Industrial action September 2018: Rory Stewart statement
Friday, 14 September 2018 11:03
Prisons Minister Rory Stewart said: Prison officers do vital and
important work and we urge them to return to their duty stations,
in line with their obligations to the law and the prison service.
It’s irresponsible for the POA to encourage their members to take
this unlawful action. We are deploying our contingency plans but,
by not turning up for work, these prison officers are...Request free trial
Prisons Minister said:
Prison officers do vital and important work and we urge
them to return to their duty stations, in line with their
obligations to the law and the prison service.
It’s irresponsible for the POA to encourage their members
to take this unlawful action. We are deploying our
contingency plans but, by not turning up for work, these
prison officers are putting their fellow staff and
inmates at risk.
Yesterday we doubled the prison sentence for anyone who
assaults prison officers. We’ve also increased pay,
provided tools such as body-worn cameras to increase
security on the landings, and are investing £40 million
to improve the estate and tackle the drugs problem which
is fuelling much of the violence. And we’ve now got 3,500
new officers to help ease the burden.
We are taking the action that needs to be taken.
-
The Assaults on
Emergency Workers Bill received Royal Assent
this week which will increase the maximum sentence for
assaults against prison officers to double from six to 12
months in prison.
- We are rolling out body worn cameras, ‘police-style’
handcuffs and restraints, and trialling PAVA incapacitant
spray to ensure prison officers have the tools they need to
do the job safely.
- In July we announced a £30 million investment including
£16 million to improve conditions for prisoners and staff
and £7 million on new security measures, including
airport-security style scanners, improved searching
techniques and phone-blocking technology. This also
includes £1 million on a digital tool which assesses
information from various law enforcement databases to
create a central ‘risk rating’ for each prisoner.
- Also in July we announced a £9 million investment to
clamp down on drugs supply and consumption at HMP Holme
House, with a major emphasis on tackling addiction.
- In August we announced another £10 million would
be invested in 10 difficult prisons to curb the
flow of drugs and phones, while also improving conditions
as those jails and improving leadership. This will tackle
drug supply by enhancing physical security at the jails;
with investment in drug-detection dogs, body scanners,
and improved perimeter defences.
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