymore?

      'Getafix

      Delete
    5. It’s not that probation was “overpaid” in the 90s.
      It’s that it was treated as a profession.

      Back then the job was built around judgement, relationships and discretion. Officers had smaller caseloads, real autonomy, time to actually work with people, and the courts genuinely respected their expertise. The pay reflected that level of responsibility and skill.

      What’s changed isn’t just the salary. The job itself has been stripped back and redesigned.

      Now it’s templates, scripts, targets, audits, enforcement, recall decisions, risk registers, endless recording and defensive practice. Less professional judgement, more process. Less trust, more surveillance. Less time with people, more time feeding systems.

      So the work has become more bureaucratic, more punitive and often higher risk, yet the pay has gone backwards. That’s not market forces. That’s policy choice.

      Probation didn’t stop being valuable.
      It was deliberately turned into something cheaper and easier to control and once you design a job to be template-driven and replaceable, you stop paying for experience.

      That’s what went wrong.

      Delete
    6. You really do get it annon 1620.
      Its not just a job! Its not about hours, not about pay.
      Its about making a difference, thats what you've done for the world, thats your contribution to your paycheck and society. That's your contributio1n when you go to sleep at night and know you've done your best
      It's about what you do make a difference, thats the important bit.


      'Getafix

      Delete
    7. Don't be silly gtx people go to work for pay.

      Delete
    8. @Getafix
      It’s exactly the same trap carers fall into.

      Society says they’re “heroes”, “angels”, “amazing people”… and then pays them barely above minimum wage.

      All praise. No pay.

      Because once a job is labelled a vocation, it becomes easier to underpay it.
      If you care, you’ll stay.
      If you stay, they don’t have to fix it.

      Meanwhile look at what we actually reward.

      People who move money around spreadsheets, write strategy decks or sit three layers away from consequences earn twice as much as the people doing the life-or-death, face-to-face work.

      The closer you are to real human risk and harm, the less you seem to be paid.

      Carers. Social workers. Probation. Youth workers.

      High responsibility. High emotional toll. High personal risk. Low pay.

      But management, consultants and “transformation leads”? Comfortable salaries and bonuses.

      So it’s not about value.
      It’s about what the system can get away with paying.

      Probation didn’t become less important.
      It just became easier to exploit the people doing it.

      And calling us “extraordinary” is a lot cheaper than paying us like professionals.

      Delete
    9. Anon 16:39

      Blunt, but true.

      You can love the job and still expect fair pay. The two aren’t mutually exclusive.
      The whole “it’s not about money” line only ever seems to apply to frontline staff but never to senior leaders, consultants or contractors.

      Funny how vocation is always demanded from the lowest paid.

      If probation really matters, if it’s really about public safety and changing lives, then it should be funded and paid like it matters.
      Otherwise it’s just warm words covering a cheap workforce.

      Delete
    10. Spot on anon 19:35

      I work in the NHS in a supporting role similar to a carer and we're treated terribly, and no amount of clapping and clanging pots and pans every Thurdsday during the pandemic changed that.
      The role itself is ok, but its more the poor treatment thats bad. This manifests in low pay, and being undermined and erased - being spoken to as if you're stupid because you're not degree educated, and not having a voice during industrial action because staff have been so depoliticized, they think only nurses and doctors make up the service, so essentially a lack of class consciousness, which has been very deliberately pushed by higher ups.
      One of the service users I supported became terminally ill in the pandemic and I was doing home visits several times a week, physically cleaning his home, but paid far less for it, compared to one of the band 7 clinical psychologists, who were largely sat at home for the whole however many months watching their Amazon deliveries pile up.


      Delete
  8. I once heard some chief or other-a few levels up from an Ace anyway(I don't know what get call themselves these days) say that pay was an ugly word and it's not a nice topic to talk about when someone brought it up in an all staff call. He was trying to make staff feel embarrassed or ashamed for bringing it up. Meanwhile he must have been taking home £200,000 per annum easy for himself. These people are just unbelievable!! Posh accents, cushy jobs but no shame, gaslighting staff. Just utterly pathetic!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Pay is an ugly word.”

      Easy thing to say when you’re on £200k!

      Only in probation are staff expected to feel embarrassed for wanting to be paid properly for life-and-death risk work. Ministers, chiefs and consultants never seem to work for vocation.
      They don’t invoice in goodwill.
      They don’t accept purpose instead of salary.
      But frontline staff are told talking about money is somehow distasteful.

      It’s not leadership. It’s manipulation.

      Calling pay “ugly” is just a neat way of shutting people up while you protect your own very comfortable payslip.

      If the job is so “extraordinary”, then pay it like it matters.

      Delete
  9. More wank salad from the onanists in moj/hmpps

    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/sentencing-act-ensuring-punishment-cuts-crime-gets-royal-assent

    Sentencing Act ensuring punishment cuts crime gets Royal Assent

    New laws will end automatic release for badly behaved offenders and strengthen community punishment.

    New laws end automatic release for badly behaved offenders and strengthen community punishment
    Reforms supported by plans to rebuild the probation service, with investment increasing by up to £700 million over next few years
    Part of the government’s plan for change to keep dangerous offenders locked up, cut reoffending and protect the public

    Legislation that will keep dangerous criminals locked up, end the cycle of less serious offenders going in and out of prison and end the crisis in our prisons has become law today.

    The Sentencing Act, which has now received Royal Assent, will grip the prison crisis on the brink of collapse which this government inherited. It will make sure future governments always have the prison places needed to keep people safe, with the most dangerous offenders locked up and tough community restrictions meaning those released from prison enter a period of supervision tailored to their risk and the type of crime they committed. This includes the biggest ever expansion in tagging and the use of restriction zones to better protect victims. 

    The most serious offenders - those on life sentences, IPP, and extended determinate sentences - will not be released any earlier than they are now.

    Alongside this, the probation budget will be increased by up to £700 million over the next three years to bolster community justice, including the probation service’s resource and ability to tag offenders. The government is also investing in new technology to reduce admin so staff can focus on work that reduces reoffending.

    Commenting on Royal Assent, Sentencing Minister Jake Richards said:

    This government inherited a prison system bursting at the seams and at breaking point – risking the total breakdown of law and order in this country.

    Urgent, bold action was needed to keep the public safe. These reforms will make sure prisons never run out of space again and dangerous offenders are kept off our streets, while putting victims first with much tougher punishments for offenders outside jail. 

    We are already delivering the biggest prison expansion since the Victorian era, but the reality is we cannot just build our way out of the chaos – it must go hand in hand with radical reform to avoid another ticking timebomb.

    The measures in the Sentencing Act will not take effect immediately, giving the probation service and victims support groups the time needed to prepare for the changes coming in. Implementation will be phased over the next two years, with changes to how long offenders stay in prison when they are recalled expected to begin in the coming months, and the earned release model to be rolled out in the Autumn.

    The Sentencing Act follows the Independent Sentencing Review led by David Gauke, published in May.

    Key reforms in the Act include:

    A new “earned progression model” for prisoners serving standard determinate sentences that will see prisoners who behave badly spend longer behind bars.
    Tougher community punishments such as new powers for judges to bar criminals from pubs, concerts and sports matches, curtailing offenders’ freedoms as punishment, financial penalties that force offenders to pay back for their crimes or unpaid work orders that force offenders to give back to society.
    New “restriction zones” to restrict offenders to a certain area, allowing victims to travel without fear of seeing them. 
    A judicial finding of domestic abuse in sentencing which will allow criminal justice agencies to identify domestic abusers, ensure they are better monitored, and the right measures are in place to protect victims.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Notes on the above

      1 - the funding promise has now been subtly amended viz - "investment increasing by up to £700 million over next few years"

      2 - "plans to rebuild the probation service" - oh, so it WAS broken after all

      3 - "badly behaved offenders" - but according to napo & hmpps the term 'offender' is not to be used:

      Probation services, particularly in England and Wales, have moved to stop using the term "offender" as part of a "reset" of language designed to foster a more inclusive, rehabilitative, and less stigmatizing culture. This shift, accelerated during the 2021 unification of the Probation Service, aims to replace labels that define individuals solely by their past actions.

      New Terminology Replacing "Offender"
      The HM Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) has adopted the following, more person-centred, terminology:
      "People on Probation" or "Person subject to probation services": Replaces "offender".
      "Probation Practitioner": Replaces "Offender Manager".
      "Sentence Management": Replaces "Offender Management".

      Delete
  10. The act’s use of language further de-professionalises the role of the ‘officer’ , usually a salaried position to that of practitioner, whereby anyone who has anything to do with probation is now a practitioner. Will the ACO and CPO now be referred to as Assistant Chief Practitioner and Chief Probation Practitioner?

    ReplyDelete
  11. Let’s not forget that Kent Surrey Sussex are doing their best with what they have and what they are being given. They do not have enough staff, they have PQIPs leaving because the hype did not live up to the reality. They are our colleagues under pressure. Their attempts to use technology is admirable and will help get this right. Hopefully all the evaluations and learning from this will value all. Probation workers are information workers who engage in skilled emotional labour and being hypercritical of using technology that is now becoming commonplace in similar work being carried out in social care is counterproductive and will slow investment - being cautious is a different thing. The fact is there has been huge underinvest in assisting the reduction of bureaucracy and modernising systems to assist rather than hamper staff. Jake Phillips has recently commented on this in Probation Journal https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02645505251355328

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Their attempts to use technology is admirable and will help get this right."

      Naiive, I'm afraid. Every pilot from oasys on has been fought over by eager beaver chiefs wanting to please 'the centre' and the results manipulated to achieve whatever 'the centre' wanted.

      KSS will have no influence. They'll be the poor saps who think they're helping to develop something when they're merely the guinea pigs being experimented on.

      There may still be some who remember the oasys pilot. After months of filling in over 100 pages per assessment (six each), they spent a day sat in Abell House (now a cluster of £million pound apartments) and had their feedback ignored, dismissed or discredited by clarke, mann & co.

      https://insidetime.org/newsround/chief-inspector-of-probation-flags-concerns-in-first-public-protection-inspection/

      https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/62e1ac09e90e0714373ff13d/Kent-Surrey-Sussex_HMPPS_Reducing-Reoffending-plan.pdf
      ________________________________________________
      hmpps

      We are now implementing the reforms to our probation services set out in our Target Operating Model, published in February 2021.

      There are 12 regions in England and Wales, each overseen by a Regional Probation Director. The Regional Probation Directors are:

      Nic Davies for Wales
      Andrea Bennett for North West
      Chris Edwards for Greater Manchester
      Bronwen Elphick for North East
      Kilvinder Vigurs for Yorkshire and the Humber
      Jamie-Ann Edwards for West Midlands
      Martin Davies for East Midlands
      Alex Osler for East of England
      Mary Pilgrim for London
      Angela Cossins for South West
      Gabriel Amahwe for South Central
      Linda Neimantas for Kent, Surrey and Sussex

      Delete
  12. The inspector whose shirt collar is too tight so he cannot do his top button and tie up is an enemy of operational probation staff it is like he and his team have a mission to discredit every practitioner they come into contact with. Instead of pushing for more support for staff in his reports and now the new ‘dynamic’ report he continually does staff down and blows smoke up senior managers, they are not leaders, as he does not want to upset them. Then you have the SFO teams putting more pressure on and kicking people when they are down as management disappear from the scene and distance themselves from what ultimately is their fault for not having proper oversight apart from making sure the boxes are ticked. I got out with a pension and a new job with a better salary than my PDU leader, the grass is greener just trust your intuition and leave those further up the food chain to ‘manage’ the festering sore.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It’s not about one inspector. It’s the pattern.

      Frontline staff get dissected. Leadership gets praised.
      Failure gets rebranded as “progress.”

      If less than half of cases meet the standard to keep people safe, that isn’t a practitioner problem. That’s chronic understaffing, overload and poor decisions at the top.

      But instead of challenging that, inspections too often push the pressure downwards onto the people already carrying the risk.

      When experienced staff retire or leave and immediately say the grass is greener, that tells you everything.

      If your best people feel relieved to get out, the problem isn’t the workforce. It’s the system running them into the ground.

      Delete
    2. I've seen the things anon 22:08 describes in both the probation service and NHS.

      "Frontline staff get dissected. Leadership gets praised.
      Failure gets rebranded as “progress.”
      True, and Id add that some of the management, at least in the NHS, also unwittingly or wittingly get staff sympathy by portraying themselves as victims of the people above them, which isn't completely untrue, but it's a problem when they also make admissions of being anti workers rights, get staff to scab in strikes, say their against strikes but will take the pay increase if offered, as well as just generally not ever really pushing back.

      "But instead of challenging that, inspections too often push the pressure downwards onto the people already carrying the risk"
      Yes, and one of the many positive outcomes of that is it creates a buck passing environment, where everyone's blaming others. This becomes engrained in the culture and ends up with everyone's hand being forced to throw others under the bus.









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  13. I agree. Got out after over three decades of service on the frontline. There is life and employers out there who value your experience and pay you appropriately. Never been happier.

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