HMP Whatton had a clear sense of purpose and was doing some
excellent work to reduce the risks posed by the prisoners it held,
said Peter Clarke, Chief Inspector of Prisons. Today he published
the report of an unannounced inspection of the training prison in
Nottinghamshire.
HMP Whatton is a category C prison holding over 800 prisoners. It
provides services that seek to address the offending behaviour of
mainly sex offenders. Over 90% of its population are serving long
sentences in excess of four years, with just fewer than three
quarters serving indeterminate or life sentences. Prisoners held
at Whatton come from across the country and about two-thirds are
over the age of 40. At its last inspection in 2012, inspectors
reported positively on the prison, which was doing some excellent
work with a settled but high-risk population. This more recent
inspection found the same.
Inspectors were pleased to find that:
- Whatton remained an overwhelmingly safe prison and there was
comparatively little violence or antisocial behaviour;
- care for those in crisis was good, though levels of self-harm
had increased in recent times;
- security arrangements were proportionate and the segregation
unit was well managed;
- the amount of time prisoners had out of cell was very good;
- the quality of teaching, learning and coaching was excellent
and prisoners developed useful skills;
- public protection work was mostly good;
- there was an extensive range of offending behaviour
programmes to meet need and support the prison’s main function;
and
- relationships between staff and prisoners were very good.
However, inspectors were concerned to find that:
- there was some evidence that medications were being diverted
and used illicitly;
- although the environment and quality of accommodation was
generally good, conditions on B wing remained poor; and
- the way race diversity complaints were answered was poor and
required immediate attention.
Peter Clarke said:
“This was another excellent report on a prison with a clear sense
of purpose. The prison was well led and had benefitted greatly
from a settled senior team who were striving for continuous
improvement. The prison had a number of advantages – notably a
generally mature and compliant population – but also challenges
in terms of managing and reducing, on behalf of the public, the
significant offending behaviour risks of those they held. The
prison made the most of its advantages, evidenced much good
practice and delivered good outcomes.”
Michael Spurr, Chief Executive Officer of the National Offender
Management Service, said:
“I am pleased to see the inspectorate notes the good work taking
place at Whatton. The prison provides those in their care a
meaningful programme to prepare them for release.
“Whatton manages a high risk prisoner population with care and
professionalism. The Governor and her team deserve full credit
for this positive Inspection outcome. They will use the
recommendations in the report to address the areas identified for
further improvement.”
- ENDS -
Notes to editors:
- A copy of the full report can be found on the HM Inspectorate
of Prisons website from 4 January 2017 at: www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprisons
- HM Inspectorate of Prisons is an independent
inspectorate, inspecting places of detention to report on
conditions and treatment, and promote positive outcomes for those
detained and the public.
- HMP Whatton is an adult male category C training prison
holding exclusively sex offenders.
- This unannounced inspection was carried out from 15-26 August
2016.