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October 6, 2006: Government To Scrap Probation Service, Says Napo
Probation union Napo is
holding it’s 94th Annual General Meeting from 6 to 8 October, at a time
when, says Napo, the Government actively plans to scrap and privatise the
National
Probation Service. The Napo AGM will debate a series of motions which are
critical of Government policy.
The Queen’s Speech in November will contain a Bill which will, if implemented,
abolish the National Probation Service and replace it with a fragmented raft of
private voluntary and public sector providers. In effect, competition will be
introduced for the supervision of offenders. It is expected that the Bill will
be introduced in the House of Commons well before Christmas. Napo argues that it
is highly likely that a whole Probation Service such as London, could be handed
over to private sector companies. The supervision of highly dangerous
individuals will become the subject of profit. According to Napo Chair Mike
McClelland:
“The Government introduced the concept of a
National Offender Management
Service (NOMS) in January 2004. Its prime purpose was to break-up the
Probation Service and replace it with the market. No business case has ever
been produced and the project over the last 30 months has been characterised
by delay, chaos and uncertainty. The supervision of the most difficult and
dangerous offenders will be determined by market forces and by profit. All
this comes at a time when the Probation Service is performing better than
ever."
"Figures for 2006 show that enforcement targets were achieved in 89 per cent
of cases (April-June), and there was timely assessment of high risk in 90% of
cases. Probation Areas are deemed to have failed if they do not reach special
high standards on a basket of targets, which include the timeliness of
reports, supervision completions and risk assessment. These figures are
produced every quarter. The figures are a nonsense; they do not reflect
quality of work nor do they allow discretion to staff. As a consequence,
within three months one small Area has risen up the league table from
forty-second to sixth place, and another Area has dropped from fifth to
forty-third. It is clear that changes to a handful of difference can have a
disproportionate effect on the tables. It is time the tables were scrapped and
that the Service’s performance was measured on its efficiency and
effectiveness. There is no hard evidence to support the claims that market
forces have made Prisons and Probation more efficient in the past. Indeed, it
has been the experience of the Probation Service so far that private sector
involvement, including electronic tagging and hostel facilities, has led to
services becoming more expensive and less efficient.”
“Last year, Probation was supervising 1,500 people where the risk to the
public was considered very high, and a further 11,280 where the risk of harm
to the public was described as high. Statistics show that 0.6% of the total in
both categories were charged with a further serious offence. This is despite
acute resource problems. The service currently has over 1,000 vacancies. The
Home Office’s own Offender Management model demands that those who pose a high
or medium-high risk to the public must be supervised by a trained Probation
Officer. The London Area alone has a shortfall of 150. Nationally the Service
needs hundreds of experienced staff in order to maximise public protection. As
a consequence of the shortfall, high risk offenders are seen by staff who have
not received formal training."
"Napo has learned that the NOMS project is already £40 million overspent. If
this continues the deficit at the end of the year could exceed £100 million.
As a consequence programmes for sex offenders and those who have perpetrated
domestic violence have been cutback. The situation is chaotic, and as a
consequence there is unnecessary risk to the public."
"Napo will be urging MPs of all Parties to vote against the proposals in the
interests of safety. In 2004, 251 MPs signed an early day motion which
demanded that the Probation Service stay public and be properly resourced. In
addition, the motion asked that privatisation was not used as a threat to
staff or voluntary sector providers.”
He added:
“Napo represents staff in the Family Courts.
CAFCASS has been under-funded since
its inception in 2001. This year it is looking at a £10 million deficit. As a
consequence there will be severe delay in reports being compiled for the
courts. This is not in the best interests of children. Staff are already
taking on more work. The Government’s solution is to restructure. This does
not deal with the fundamental problems of shortage of cash.”
In addition Napo members are debating a range of motions which
include:
- A demand for workload protection
- A campaign to defend the Prison’s Inspectorate
- Stopping the privatisation of unpaid work
- Abandoning pilot schemes that take benefits away from
offenders who breach their orders
- A demand for proper negotiation and consultation with the
unions within CAFCASS
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