HM Inspectorate of Prisons - report on thematic inspection of separation of children in young offender institutions (YOIs)
Many children separated from their peers in young offender
institutions (YOIs) are effectively held in harmful solitary
confinement, with little human contact and in conditions which risk
damaging their mental health, according to a new report. HM
Inspectorate of Prisons found fundamental flaws in the use of
separation in the five YOIs in England and Wales. Peter Clarke, HM
Chief Inspector of Prisons, said: “As a consequence of these
failings most separated children...Request free trial
Many children separated from their peers in young offender institutions (YOIs) are effectively held in harmful solitary confinement, with little human contact and in conditions which risk damaging their mental health, according to a new report. HM Inspectorate of Prisons found fundamental flaws in the use of separation in the five YOIs in England and Wales. Peter Clarke, HM Chief Inspector of Prisons, said: “As a consequence of these failings most separated children experienced a regime that amounted to the widely accepted definition of solitary confinement. For some of these children, their solitary confinement was prolonged in nature.” He called for an “entirely new approach” to separation. Mr Clarke has published a thematic report on separation, covering the variety of ways in which children aged 15-18 in YOIs are unable to mix with their peers or attend activities in the normal way. “We understand that there are occasions when it is in a child’s best interests to be separated from others either because they pose a risk to their peers or need protecting from them,” Mr Clarke said. “In these cases, we expect managers to place separated children in a unit where they can gain access to the equivalent daily activity, including education, as the children they are separated from. We also expect staff to work with children to address the reasons for their separation and plan for their return to a normal regime.” Children said staff were often too busy to deliver anything more than the basic regime for those who were separated. The findings from a total of 85 interviews with separated children and the staff responsible for their care, and detailed analysis of the cases of 57 separated children, were “a cause for significant concern.” There were dramatic variations in children’s experience of separation across the five YOIs, which was “inexplicable” in a small custodial estate holding just over 600 children. Around one in ten were found to be separated. Mr Clarke said: “The regime offered to most separated children was inadequate. While it tended to be better on designated segregation units, nearly all separated children spent long periods of time in their cell without any meaningful human interaction. We found children who were unable to access the very basics of everyday life, including a daily shower and telephone call. In the worst cases children left their cells for just 15 minutes a day.” Separation in cells on normal residential units was “particularly grim.” Inspectors identified significant failures of oversight both locally and nationally. “The current system of daily checks by managers, nurses and chaplains gave an illusion of oversight. However, these checks were cursory, often took place though a locked door and sometimes did not happen at all.” The report noted some areas of better practice, particularly at HMYOI Parc in South Wales, but generally identified “multiple and widespread failings”:
Overall, Mr Clarke said: “The weaknesses of current practice and oversight are of such a magnitude that we recommend an entirely new approach, and that current practice be replaced. A new model of separation should be implemented that enables managers to use separation to protect children from harm and prevents separated children being subjected to impoverished regimes.”
Notes to editors 1. The full report, published on 21 January 2020, can be found on the HM Inspectorate of Prisons website at: www.justiceinspectorates.gov.uk/hmiprisons/inspections 2. 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. 3. This thematic inspection looked at the separation of children in five young offender institutions (YOIs) in England and Wales: Feltham A, in west London; Cookham Wood, in Kent; Werrington, in Staffordshire; Wetherby and Keppel, in North Yorkshire; and Parc, in South Wales. 4. Primary fieldwork in the five YOIs took place in May and June 2019. This was supplemented by a survey of available data and interviews with prison staff. |