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September 1, 2008: Tougher Community Work For Offenders
Steps to further toughen up the demanding physical work offenders
carry out on community payback were announced today. Courts will be able to hand
out tougher and more intense penalties for a range of offenders - including
those in possession of knives - who are ordered to carry out work such as
picking up litter, renovating community centres, clearing undergrowth and
graffiti for local communities.
Starting today, anyone convicted of a knife-related offence who is unemployed
and sentenced to the maximum 300 hours of community payback from the courts will
complete their sentence in intensive blocks of up to five days a week. This will
mean more intensive labour for all those knife offenders who are not in work
across all 42 probation areas.
A pilot will also run to see if this sort of intense work could be rolled out to
all types of offenders given community payback. West Yorkshire will trial a
programme for all offenders receiving 200 hours of work from the courts doing
this intensively in 6 weeks. This will represent a significant loss of liberty
and free time for many people with work taking place 5 days per week and
continued tough consequences for not turning up.
The measures follow the recent announcement made by the Prime Minister that
community payback for offenders would be tough, visible and effective. Minister
of State for Justice David
Hanson MP also highlighted that more offenders are currently 'paying back'
the community through work at weekends when they expect to have free time, with
74% of community payback programmes running on either Saturday or Sunday. He
said:
'Offenders sentenced to "pay" for their crimes within the
community can already expect to work hard and lose much of their free time. By
introducing intensive 5 days a week payback for many knife crime offenders we
are further toughening these punishments. Initially the change will affect the
small number of knife crime offenders who are given the longest community
payback sentences instead of custody by magistrates, but we are also
announcing a pilot to assess the suitability and success of extending this
over time to a much wider range of offenders.
'It is important that the public can see and influence the work that is being
carried out by offenders in their neighbourhoods. This is crucial to ensure
that there is confidence in community sentences.
'The public can already suggest projects for offenders to work on to their
local probation office and we are intending to set up community panels linked
closely to local communities which will further enable members of the public
to propose work projects for offenders in their local area.'
Last year there were 55,771 completions of community payback
across England and Wales, providing over six million hours of free labour for
communities.
As well as providing a tough form of punishment for offenders and a constructive
form of payback to communities, tough community sentences can be more effective
than a short prison sentence in terms of rehabilitating some offenders, turning
them away from crime and therefore giving greater protection to the public.
Recent statistics show that frequency of reoffending
for community sentences have fallen sharply by 13%. The reoffending rate
following a short custodial sentence is 59.7%. The reoffending rate following a
community sentences is 37.9%.
A community sentence can be made up of one or more of the following 12 options:
compulsory community payback, specific activity - such as a community drug
centre, supervision - daily or weekly meetings with a probation officer, an
accredited programme to tackle issues such as anger management, prohibited
activity, curfew, exclusion from a place, activity at an attendance centre,
residence with an automatic curfew, mental health treatment, drug rehabilitation
and alcohol treatment.
Sentences are constructed to ensure the public's safety is
paramount, the offender is duly punished, but they are also given the
opportunity to rehabilitate and get help for the some of the root causes behind
their offending.
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