The Justice Committee has today
published correspondence from the Comptroller & Auditor
General of the National Audit Office (NAO), Sir Amyas Morse KCB.
This follows a request from the Chair of the Committee, MP, for the NAO to provide
information on HMP Birmingham – in particular, a review of the
contractual relationship between the Ministry of Justice and G4S.
The letter from Sir Amyas Morse is attached to this email. It
sets out:
- Some brief background and context on HMP Birmingham;
- An explanation of the arrangements for governance and
oversight of the contract; and
- A timeline of key events from the disturbance in 2016 up to
the point of step-in.
This morning, the Committee questions officials from the Ministry
of Justice and HMPPS, the new prison Governor and G4S on problems
at HMP Birmingham identified in HMIP’s Urgent Notification
and inspection
report. Following this, the Committee holds the final
evidence session of its long-running inquiry Prison Population 2022:
planning for the future.
Chair of the Justice Committee, MP, said:
“The diabolical situation at HMP Birmingham – highlighted by
the recent HMIP report – is one of the worst examples of the
crisis in our prisons. I am grateful to Sir Amyas Morse for the
information provided to our inquiry, but the stark findings will
surely be of serious concern not only across Government and the
prison sector, but for the wider public too.
“I am particularly alarmed to learn that the prison was
returned to capacity only a few months after rioting had put
whole blocks out of action, that there was ongoing instability
and both the MoJ and G4S were concerned about staffing levels.
G4S and the Ministry were discussing a project to replace windows
in May 2017 but, as we learned from the Chief Inspector’s
Urgent Notification, almost all windows in the old blocks were
still broken the following year in August 2018.
“Why did HMPPS not serve contractual improvement notices
until March this year, nine months after it first threatened to
do so? The MoJ imposed financial deductions on G4S but deductions
against the ‘Contract Delivery Indicators’ were only 1% of the
value of the contract, arguably an inadequate figure to have any
impact.
“This was an abject failure to provide a decent prison and I
will be demanding reassurance from the MoJ and the Minister that
lessons have been learned and that such situations can never
happen again.”