Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Thought Piece 11

We need to be real about the future of probation. You couldn’t make it up really. A new Sentencing Act, £700 million invested in AI and IT, and 1,000 new trainee probation officers promised, yet here we are on the precipice with rising workloads, growing uncertainty and a carefully packaged 4% pay offer presented as progress. We’re told probation is “extraordinary work”; the glossy recruitment adverts insist on it. But scratch beneath the surface and a different picture of probation in 2026 begins to emerge.

Imagine every probation office of the near future. An offender walks in, places their bag in a locker and pauses at the door to be facially and bodily scanned. If the system does not recognise them, or flags an unknown object in a pocket, a security wand completes the ritual. Efficient. Controlled. Managed. They sit and wait for their probation practitioner, who is likely newly qualified, recently out of university, bright and well-intentioned but learning the craft in a system that no longer appears to value craft. It isn’t their fault. They need employment and income like anyone else. Many will leave when something more stable or better paid appears, unless they are accelerated into management within a year if their psychometrics fit.

They move to a supervision room. An induction, a toolkit session, a review of licence conditions, delivered through structured prompts. Tick boxes completed. Risk assessment refreshed. Every word captured in real time by Justice Transcribe AI and uploaded directly into the case management system. Reports drafted instantly. Risk tools auto-populated. Supervision records formatted before the conversation has properly settled. The practitioner informs the individual that their risk level has been lowered. Not necessarily through nuanced professional judgement shaped by experience and relational depth, but because the algorithm indicates it. The outcome is eligibility for automated reporting. Instead of attending weekly or fortnightly, the offender now logs into an app once a month, speaks to an AI interface and confirms everything is fine. Compliance recorded. Case maintained. Human contact reduced to exception management.

Meanwhile, the probation practitioner holds a caseload exceeding 100. With no short sentences going into custody, probation absorbs the volume. Post-Sentence Supervision has ended, everyone is electronically tagged and tracked, and recalls recycle through the system with predictable speed of less than 2 months. Reports are AI-drafted. Risk assessments AI-assisted. Supervision notes AI-transcribed. Enforcement actions processed by administrative teams prompted by automated flags. Half the caseload reports digitally. The practitioner’s role becomes one of oversight rather than engagement, validation rather than intervention. Professional discretion narrows as the system standardises responses. Time once spent building motivation or challenging thinking is redirected into monitoring dashboards, tracking offenders on tags, and ensuring the technology has functioned correctly.

At that point, the question becomes uncomfortable. If supervision is automated, reporting is automated, monitoring is tagging and tracking, enforcement is automated and risk assessment is automated, what exactly are the 1,000 new probation officers for? What is the long-term workforce plan in a service increasingly shaped around digital compliance? Perhaps the 4% pay offer was not misjudged after all. Perhaps it was transitional, and intentional. It is easier to contain pay when you quietly redesign the profession to be less.

On a shelf somewhere in that office sits a book with that old motto: advise, assist, befriend. It reads almost like an artefact from another era. Now replaced by scripted prompts, app notifications, dashboards and tracking. This may sound exaggerated, even dystopian, but the building blocks are already visible. Technology and AI isn’t enhancing probation, it’s replacing it now.

Anon

7 comments:

  1. The future of probation isn't human. The future of probation is mass redundancies and replacement by minimum wage people in unidentified offices. The craft is on life support which will shortly be turned off.
    sox

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  2. The word "probation" seems now a misnomer with regard to the naming of the Probation Services formerly apparently deriving from the name of a court order introduced in 1907.

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  3. Replaced by ai was stated in this blog months ago and it's not 700mil it's divided over several years with inflation and waste pay offs consultants it won't leave much . That money will go for cost cutting schemes not staffing it is very clear so let's not start thinking about what it could do. That's already over.

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  4. The word probation to be removed and replaced by UK Correctional services, this will lead to an attitudinal shift towards Challenge,Confront, Change…..and the change is not to be a mutual goal, it is to be on a sliding scale of punishments placing UKC services at the forefront of non court issued sanctions………this will require staff to be able to follow the script and abstain themselves of individual responsibility….the future is bleak, the future is correctional rather than probationary based……..

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    1. Posted the same on this blog years ago post the UK study of USA correctional officers powers to recall.

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  5. There is almost a quarter of a million people being supervised currently by the probation service. However, as the service shifts and changes, new laws and bills being introduced there is very little conversation about the negitave impact a broken service has on those being supervised.
    For some there is no problem navigating the supervision period. Many however are becoming trapped in a system that brings no benefit to anyone.
    For some probation has become nothing more then an obstacle and an impediment to progress.
    In short, for some probation is damaging, the total opposite of its founding purpose.
    A chaotic system charged with managing chaotic lives can only lead to more chaos.
    If there is no other identifiable purpose of subjecting someone to probation supervision other then they have broken the law or being a prison leaver, then they shouldn't be there. Probation cannot be, nor should it be, a universal dumping ground for all those that come into contact with the criminal justice system.

    https://hmiprobation.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/document/safeguarding-adults-at-risk-of-harm-supervised-by-the-probation-service-in-england-a-thematic-inspection/

    'Getafix

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  6. Anyone seen email from Sir McEwan. Utter disgrace and pathetic response.

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