HMI Probation and HMI Prisons report on Through the Gate support for prisoners leaving jail - community rehabilitation companies not having any impact
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Support for prisoners leaving jail and moving back into the
community was poor and the work of most Community Rehabilitation
Companies (CRCs) was not making any difference, according to the
Chief Inspectors of Probation and Prisons. The government’s
Transforming Rehabilitation reforms were meant to improve
rehabilitation, but those good intentions have not been realised.
The general position has not improved in the eight months since HMI
Probation’s last...Request free trial
Support for prisoners leaving jail and moving back into the community was poor and the work of most Community Rehabilitation Companies (CRCs) was not making any difference, according to the Chief Inspectors of Probation and Prisons. The government’s Transforming Rehabilitation reforms were meant to improve rehabilitation, but those good intentions have not been realised. The general position has not improved in the eight months since HMI Probation’s last inspection of Through the Gate services. Today they published a report, An Inspection of Through the Gate Resettlement Services for Prisoners Serving 12 Months or More.
Through the Gate resettlement services were introduced in 2015 to
bridge the gap between prison and the community. The government’s
hope was that the newly formed Community Rehabilitation Companies
would resettle prisoners successfully and so reduce reoffending.
The inspectorates published a report in October 2016 on the
poor-quality services for prisoners serving short sentences. This
more recent report looks at services for prisoners serving longer
sentences. It found that CRCs are making little difference to
prisoners’ prospects on release and the overall picture was
bleak.
Through the Gate services are not well enough integrated into prisons and CRCs alone cannot reduce reoffending. Prisons need to do more to support resettlement, including properly screening for prisoners’ needs, assessing the risks a prisoner might pose and planning and delivering rehabilitative work where needed. Wider problems with the prison system mean prisoners rarely receive effective rehabilitation while detained.
Many prisoners have enduring problems including mental illness
and addiction and links between treatment in custody and the
community were not always easy. Affordable accommodation is hard
to source and claims to state benefits take time to process so
some prisoners are released with nowhere to live and may face
weeks without any income. The impact of Through the Gate services
on education, training and employment was minimal and those
prisoners who did get jobs quickly after release had either
started work while in an open prison or had made their own
arrangements.
Key recommendations made by inspectors include the Ministry of Justice and Department for Communities and Local Government in England and the Welsh Government Department for Communities and Children working together to recognise homeless released prisoners as a priority need for housing. The Ministry of Justice and HM Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) should consider whether CRC contracts are the best way to deliver effective resettlement services and make sure every prison provides services to meet the needs of prisoners in respect of education, training and employment, finance, benefit and debt and support for victims of domestic abuse and sex workers.
HM Chief Inspector of Probation Dame Glenys Stacey said, on behalf of both inspectorates:
“There were great hopes for Through the Gate, but none of these have been realised. Staff working for Through the Gate services in prisons are keen and committed, but they are making little real difference to people’s life chances as they leave prison. The gap between the government’s aspirations and reality is so great. There is no real prospect that these services as they are will reduce reoffending. Instead there needs to be a renewed focus and effort.
“To be sure of success, the government and HM Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) need to look again at the contractual arrangements with CRCs. They must also make big improvements to IT systems, and make sure processes and targets are aligned and joined up between prisons, CRCs and the National Probation Service so that effective work gets done.” - ENDS -
Notes to editors:
2. Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation is an independent inspectorate, sponsored by the Ministry of Justice, and reporting directly to the Secretary of State on the effectiveness of work with individual adults, children and young people who offend, aimed at reducing reoffending and protecting the public. 3. Her Majesty’s 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. 4. Inspectors visited nine prisons, where Through the Gate services were being delivered by eight different CRCs with seven different corporate owners. Inspectors looked at the cases of 98 prisoners, before and after release. |
