- record recruitment drive hits target in push to cut crime and
make streets safer
- Probation Minister vows to tackle reoffending and recruit
further 1,500 trainees
- £300 million extra funding for the Probation Service over
last 2 years
The record recruitment drive has seen people from diverse
backgrounds across the country commit to be trainee probation
officers, including teachers, university graduates and a pub
landlord who has switched from pulling pints to protecting the
public.
Thanks to an extra £300 million investment in the Probation
Service over the last 2 years, a further 1,500 trainee probation
officers will be taken on in 2022-23, keeping our streets safer
and preventing future crime.
The successful recruitment honours a commitment made in the
government’s Beating Crime Plan
published last July.
With around 80 percent of offenders having at least one previous
caution or conviction, probation officers play a vital role in
supervising and rehabilitating people who have committed crime.
They also ensure they attend drug or alcohol treatment and gain
access to help with accommodation and education - reducing the
risk of further offending.
Figures released today
(19 May 2022) show that in the financial year 2021/22, 1,518
people enrolled on the Probation Service’s trainee probation
officer scheme, and nearly 1 in 6 were from an ethnic minority
background.
Probation Minister, said:
Making the streets safer is one of our top priorities so we are
giving the Probation Service the resources they need to hold
offenders to account, cut crime and reduce the number of victims.
Probation officers play an invaluable role in protecting the
public and so we are boosting their numbers – meaning there are
more people keeping a watchful eye on offenders and ensuring they
reform their criminal ways.
The staffing boost is increasing the amount of face-to-face time
that staff have with offenders so they can better protect the
community and support rehabilitation.
Mark Feasey is based with the Yorkshire and the Humber regional
Probation Service and made the switch from pub landlord via the
trainee probation officer route. He said:
It’s a great career. I get to work with people to help them
change their lives and when I’m able to support someone to do
that, the rewards are huge.
We are all human; we can all make mistakes and we’ve all got
potential. Helping people break that cycle of offending drives me
every day.
The government is also tagging even more offenders as part of its
drive to cut crime. Since alcohol tags were launched a year ago
as part of government plans to curb drink-fuelled crime, 3,121
offenders have been monitored, with more than 3,000 staying
sober. By 2025 around 12,000 offenders will have had their
drinking monitored by sobriety tags – part of a £183 million
expansion of electronic monitoring.
As well as alcohol tags, GPS monitoring equipment has been rolled
out across half of England and Wales. Burglars, robbers and
thieves who have served a prison sentence of a year or more are
tagged on release and tracked, so if they reoffend police can
quickly catch them.
Her Majesty’s Prison & Probation Service (HMPPS) is currently
hiring trainee probation officers across England and Wales.
Anyone interested in becoming a probation officer should visit
Probation
Service (traintobeaprobationofficer.com)
Notes to editors
- The government reunified the Probation Service in June last
year with a permanent uplift of £155 million extra investment – a
15 per cent increase on 2019-20 funding.
- GPS monitoring equipment is now deployed across 19 police
force areas – roughly half of England and Wales.
- HMPPS is currently hiring trainee probation officers across
England and Wales. Users should be directed to: Probation
Service (traintobeaprobationofficer.com)