Dominic Raab told his Party Conference this week that the government is investing £4 billion to deliver 18,000 extra prison places. How’s that going?
Whatever one thinks of the policy- not a lot in my case- the
programme to deliver it looks to be making some progress. But considerable
uncertainties remain, especially in respect of planning permission and budgets
for new prisons; and increasing capacity in existing ones. I wouldn’t bet much on
all of the additional places being available by 2026.
In May, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) told the
Justice Committee the 18,000 place expansion plan for the prison estate is made up as
follows:
6 New Builds |
9,800 |
Estate
Expansions |
6,400 |
Rapid
Deployment and Temporary Accommodation |
1,400 |
Estate Conversions (re-rolling existing facilities into prisons) |
400 |
Total |
18,000 |
The 6 new builds comprise two Category C prisons where
construction is underway: the 1,680 places at HMP Five Wells where prisoners will arrive in February 2022 and a similar
number at Glen Parva due to open in Spring 2023 after various delays.
Detailed plans have been submitted for two other prisons; the
new 1,440 place Category C Prison at Full Sutton is being considered by East Riding Council. If approved, building
will start next year. Harborough
District Council in Leicestershire is not expected to decide until next
year on the application for a 1,715 place Category B prison next to HMP Gartree.
A number of other options are being explored for the other two proposed new
builds. A
pre application consultation was held earlier in the year on a new Category
C resettlement prison for 1,440 on land adjacent to HMP Grendon and HMP
Springhill in Buckinghamshire. A similar consultation was held over the
summer about a new 1,715 capacity Category C prison on land next to HMP Garth
and HMP Wymott in Chorley, Lancashire.
Additionally, recent weeks have seen a proposal for two new prisons in Essex. Local
residents have until 8 November to comment on
ideas for a Category B and Category C prison on RAF land at Wethersfield each of which would accommodate 1,715
prisoners.
Wherever the final sites, the MoJ is working hard to reduce building
time by using standard designs, encouraging off site construction and creating an alliance of 4 building companies who will work together to plan and set up supply chains.
Each company will be allocated one prison to deliver in due course.
Even so, completing all four by 2026 could prove challenging;
contract signing to completion looks likely to take almost three years in the
case of Five Wells but nearer four or more for Glen Parva.
That’s why an important part of the programme involves making existing prisons bigger. Capacity
is being expanded by 938 at HMPs Guys Marsh, Rye Hill, Stocken and High Down. Other establishments look set to hold more prisoners. A consultation is underway about an additional 247 place house block for men at HMP Gartree. Estate expansion includes the wholly unjustifiable creation of 500 new
places in five women’s prisons.
MOJ staff were told this week in an update on the Department’s
Outcome Delivery Plan that “there are some elements that aren’t progressing as
hoped, for example the houseblock programme” but no details were provided. In coming months and years, monitoring
this - and indeed the overall programme will be an important task for MPs on the Justice Committee.
The idea that simply adding more cells without extending a
prison’s capacity to provide a decent and rehabilitative regime for their
occupants is, in any event deeply flawed. Independent Monitors at Wymott reported
today that “the kitchen, built in 1979, continues to struggle to cater for
more prisoners than was originally planned.”
The IMB also reported that one wing has been closed for failing
to meet health and safety legislation and that “other wings have been in a dire
state for many years”.
The Lancashire Prison seems a microcosm of the existing estate, much of which
is not fit for purpose. Rather than build a new prison next door, the Prison Service would do better to
bring existing facilities up to scratch and reinstate their new for old policy with
the worst prisons closed and if necessary, replaced. That of course would
require a stabilisation and ideally sharp reduction in prison numbers.
Sadly, that’s not something we are likely to see. The Justice Secretary thinks “we need the extra cells to restore some honesty in sentencing.”
What we really need is honesty on prisons.
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