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March 13, 2007: Napo Speaks Out On Prison Overcrowding
Probation union Napo has
commented on prison overcrowding by addressing the Home Secretary’s recent
statement on dealing with prison overcrowding through a commitment to provide
2,500 additional places by the end of the year. The plan was to involve the
opening of a 300-bed prison on the Ashworth site and finding 900 places in
temporary accommodation. It was thought that the remaining places would be a mix
of converting military barracks and bringing wings which are out of commission
for various reasons back into use. However,many believe the figure of 2,500 is
optimistic and cannot be achieved.
Napo has learnt that the temporary accommodation will be customised sea
container units normally used for transporting heavy goods across the sea. The
units will be fairly large and each one would take 30 prisoners. They are
currently being built to specification by a company in China that supplies sea
containers. The Prison Service
is then intending to bolt 2 of the units together to provide 60-bed units. The
Service is therefore in the process of commissioning up to 15 units. An official
has been seconded in from the DPW to oversee the programme.
Napo understands that each 60-bed unit is costing £3.5 million. The overall
cost, therefore, will be just over £50 million. No decisions has yet been made
on regime activities or on staffing the units. It is thought that all the funds
would have to come from existing budgets. There is, therefore, a huge hole in
Prison Service finances.
Up to a third of the units would be for young offenders. The senior officials
and staff are currently examining the prison estate with urgency to determine
where the units will be placed. It seems almost certain that the units will be
used for short-term prisoners because there clearly will be physical restraints
on what activities they can pursue in the customised sea containers. Exercise
will also be constrained as the containers will take up room in the prison
grounds and yards. Each unit will be divided into 15 two-bed units, each with a
‘wet room’. All units will have a portal window with an anti-suicide device.
Each unit will be of a uniform size, the same as a large sea container. Similar
units are being used as temporary accommodation for soldiers in Afghanistan and
Iraq.
Napo further understands that, despite the urgency, planning permission has not
yet been obtained for the temporary placing of the units. Currently the open
estate is running at 86% capacity, following criticism of inappropriate
referrals. The Home Office is, therefore, considering, as a matter of priority,
fencing Wealstun Open Jail in order to provide 400 additional secure places. The
prisoners in the West Yorkshire jail would be redistributed round the rest of
the open estate. The Home Office is also looking again at opening the barracks
in Dover.
If the crisis continues, and the prison population could reach 83,000, then an
administrative decision will be taken by the Prison Service in June to release
on temporary licence (ROTL) all prisoners who are with two weeks of their
release date. Excluded from this scheme would be anyone convicted of a violent
offence or considered as a risk to the public. But this would free up at a
stroke 2,500 places.
Napo also understands that a separate unit has been looking into the possibility
of building new prisons and as a consequence closing down the Victorians prisons
such as Brixton, Leicester, Birmingham and Wormwood Scrubs. It is thought that
these lucrative inner city sites could be used for commercial development.
However, Napo understands that the scheme has run into problems because the
Prison Service has not got the funds to build the new prisons first before
shutting down the existing stock. The idea therefore has been sidelined.
The Government’s situation is exacerbated by the fact that prisoners are
spending longer in jail than hitherto. Napo has been told that the numbers being
received into prison is not increasing, but that sentence lengths have increased
over the last 5 or 6 years by around 5% to 10%. In addition fewer prisoners are
being granted parole because of a reaction to the Monckton case. The Parole
Board has been more cautious and the Home Secretary is overruling more decisions
than ever before, indeed the number of positive decisions has been halved. There
has also been a threefold to fourfold increase in the number of prisoners
recalled because it is alleged that they have failed to keep to their licence
conditions.
This has happened because probation officers’ discretion on whether to recall
has been drastically reduced, and as a consequence there has been a large
increase in people recalled for technical reasons. The number recalled has
increased from 200 a month in 2001 to over 800 a month in 2006. This accounts
for the majority of new admissions to custody each month.
Late last year the Home Secretary was asked to consider either executive release
or changing the percentage of time actually served before parole was considered.
Both of these options were rejected.
A further problem for the Government is that the number of prisoners on Home
Detention Curfew has also fallen. The peak was around 3,400 last year on any
given day; it is now about 2,700. The reasons for this are that Governors have
become more cautious and also because fewer prisoners appear to fulfil the
eligibility rules; that is serving less than 4 years for an offence not
involving sex, violence or drugs.
The Government’s options, therefore, are drastically reduced. Insiders predict
that prison numbers will hit total crisis point in June and that a once off
release of all prisoners on ROTL who have 14 days to go will happen. Whether to
use the 14 day early release on a continuous basis is also under consideration.
Last year around 90,000 prisoners were discharged, which equates to about 1,700
a week. Over a fortnight, therefore, there will be 3,400 and it is estimated
about 2,500 of those would not have been sentenced for a sexual, violent or
drugs related offence.
Harry Fletcher, Assistant General Secretary of Napo, the Probation Union,
commented:
“Release on temporary licence is an act of desperation. But
the Prison Service is in a desperate state. Using sea containers to house
prisoners, even for short periods of time, is extraordinary. There are clearly
health and safety and environmental issues which would have to be addressed.
The units are likely to be cramped so there will not be much room for
activities such as education. No decisions appears to have been made on
staffing and it is unclear where the money will be coming from. The Home
Office has a massive problem. The only remedy is to advise the courts that
they should not be sending short-term prisoners into custody. If all prisoners
serving less than 12 months were diverted to community penalties or fines this
would free up 10,000 prison places on a daily basis.”
The decision to create a Ministry of Justice, based on the
transfer of Prisons, Probation and public protection work to the
Department for Constitutional Affairs,
appears to have been put on hold. It was thought that all the difficult parts of
the Home Office would be transferred out, leaving the Home Secretary with Home
Land Security. There appears to be a difference of opinion on whether this
should be announced pre or post Tony Blair.
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