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February 9, 2006: New 5 year Strategy To Stop Re-offending
The Government today announced their five-year strategy to reduce
re-offending. The strategy includes a significant increase in the total amount
of visible, unpaid work carried out by offenders in the community as part of
community sentencing. In 2005, offenders carried out 5 million hours of work in
their communities under the Community Payback initiative. Under the new strategy
that will double to 10 million hours. The Government believes that visible
reparation is a key element in reducing the problem of re-offending.
The strategy combines public work with a number of other changes:
- Full use of rehabilitation processes, including support for
health problems and educational advancement
- Help to 'go straight' for every individual
- Community prisons, so that inmates can maintain family
ties, and smoothly integrate into the community after their release
- The development of "contestability" (arguably de facto
privatisation)
Other key developments include:
- A new indeterminate sentence for public protection, which
means that seriously dangerous offenders will not be released until the Parole
Board assess that it is safe to do so. In some cases, this may be never.
- Better parole decisions, with the Parole Board putting the
safety of the public first; and every released lifer living under the threat
of recall to prison.
- Continuous improvement in the way offenders are supervised
in the community, with better management of risk and offender manager
The new strategy recognises that sending people to prison is
not the only way of punishing them.
Action that is promised includes:
- Faster and fairer justice for minor offences, including
extending the use of conditional cautions. Conditions can include paying
compensation or making another kind of direct reparation to the victim of the
crime.
- Day fines, which vary according to ability to pay – so that
fines will be as tough for a rich offender as for a poorer one.
- Replacing all existing community penalties with a single
Community Order, with a mix of up to twelve different requirements.
- Putting unpaid work at the heart of community sentences –
rising from 5 million hours in 2003 to approaching 10 million by 2011.
- All unpaid work branded as Community Payback putting
focus on the fact that offenders have to make amends to society for the wrong
they have done, giving local councils and communities a say in what offenders
do, and making it much more visible.
- New sentences which combine prison with community
punishment and supervision afterwards, working better to stop people offending
again.
Whether offenders are in prison or in the community, there is
a recognition of the need to manage them better to stop them re-offending. There
will be a named offender manager for every offender, who will be responsible for
making sure that they are both punished and rehabilitated properly; and who will
get involved as early as possible in managing the offender.
The strategy endorses the need to "harness the dynamism and
talents of a broader range of innovative and effective providers from the
public, private and voluntary and community sectors", which will be seem by some
as de facto privatisation. This will involve:
- A system built on commissioning so that those who buy
services for offenders are separated out from the providers of those services
– so that there is no incentive to deliver services that do not work.
- A phased programme of contestability for Prison and
Probation Services, with a prospectus, so that the government can ensure that
services are provided by the best possible partnerships and providers, drive
up standards, and improve results so that we can cut re-offending still
further and faster.
- Legislation to turn Probation Boards into Probation
Trusts, giving flexibility to get the best possible providers of probation
services, with the focus on improving standards, not cutting costs.
Home Secretary Charles Clarke stated:
"A shocking truth is that more than half of all crime in
this country is committed by people who have been through the criminal justice
system before.The idea that "prison works" in stopping re-offending is
demonstrably wrong. We have to stop people re-offending, and this strategy
will meet that challenge."
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