Complaints about food are “a constant refrain” when Monitors
visit HMP Warren Hill in Suffolk according to a Report
out today. Prisoners are unhappy with the quality, quantity, choice and food temperature
at the small Category C prison in Suffolk. Recent reports on other
establishments suggest discontent may be increasingly widespread. They've been published in the months following the hospitalisation of six people at
Lewes prison with
food poisoning.
Yesterday, His Majesty’s Prison Inspectorate(HMIP) reported
that just 18% of prisoners at HMP Erlestoke said that they got enough to
eat, down from 35% at the time of the last inspection. The small size of the portions was a key- but
not a priority -concern for HMIP. At
Belmarsh only a quarter of prisoners said that the food was good and that
they got enough to eat. Lunch was served to the prisoner’s door as early as
10.30 in the morning.
Earlier this year, in a survey conducted by the IMB at HMP Oakwood, more than nine out of ten of the 280 respondents found the overall food quality to be bad or very bad. 68% found they did not have enough to eat at mealtimes, with only 27% feeling they had enough some of the time. This is the prison that the Chief Inspector of Prisons, Charlie Taylor has described as the best in the country.
Oddly Taylor’s latest Annual
Report fails to mention food, other than to criticise a filthy food trolley.
It’s an omission.
I’m not sure how psychologists view Maslow these days but
his argument that survival needs must be satisfied before anyone can address
matters higher up the hierarchy still rings true. In prisons, the challenges of
offering safety and security, a sense of connection and of individuality will
often act as further barriers to reaching self-actualisation. If Maslow’s
right, if you’re hungry, you’ll struggle to reach let alone overcome them.
An
academic review last year concluded “the potential of food to enhance the
prison environment and support improvements in prisoner health and wellbeing is
limited when the nutritional content is inadequate and/or where food is served
and eaten impacts negatively on human dignity. Prison policy which provides
opportunities for cooking and sharing food that better reflects familial and
cultural identity has the potential to improve relationships, increase
self-esteem, build and maintain life skills needed for reintegration”.
There is great work going on to influence policy and practice
in this direction. Charity Food
Behind Bars is working to transform the food served in British
prisons and researchers at Surrey
University have called for an increase in the food budget -as well as
publishing a recipe book prepared by women in prison. £2.70 per prisoner per day was spent on food in
2023–2024, a 25% increase from the previous year's budget of £2.16. I cant
find a figure for this financial year.
But the latest glut of reports suggest creating improvements will
be an uphill struggle. Communal dining and opportunities to prepare food other
than in a microwave seem very much the exception rather than the rule.
With the planned expansion of capacity at several prisons, there’s a risk that pressure on kitchens will increase. At Warren Hill, food is prepared at neighbouring Hollesley Bay a mile away. Unreliable transport results in food going cold and even being tampered with. Monitors hope that a planned expansion of the prison will bring with it a new kitchen.
Planning
permission has recently been obtained for 93 rapid deployment cells, and a servery.
But no kitchen that I can see. I hope I am
wrong.
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