There were wry smiles among staff
at the headquarters of the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) last
week. Apparently bailiffs turned up in Reception in pursuit of an unpaid debt.
It took a senior legal adviser a couple
of hours to get them off the premises but at least the furniture still seemed to be in place in the
bit I visited anyway.
It doesn’t get much starker as an
illustration of the financial pressures facing the Ministry of Justice but it
wasn’t the only one to surface in the last few days. A far more serious example
lies in Nick Hardwick’s inspectorate report into Cookham Wood, woeful even by the standards we have sadly come to
expect . High levels of violence, a backlog of disciplinary cases and worsening
outcomes no longer shock as they should. All are symptoms surely of the need
for greater numbers of capable staff to work with these troubled and
troublesome boys in the care of the state. The failure to provide enough well trained people
is as much a sign of reckless cost cutting as are bailiffs at the door of hq.
What did surprise was the response
of the Youth Justice Board to the inspection, its Chief Executive pleased to
see that inspectors had recognised the progress made at Cookham Wood “which is especially encouraging in the light
of the challenging and vulnerable cohort of young people whose needs the
establishment seeks to address”.
It’s true that the report commends
certain improvements – in the reception process, safeguarding and resettlement
for example. But progress? It is the deterioration in safety and in basic care which
should really be worrying the YJB as the body that commissions the places at the
establishment. In the inspectorate’s survey, only 14% of the boys said they had association every day and exercise in
the fresh air was limited to 30 minutes a day, a breach of the best known
international prison rule which requires double that. Many of the 25% of staff
who were from other prisons “did not know the work, the institution or the boys.”
Not long after the Inspectors visited, a boy died in Cookham Wood. The YJB’s response to the findings looks like
a case of “praising with faint condemnation”.
As Hardwick hints, all this is yet more evidence, if it were
needed, that prison is no place for this age group. Yet if there is to be
fundamental change, there is a need to be outraged by what is happening in
places like Cookham Wood. The YJB , MoJ and NOMS are in danger of turning a
blind eye to the impact of the budget cuts they oversee. Given the state to which the youth custody sector has been
reduced, looking to it to help the YJB find fresh savings imposed on it by the
MoJ seems a poor call.
In one of his well- received pre-recess speeches Michael Gove warned
, in his philosophical way, that reforms to the criminal justice system should
not be achieved by “defining deviancy down”- a phrase coined by Daniel Moynihan
in the 1970’s to decry a permissive tendency to normalise what was once
offensive. Whether or not he’s right on that, he certainly should not be
defining decency down and accepting what is happening in prisons for young
people. He should not be reviewing them- he should be planning to shut
them.