Reoffending Rates Mr Steve Baker (Wycombe) (Con) 1. What recent
assessment she has made of the potential (a) financial and (b)
social benefits of reducing reoffending rates. [909086] The
Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice (Elizabeth
Truss) Almost half the people...Request free trial
Reoffending Rates
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1. What recent assessment she has made of the potential
(a) financial and (b) social benefits of reducing
reoffending rates. [909086]
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Almost half the people leaving our prisons will reoffend
within a year, with a cost to the economy of £15 billion,
and countless costs to victims and society. We are giving
prison governors the power to be able to turn people’s
lives around in order to reduce that level of
reoffending.
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Prison should be a place of transformation and renewed
hope. What steps has the Secretary of State taken to
ensure that prisons are places of reform and
rehabilitation?
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We need to ensure
that prison governors have all the tools at their
disposal to get people the education they may not have
had—almost half of prisoners do not have basic English
and maths—to get them into jobs and training so that they
can go into work and lead a lawful life when they leave
prison.
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Following the transforming rehabilitation reforms, there
has been a 57% increase in the number of offenders being
recalled as a result of failure to keep in touch during
supervision after short sentences. What action are the
Government taking to address this rise in the number of
people being recalled to prison, and why is such failure
being seen as a result of the reforms?
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It is, of course, important that we recall people who
pose a danger to society, but we need to ensure that we
are recalling the right people. We are looking at that
issue and at wider probation reforms to ensure that we
turn people’s lives around not just while they are in
prison, but while they are under community supervision.
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One particularly stubborn area of concern has been the
above-average reoffending rate of those serving sentences
of 12 months or less. Does not that give rise to the need
to look again at the effectiveness and use of short
sentences as opposed to community penalties, and to look
carefully at the way in which the Through the Gate
programme operates? There is a real concern that there is
not adequate follow-up for people who are released under
these circumstances.
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The Chair of the Select Committee on Justice is right
that we need to get better at intervening before people
commit crimes that lead to custody. As well as announcing
a review of probation and the way in which it operates,
we are looking at community sentences. We are ensuring
that good community sentences are in place and that there
is a higher use of mental health treatment orders and
drugs desistance orders, which reduce the likelihood of
reoffending.
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What steps is the Secretary of State taking to reduce
reoffending by domestic violence perpetrators in prisons
and in communities?
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The hon. Lady is absolutely right that as we have got
better at dealing with issues of domestic violence, there
is more we can do. That is why I am leading a joint
taskforce with the Home Secretary to look at the law
around domestic violence. We are also ensuring that
domestic violence victims are protected in the family
court. Under the Prisons and Courts Bill, abusers will no
longer be able to cross-examine domestic violence
victims, and that is an important step forward.
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I am sure the Secretary of State will welcome the fact
that companies such as Boots, Barclays, Carillion, Land
Securities, Ricoh and many others have “banned the box”
to improve the chances of ex-offenders getting jobs.
However, does she share my concern that some quite big
household names have not yet stepped up to the plate?
Will she do her bit to get them over the line alongside
those other good employers?
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I congratulate my hon. Friend on the work he did to get
more employers involved in this when he was a Minister.
We are following on from his good work by setting up an
organisation called the New Futures Network, which will
comprise businesses and charities. The network will
encourage more employers to take on ex-offenders, who are
often very loyal and hard-working employees, and who can
help to address some of the skills shortages we face.
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Reoffending now costs us £15 billion annually, as the
Secretary of State just said. A recent report by Her
Majesty’s inspectorate of probation noted that not enough
is being done to help prisoners to prepare for life
outside prison, due to a
“combination of unmanageable caseloads, inexperienced
officers, extremely poor oversight”.
The service was rated as four-star before privatisation.
What will the Secretary of State do to address this?
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As I have said, it is important that people are supported
to get into jobs once they leave prison. Just as we are
establishing metrics for governors, showing how many
people are employed once they leave prison, we want to
use similar metrics to hold probation operators to
account to make sure that they are focused on getting
people into homes and into work, which we know leads to a
reduction in reoffending.
Prison Safety and Security
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17. What steps the Government are taking to make
prisons safer and more secure. [909102]
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We are taking urgent action to improve prison
safety and security, alongside reforms to
overhaul the system to focus on the
rehabilitation of offenders. This includes
tackling the supply and demand of drugs, drones
and phones, which drive prison violence and
undermine safety, and redoubling our efforts to
address the record levels of suicide and
self-harm.
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I am the rapporteur to the Joint Committee on
Human Rights, which is conducting an inquiry into
mental health and deaths in prisons. Last week,
we took evidence from four serving prisoners,
including on the issue of safety. One young man
told us that he had received only two days’
advance notice of when he was due to be released,
causing him great anxiety about accommodation and
having a sufficient support network. Will the
Minister undertake to look at the resettlement
problem?
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I would be surprised if the gentleman my hon.
Friend mentions was informed of his release only
two days in advance, but I would of course be
happy to look into the situation in more detail.
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When the Minister replied to the question asked
by my hon. Friend the Member for Luton South (Mr
Shuker) about safety in prisons, he forgot to
supply my hon. Friend with the number. What is
the number?
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The answer is very straightforward: mutual
assistance exists for prisons to support each
other in both the private and public sectors.
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Staff morale is very important to safety and
security in prisons, so I wish to ask the
Minister again about the flexibilities that I
understand governors will have on pay increases
from 1 April. Will that mean that we could end up
with prison officers in Hull being paid less than
prison officers down the road in Leeds? How will
that affect morale?
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No. As I said in my answer to a previous
question, the matter of Prison Service pay will
be decided nationally. The independent pay review
body will also submit evidence throughout this
year. That will still be the case where we have
governor freedoms, but, in giving governors their
budgets, they will be able to decide on the mix
of staff and how to deploy them.
TOPICAL
QUESTION
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Developing skills in prison is crucial to
successful rehabilitation, but it is
important that those skills translate
into the real world. What consideration
are Ministers giving to ensuring that
skills development in prison dovetails
with the needs in the industrial
strategy?
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My hon. Friend is absolutely right, and I
know he is a big supporter of the new
Wellingborough prison. In that prison, as
well as in others across country, we are
looking at areas where there are skills
shortages—whether it is in construction
or catering—and making sure that we start
apprenticeships in prison that can then
be completed on the outside, so that we
can bring new, skilled people to
important industries.
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