Prisons White
Paper attached to this email
- New technology to thwart smuggling and bolstered plans to
tackle addictions to keep offenders clean
- Rigorous new literacy and numeracy standards and job-matching
service to find employment
- ‘Resettlement Passports’ to ensure prisoners have the basics
to stay crime-free upon release
Modern jails will cut reoffending and protect the public by
giving prisoners the education, skills and addiction support they
need to live crime-free lives.
The Prisons Strategy White Paper, published today (7 December
2021), sets out a new plan to deliver the biggest prison-building
programme in more than 100 years – creating the right conditions
to reform and rehabilitate offenders and ultimately cut crime,
keeping streets safe.
Key measures include:
- A zero-tolerance approach to drugs – all new-build prisons
will have cutting-edge body scanners and airport-style security
as standard to prevent offenders from continuing criminal
activity behind bars
- Getting offenders clean and treating addictions that thwart
rehabilitation – assessing all prisoners on arrival for drug and
alcohol addictions and putting in place a comprehensive plan to
support them to properly recover from day one – including
abstinence-based treatment
- Making sure prisoners gain basic standards of numeracy and
literacy while inside –ensuring every single prisoner has a basic
level of English and maths so they are equipped for work on
release, and a new Prisoner Education Service to train up
offenders with vocational skills including construction and
coding – improving their job prospects and steering them clear of
crime
- New drive to get offenders into work – introducing a new
job-matching service that pairs offenders up with vacancies in
the community on release and dedicated employment advisors in
prisons to help offenders find work
- Resettlement Passports to put proper plans in place for
prisoners on release – providing all prisoners with a
personalised passport that brings together all the things
offenders need to start looking for work straight away, including
a CV, identification and a bank account as well as vital support
services in the community
- New fast-tracked punishments – bringing forward a speedier
punishment scheme when prisoners transgress. Penalties will be
linked directly to their offence and support rehabilitation, for
instance forcing prisoners to repair their cells or prison
landings if they cause damage
Deputy Prime Minister, Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor
said:
We’re building the prisons to incarcerate dangerous and prolific
offenders. We’re deploying the tech to stop the flow of drugs,
weapons and phones into prisons. And we’re re-orienting the
regime to get offenders off drugs for good, and into work – to
cut crime, and keep the pubic safe.
This new strategy will be backed by unprecedented investment and
state-of-the-art infrastructure.
Last month, the government allocated an extra £550 million to
reduce reoffending and £3.75 billion to create 20,000 extra
prison places across the estate. These will ensure the right
modern, innovative and secure conditions are in place to truly
rehabilitate offenders and keep the public safe.
The 6 new prisons to be built over the next 5 years will have the
latest in technology – meaning more in-cell learning so offenders
leave prison with the skills they need to move away from crime
and into employment. This will include basic education like maths
and English, vocational skills such as IT and engineering, and
even driving theory tests so they can get a licence on release –
helping them get to and from work.
Frontline staff are also crucial to making the strategy a
success, and the White Paper includes a new commitment to recruit
an additional 5,000 officers, with 2,400 employed in the next two
years, and a new retention programme to keep existing staff.
Prison governors will be given greater autonomy and freedom to
run their jails, with new key performance measures and public
league tables incentivising the spread of best practice right
across the estate in vital areas including security, training and
employment and drug and alcohol addiction.
New prisons, such as those currently under construction at Glen
Parva, Leicestershire, and HMP Five Wells, Wellingborough, will
play a crucial role in cutting crime by training prisoners in the
skills of the future, helping them find a job on release and
dramatically reducing their chances of reoffending.
These will act as a blueprint for the government’s ambitious
prison-build programme, which will create 20,000 modern,
rehabilitative places by the mid-2020s.
The White Paper follows the publication of the 10 Year Drugs
Strategy yesterday which outlines plans backed by record
investment to crack down on supply chains and criminal gangs
profiting from the trade in illegal drugs, as well as boost
treatment services to get people off the drugs responsible for
driving crime in the first place, so that everyone across the
country can benefit from the safety and security that comes from
a safe neighbourhood.