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March 20, 2008: Poor Relationships In Prison, Say Howard League
Prisoners in high security jails feel that poor relationships with staff and
poor regimes behind bars are undermining their preparation for life after
release, with inevitable consequences for reoffending, according to a report
just published by the Howard League
for Penal Reform.
'Prison Information Bulletin 4: High Security Prisons', which analyses
quality of life surveys conducted by the prison service and obtained by the
Howard League through the
Freedom
of Information Act, finds that high security prisoners criticise:
-
Regimes: The most referred to negative aspect of prison life, with
prisoners citing the amount of time spent locked in cells, lack of leisure
and exercise facilities, inconsistencies or errors in the incentives and
earned privileges system; as well as unpredictable regimes where new rules
are implemented without informing the prisoners, rules were not applied
consistently and instances where security was used as a justification for
unfair decisions.
-
Relationships with staff: High security prisoners report negative
attitudes from staff, a lack of respect and poor levels of communication.
Prisoners described racist staff members and those who were unconcerned
about prisoners’ opinions or needs and unwilling to help with problems.
-
Contact with families and the outside world:Dissatisfaction with outside
world contact, seen as vital for a safe return to the community, was
widespread. Prisoners described visits being cut short and poor access to
telephones jeopardising their ability to maintain relationships with those
outside the jail.
-
Rehabilitation: Concerns are focused on a lack of offending behaviour
programmes, late and infrequent completion of sentence plans, late and
inaccurate review board reports, and insufficient opportunities to engage
in vocational skill training or work.
-
Complaints process:The complaints system is seen as inefficient and
ineffective, while prisoners had little faith in the applications process
– an intermediate step between informal contact with an officer and an
official complaint.
Director of the Howard League for Penal Reform, Frances Crook, commented:
“The prison service is currently analysing the quality of life surveys
- not simply in the high security estate that this report focuses on - and
unsurprisingly there is a clear link developing between safe prisons with
active regimes that have good staff-prisoner relationships and subsequent
reoffending. Decent prisons reduce re-offending and protect victims."
“This is of the utmost importance when we consider the high security estate,
given the gravity of offences and the potential danger posed to the public
that placement in a high security jail implies. The discontent and
unhappiness within high security dispersal prisons recorded in this report
should be concern to us all, as all but a few of these prisoners will
eventually be released back into the community."
“High security jails need to be rebooted for the 21st century. With
increasing numbers of criminals entering prison with extensive gang
contacts, and increasing numbers of category A terrorist prisoners, it is
vital that the high security estate is properly ring fenced from the rest of
the prison system. At the moment, overcrowding elsewhere has seen more and
more people sucked into dispersal prisons simply because beds are
unavailable elsewhere.
“With a stable population of largely long term prisoners, the dispersal
prisons should have intensive perimeter security to prevent escape alongside
dynamic internal security, so that a reliance on barred gates and CCTV
inside can be replaced with high staffing levels and highly skilled staff
who can forge good relationships with prisoners."
“Most importantly, those incarcerated for years in the high security estate
should be given something productive to do. Rather than spend years and
years lying on their bunks, pottering about in flip flops doing nothing in
particular, we believe that long term prisoners in the high security estate
should be involved in productive activity in purposeful regimes. From
education, training and other rehabilitative measures, to the radical
concept of real work in prison we are now campaigning on, far more positive
effort should be made than is currently possible in our failing prison
system.”
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