I remember many years ago hearing ex prisoner turned probation officer
Bob Turney explain the difference in the response to missed probation
appointments in the UK and US. In the States, he said, a probation officer
would go armed to their errant client’s home and arrest him. In England and Wales,
he’d send him a letter. The caricature summed up how probation here was about keeping people out of prisons while in the US it was about getting people into them.
While dealing with breach has become a lot tougher since then, the British Government
is being urged to go further down the American road. Today’s Centre for Social Justice report is the latest to favour a more robust approach to those who fail
to comply with community sentences. Threatening Americans on probation with immediate
short spells in prison has apparently reduced the numbers not only of those who
miss appointments but also who fail drug tests and who re-offend. The mantra of
swift and certain punishment is becoming a new orthodoxy in probation,
promising to make community sentences both more effective and more credible. As
our friends across the pond might say, “What’s not to like?”
Three things actually. First, those with long memories will recall how the
fruits of North American research have been touted as the saviour of probation once
before. The overblown claims made by proponents of accredited programmes in the
early 1990’s took community based supervision down a psychology dominated road that
many have come to regret. At the very
least some British pilots are needed to see whether the admittedly impressive
results reported in Hawaii are replicated here and whether it is in fact the deterrent
threat of prison which makes the key difference.
Second in the UK putting people into prison for short periods is generally
agreed to be a problem not a solution. This is partly for practical reasons. Intermittent
custody was quietly abandoned in 2006 in part because courts were reluctant to
use it and in part because the prison service could not manage it. Today’s
report seems to envisage failing probationers being held in police cells for
several days at a time, a role for which many police stations are simply not equipped.
Finally the automatic unleashing of custodial sanctions on people who fail to
comply offends both the values and evidence base for probation. It’s true that
the European Probation Rules say that where offenders fail to comply with conditions,
probation staff should respond actively and promptly. But they go on that “the
response shall take full account of the circumstances of the failure to comply”.
Swift and certain imprisonment comes close to violating this requirement as
well as the rule that in gaining the offenders’ co-operation, probation staff should
not rely solely on the prospect of sanctions for non-compliance.
Moreover swift and certain punishment seems to fly in the face of the growing acceptance
that giving up drugs and going straight involve a process of desistance. In
encouraging desistance, using authority is a crucial part of a probation
officer’s role; but effective supervision demands very much more than the
policing function envisaged in the simplistic and punitive approach put forward by CSJ.
Friday, 16 May 2014
Wednesday, 7 May 2014
The Best of Times, The Worst of Times. A Tale of Two Prison Services
As the Prison service
prepares to make more deep cuts in
its budget, two sharply contrasting views have emerged about whether the 146
prisons in England and Wales are in a fit state to shed more staff and reduce
what they are able to provide for prisoners. Last month, Chief Inspector Nick
Hardwick condemned Brinsford Young Offender Institution as the worst prison he
has visited since taking up the role in 2010, adding to a growing list of jails
unable to provide basic levels of decency and safety. The House of Commons
Public Accounts Committee (PAC) meanwhile proposed that the government’s management of
prisons over the last four years
should be disseminated across Whitehall as an example of best practice. Who is right?
Of course not all prisons contain the squalid cells and enforced idleness found at Brinsford. But a range of other prisons have come in for heavy criticism in recent reports – whether for the dilapidated state of the buildings at Pentonville and Winchester, the high levels of violence at Feltham , or the restricted regimes provided at the newly opened private prisons Oakwood and Thameside.
Of course not all prisons contain the squalid cells and enforced idleness found at Brinsford. But a range of other prisons have come in for heavy criticism in recent reports – whether for the dilapidated state of the buildings at Pentonville and Winchester, the high levels of violence at Feltham , or the restricted regimes provided at the newly opened private prisons Oakwood and Thameside.
The limitations of these
two private prisons feature too in the report by Margaret Hodge and her
colleagues which despite noting their poor performance is however a generally
positive one. The PAC welcomed the fact that the prison service has achieved
significant savings in running costs (which is certainly true) and also
reported that improvements are being made in the way offenders' needs are met,
allowing more of them to work and stay closer to their homes.
This is a far more
questionable claim. In addition to criticising the two new private prisons, the
PAC itself quotes Hardwick's findings that the quality and quantity of work,
education and training across the prison system had 'plummeted' over the year
2012-3. What they do not
say is that the cost cutting on which they lavish praise is in large part the
cause of the poor performance they decry.
If the PAC had looked at
the Brinsford report they would have seen the negative consequences of staff
reductions; too many evening and weekend recreational sessions cancelled
because officers were redeployed to other areas; inadequate supervision in the
health care unit; and significantly in the light of Chris Grayling’s assurances
that prisoners do not need books to be sent in to them, inadequate access to
the library because of the lack of available prison staff.
The PAC make the point
that additional cost
savings could be made if the prison service provided more offender behaviour
programmes to help prisoners serving indeterminate sentences to be released at
the earliest opportunity. Such savings would be even more substantial if the
experience of imprisonment for all prisoners better equipped them for a life
back in the community so that they are less likely to end back inside.
But rehabilitation
programmes have an upfront cost which the PAC are unwilling to acknowledge.
Instead by prioritising economy and efficiency over effectiveness, they are
encouraging a further round of cuts rather than sounding a warning siren. Their
investigations into the costs of Oakwood prison in particular have been
cursory. The prison’s claim to be able to deliver the same regime as other
Category C prisons at less than half the average cost has always seemed
fanciful. As this level of economy is now being held up as an example for the
rest of the prison service to follow, the case for it to be properly
scrutinised is overwhelming.
Earlier in the year the PAC recommended
far greater visibility about the private sector’s performance, costs, revenues
and profits. The Committee should put the private sector to the test and take a
much closer look at whether the much lower budgets in their prisons are
genuinely delivering what is required. Alongside this the Prisons
Inspectorate should look much more systematically at the impact of staffing and
resource levels on what is happening in the prisons they visit. These two
assessments would help answer the question of whether prisons can sustain any
more cutbacks
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