September 20, 2005: Home Secretary on Future of Penal Policy
Home Secretary
Charles
Clarke gave the
Prison Reform Trust’s annual lecture in London last night. In his first
detailed speech on the future of penal policy, he focused on how best to prevent
re-offending, and noted that over half of all crime is committed by people who
have already been through the criminal justice system. He therefore aimed:
“to move away from the idea that prisons can be universities
of crime towards them being institutions that ensure offenders become working
and productive members of society upon release.”
Spending on prisons had risen by over 25% in real terms since
1997, and on probation by 39% in real terms since 2001. However, stated Mr
Clarke:
“The least educated and least healthy people in the country
remain those within the criminal justice system. And their poor education and
health does not only damage them. It makes them more likely to re-offend and
so a greater danger to society than they need to be.”
We therefore had to:
“move towards a form of contract between the criminal and
the state where each individual in prison, on remand or on probation is
required to commit to a non-criminal future, to no future re-offending. And in
return the State and its agencies should commit to providing whatever support
it can to stopping their re-offending; or, to use a medical analogy, to
providing the right 'treatment' for every individual."
He emphasised the word ‘individual’, since offenders were not
a homogenous group:
"They have very different reasons for offending and will
respond to different solutions.... For some the fact of prison, or even simply
the threat of prison, will be enough to prevent any re-offending. For others
prison is merely part of the reality of an institutional life in which the
individual has little stake. We have to create a package of support and
interventions for each and every offender... We need to make sure that for
every person within our prison and probation services we have a realistic
programme for their time in the system with clear goals right from the start.
Community sentencing… can be an important support for this approach…”
Mr Clarke rejected what he labelled as the 'populist
suggestion' that:
“... community sentencing is a soft option in comparison to
prison. The truth is that a well-planned and properly-supervised community
sentence is both tough on the offender and far more valuable in indicating
constructive futures for the individual. Moreover, such sentences allow
offenders to perform reparation in a more visible way which the community is
better able to shape and understand.”
Mr Clarke was supportive of professional staff who work in
prisons and the probation service, who were:
“deeply committed and effective and they have to take some
of the toughest decisions of any public servant, in some of the toughest of
circumstances.”
He stressed that the individualised response he advocated
could not exist:
“without one person being responsible for each offender
throughout their time in prison and on probation - the end-to-end offender
manager. This role will embed partnership between the prison and probation
services and the wider community, and that will be helped by new technology
which will better assess risk and manage offenders through one single database
wherever they are in the system."
The introduction of the
National Offender Management
Service (NOMS) was aimed at maximising is also seeking rehabilitative
outcomes for every offender in a way that is far more consistent nationwide:
"While some prison and probation areas have responded
magnificently to these challenges and have improved, there are others which
have not achieved as much as necessary. This is the reason why I am personally
committed to the creation of a vibrant mixed economy with NOMS. I believe
that, particularly within the voluntary and community sector, there is a large
untapped resource which is keen to help us achieve the reductions in
reoffending... A strong structure of commissioning and contestability in
prisons and probation will create a wider range of appropriate interventions
and raise the quality of offender management services across the country."
This may be difficult to achieve, he acknowledged,
"... particularly when the historic cultures of the
nationally managed prison services and the locally-managed probation services
are so very different. It is however essential and I believe we can drive
improvement through seeking the best possible providers for interventions and
offender management in each area. In many areas the public sector’s skill and
expertise will deliver the continuous improvement we need. In other areas,
competition is needed to stimulate this improvement."
He cited the example of voluntary organisations with
significant experience and history of success already providing drug treatment
interventions, and could see:
“no reason of principle or practicality why offender
management should not be provided by the private or voluntary sector. And a
very important part of the development of commissioning and contestability
will be the ability to specify and contract for cross-cutting services,
straddling the current silos of prison and probation, and making a reality of
the end-to-end management of offenders."
He wanted a range of suppliers from both the statutory and
non-statutory sectors. He saw a key role for the commissioners at the centre of
the organisation as ensuring there were no obstacles to new players joining the
market, with a level playing field for competition. He nevertheless stressed his
view about the main driver for change:
"The whole motivation behind this change is to drive up
performance to further reduce re-offending. It is not about cost-cutting and
standards."
In terms of sentencing policy, we needed to remand people only
where there is a risk to the public or a significant risk of the offender
absconding. Sentencers, he stated, should:
- Be rigorous in using your powers to sentence in a way which
protects society against dangerous and violent criminals including making good
use of indeterminate sentences for the most dangerous offenders;
- Be rigorous in upholding the authority of the Court when it
comes to enforcing penalties including fines, to forcing offenders to give
respect to the Court and its procedures and to ensuring that justice is
rapidly despatched;
- Be flexible and positive in using community sentences,
which can be far tougher than prison, to help prevent re-offending;
- Make full use of fines – effective penalties which hit
offenders in the pocket where it hurts; and which are increasingly being more
enforced;
- When giving a custodial sentence, take full account of the
new guidelines issued by the
Sentencing Guidelines
Council... They are there to deliver consistency and effectiveness in
sentencing;
- Make full use of the custody minus, custody plus and
intermittent custody arrangements when they are fully in place since they will
reinforce the flexibility which can best reduce re-offending.
Mr Clarke spoke at a time where England and Wales has the
highest imprisonment rate in Western Europe at 145 per 100,000. There are
currently almost 77,000 prisoners in the system. Prison has a poor response to
addressing potential re-offending – 61% of all prisoners are reconvicted within
two years of released.
Prison Reform Trust director Juliet Lyon commented:
“With prisons at bursting point and reconviction rates sky
high, it is welcome news that the Home Secretary plans to focus on community
solutions to crime. For those serious offenders who really need to be in jail,
community prisons make sense. For far too long people have been held in prison
too far from home and too far from the support they need to stand a chance of
resettling in society on release. It is commonsense that employment, training,
drug treatment and family support are the keys to stopping re-offending. But
there is a risk that prison could be used as a gateway for social care. When
delivered in the community, these measures could cut crime before it starts,
leaving prison to work constructively with high risk offenders.”
Campaign group Smart
Justice Director Lucie Russell also welcomed moves to re-enforce community
sentences for petty offenders:
“Offenders should pay the community back for their crimes
and the damage they have caused instead of sitting around in a prison cell
doing nothing, costing the taxpayer £37,000 per year. Helping offenders get
back on track will cut crime and increase public safety."
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