Restorative Justice 1.30 pm Robert Neill (Bromley and
Chislehurst) (Con) I beg to move, That this House has
considered the Fourth Report of the Justice Committee, Restorative
justice, HC 164, and the Government response, Cm 9343. It is
a particular pleasure, as always, to serve under your...Request free trial
Restorative Justice
1.30 pm
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(Bromley and
Chislehurst) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the Fourth Report of the
Justice Committee, Restorative justice, HC 164, and the
Government response, Cm 9343.
It is a particular pleasure, as always, to serve under your
chairmanship, Mr Evans, and to move the motion on behalf of
the Justice Committee. I am grateful to my Committee
colleagues who are here to take part in the debate. We
believe that this topic is important and look forward to
hearing the Minister’s response to the issues we raised.
Restorative justice is defined by the Ministry of Justice
as
“the process that brings those harmed by crime, and those
responsible for the harm, into communication, enabling
everyone affected by a particular incident to play a part
in repairing the harm and finding a positive way forward.”
We heard evidence during our inquiry that restorative
justice had been largely offender-led, aimed at the
tangible measure of reducing reoffending, but that everyone
involved recognised that it was crucial for restorative
justice to be initiated by victims and focused on their
needs, even if increased victim satisfaction does not have
an easily measurable financial benefit. We are now much
more alert to issues affecting victims. It is particularly
sad that Jill Saward, who did so much to highlight the
plight of victims, died only recently; I am sure that every
one of us would want to pay tribute to her courage and
bravery in this area.
The Committee thinks that refocusing restorative justice to
put victims at the heart of the process has been a welcome
development. Any reduction in reoffending is of benefit to
society and achieving that is a good thing, in any event.
Restorative justice can be delivered in various ways, the
most well known of which is through a conference or meeting
between the victim of a crime, and any of their supporters,
and the offender. That can be directly—face-to-face—or
sometimes by telephone or video conferencing.
It is worth stressing that victims and offenders are not
simply brought together and left to get on with it. A lot
of people do not understand how the process works. In
reality, expert facilitation and preparation are essential
parts of the restorative justice process. That can often
involve a lot of work and discussion with victims and
offenders in advance of their actual contact with one
another in order to explain the process, manage
expectations and set out objectives and ground rules.
Facilitators are also present during the conference to set
the scene and guide the conversation.
According to the Restorative Justice Council, whose work we
recognise and pay tribute to, victim and offender
conferences can be beneficial both for offenders and
victims. The RJC said that for offenders the experience can
be incredibly challenging, because it confronts them with
the personal impact of their crime. For victims, meeting
the person who has harmed them can be a huge step in moving
forward and recovering from the crime. I say in parenthesis
that my experience of practising for 30 years at the
criminal Bar led me to recognise the truth of both those
aspects. Frequently offenders—even repeat offenders—had no
concept of the human cost of their offending. It is a
powerful means of bringing them up sharp and causing them
to think differently, and it is part of a cathartic process
for victims as well.
The Ministry of Justice is currently working to its third
action plan on restorative justice, which was published in
November 2014 and has objectives and information going up
to 2018. We were advised during our inquiry that the
Government were preparing a progress report on the action
plan, but that report appears not to have seen the light of
day. We have also heard suggestions informally that the
Government have been thinking about producing a new action
plan to replace the final year of the current action plan.
With just over a year left, not much time is left to report
on progress or revise the plan for the rest of its
lifetime. I hope that the Minister—I welcome him to the
debate—will explain what the Government’s intentions are in
that respect when he responds.
In the action plan as it stands, the Ministry’s vision is
for
“good quality, victim-focused restorative justice…to be
available at all stages of the criminal justice system…in
England and Wales.”
Within that vision the Ministry has set itself three broad
objectives: first, equal access to restorative justice for
victims of crime, wherever they are in England and Wales,
whatever the age of the offender, and whatever the offence
committed; secondly, raising awareness of restorative
justice and its potential benefits among victims,
offenders, criminal justice practitioners, the media and
the general public; and thirdly, ensuring that restorative
justice is of good quality, safe, in line with the European
Union directive on victims’ rights, focused on the needs of
the victim and delivered by a trained facilitator. I hope
that even after this country leaves the European Union, we
will maintain awareness of that particular directive, which
sets out sensible good practice. I am sure that any
sensible Government would wish to maintain that, whatever
our future relationship with our European neighbours.
We clearly state in our report that we support the aims and
objectives of the action plan, welcoming in particular the
Ministry’s focus on ensuring that restorative justice
services are high quality and focused on victims. During
the inquiry we discovered that evidence on the
effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness, of restorative
justice is not as well developed as it might be. We
recommend further work by the Ministry, together with
stakeholders, to establish criteria for judging the success
of restorative justice in relation both to offenders and to
victims.
The Government’s response to our report states that
“work is already underway to develop an evidence base for
the effective delivery of restorative justice services and
the outcomes achieved by those services.”
I would be grateful if the Minister could tell us a little
more about that work, where it is leading and the progress
so far.
On restorative justice in general, there is much agreement
between the Ministry, other authorities and stakeholders
about its use within the criminal justice system. That may
mean that there is a higher degree of consensus in this
debate than in some other debates we have had on our
reports in Westminster Hall—I hope so, because this is an
important topic and perhaps an often under-appreciated part
of the criminal justice system.
I am conscious that other Members wish to contribute to the
debate, so I will briefly touch on four important topics
arising from our report, including the restorative justice
landscape and funding, and the recent Victims’ Commissioner
report on victims’ experiences and perceptions—I am
delighted to see the Victims’ Commissioner and the chief
executive of her office in the Public Gallery today; they
were helpful in their evidence to the Committee. I will
touch briefly on restorative justice in domestic abuse and
violence cases—my hon. Friend the Member for Henley (John
Howell) will also refer to those matters—and on the
potential role of legislation.
I say to the Minister—not simply because he is an old
friend and it is still post-Christmas—that we are grateful
for, and commend him and the Government for, the
comprehensiveness and quality of their response to our
report. That is appreciated, and we accept that they have
taken the report seriously. However, we still have a number
of concerns and might want to push him to be a bit bolder
and go a bit further and faster, but we recognise the
spirit in which the response was delivered.
Let me touch on the landscape of restorative justice and
funding. A range of bodies within the criminal justice
system are responsible for the funding and delivery of
restorative justice at various points in the system. The
primary responsibility for provision lies with police and
crime commissioners, within their overall remit for
delivering victims’ services. Some £29 million was made
available to police and crime commissioners over the past
three years for restorative justice, although it was not
ring-fenced; it was within an overall provision for
victims, which stands at £63 million in 2016-17. The
Ministry of Justice has provided other funding to the Youth
Justice Board to build restorative justice capacity within
youth offending teams, and the National Offender Management
Service has also spent money to build restorative justice
capacity.
We were pleased that the Government accepted the thrust of
our recommendation that annual collation and publication of
information on spending by police and crime commissioners
on restorative justice would be helpful in assessing
progress on the action plan and supporting an evidence base
to test the effectiveness of restorative justice. However,
they did not make a firm commitment to do so. I press the
Minister again to make that firm commitment, following what
seems to be the spirit and tenor of the Government’s
response to our recommendations. The Government response
states that the overall victim services budget has been
protected over the spending review period to 2020-21. Can
he confirm how much funding will be provided within that
envelope to police and crime commissioners for restorative
justice capacity building?
Let me turn to the Victims’ Commissioner’s report. Shortly
after the Government responded to our report, another
important report was published, fittingly enough during
International Restorative Justice Week last November. The
second part of the commissioner’s report on restorative
justice examined victims’ experiences and perceptions of
restorative justice, on the basis of 35 interviews with
victims. It is worth saying that the first part of the
review examined the subject from the perspective of
providers. The second part of the report raised several
issues of concern, on which it would be helpful to hear the
Minister’s views.
First, as I said, the Government allocated £23 million to
build capacity for restorative justice between 2013 and
2016, but the crime survey for England and Wales shows that
only 4.2% of all victims of crime were offered restorative
justice in the year to March 2016, the lowest percentage
since 2010. What will be done to ensure that restorative
justice is offered to victims in accordance with their
entitlement under the victims’ code? What do the Government
intend to do, or encourage others to do, to raise awareness
of restorative justice to meet those objectives?
Our report recommended that the main means of raising
awareness should be through criminal justice: effectively,
it should be mainstreamed into the system through various
agencies. What we discovered, though, was that when
restorative justice is offered, it is often during the
later stages of the criminal justice process. Nearly half
of victims in the Victims’ Commissioner’s review said that
they were informed of restorative justice only after the
offender had been sentenced. That is not in line with the
vision in the Government’s action plan to make restorative
justice available at all stages in the criminal justice
process, including pre-sentencing or as part of the
conditions for an out-of-court disposal. Does the Minister
recognise that point, and do the Government plan to address
it?
What plans do the Government have to increase the use of
restorative justice as part of the conditions attached to
community orders or suspended sentences? When we visited
north America as part of our inquiry, we were struck by the
amount of use made of restorative justice as part of a
robust set of out-of-court disposals or, in our language,
community types of disposal. We think that more could be
done here in the UK as well.
Let me turn to domestic abuse and violence cases. One of
the most difficult and sensitive questions to address is
the suitability of restorative justice processes in cases
of domestic abuse and violence. In our report we set out
the concern, expressed to us in evidence by Women’s Aid and
others, that restorative justice was potentially harmful.
It was put to us that it could be
“another way for a perpetrator to continue their control
and abuse.”
Again, it is timely to review the topic, because that point
is not dissimilar to the one made about cross-examination
by litigants in person in family courts, and I am delighted
to see the Government taking steps to prevent such abuse.
There is a concern that the same sort of risk could arise
in the restorative justice process.
Of particular concern to us, and I think to Ministers too,
was evidence that restorative justice was being used at
level 1—at street level, to put it in everyday language—by
police officers in domestic abuse cases, contrary to police
guidance. We are pleased that the Government’s response
stated that they were considering with the police how to
reinforce the message that such unsophisticated level 1
restorative justice is not appropriate in such cases.
More generally, our report expressed the view that, in
principle, restorative justice should be available for
every type of offence. However, given the clear risks in
the use of restorative justice for certain types of
offence, we recommended that the Ministry should work with
the Restorative Justice Council to create and fund training
and promote best practice guidance for restorative justice
facilitators. It is an area where care and discretion are
needed, particularly in domestic abuse cases. We were
pleased that the Government response stated that they were
producing a paper setting out the issues that need to be
addressed, including any guidance or training, before
restorative justice is taken forward in domestic abuse
cases. When he replies, will the Minister let us know what
progress is being made on that paper and when it is likely
to see the light of day?
Finally, I turn to the victims’ code and what is sometimes
referred to as a potential victim’s law. One of the
starkest anomalies in relation to restorative justice is
that victims’ rights are stronger for victims of offenders
under the age of 18 than others. In cases where the
offender is under 18, victims are entitled to be offered
restorative justice by the relevant youth offending team
where it is appropriate and available. Victims of adult
offenders have a rather weaker right to receive information
about restorative justice, including about how they can
take part. That anomaly seems to have arisen for historical
reasons rather than any other, particularly logic, so we
recommended that the code should be strengthened to bring
the rights of victims of adult offenders into line with
those of victims of young offenders.
On that recommendation, we found the Minister’s response
disappointing. The Ministry said:
“We continue to keep the Victims’ Code under review and
will consider the Committee’s recommendations the next time
we consult on changes.”
I urge the Minister to be a bit more specific. I would
never accuse my right hon. and learned Friend of sitting on
the fence, but the Government need to be more specific
about where they stand on the issue. It seems to us that
the evidence makes a clear case that that anomaly should
not exist. It would not be difficult to rectify, although I
grant that it might require legislation. Do the Government
acknowledge that in a victim-focused restorative justice
system, which is the Government’s objective and one that we
agree with, there can be no good reason for victims’ rights
to differ, purely arbitrarily, depending on the age of the
offender? I hope that he will give us more detail on that
point.
Things have gone quiet since the undertaking in the 2015
Queen’s Speech to put key entitlements under the victims’
code into a victims’ law. A Green Paper on the victims’ law
was expected before the summer recess last year, but it has
not appeared. We noted that a number of amendments
concerning victims’ rights have been made in the House of
Lords to the Policing and Crime Bill. On the question of
victims’ right to restorative justice, we made what we
thought was a nuanced recommendation on introducing a
statutory right. We said that due to questions about the
capacity to provide restorative justice services, it was
probably too soon to bring a statutory right into
effect—there is not much point having a statutory right if
it cannot be delivered and used—but we felt that the power
to introduce such a right, when appropriate, should be
conferred by legislation on Ministers. We know that a
significant Ministry of Justice Bill is forthcoming.
Without risking overloading it even more, it might be an
opportunity to consider that. I would be interested to know
what the Minister feels about that.
In their response, the Government were equally guarded,
saying merely:
“Careful consideration is being given to suggestions made
by the Victims’ Commissioner and others about key rights
and entitlements that might be set out in a Victims’ Law.”
Given the wider debate about the desirability of a victims’
law and about what it might contain, I must press the
Minister to be more forthcoming about the Government’s
intentions for such a law, which has long been heralded,
and what provisions for restorative justice rights it might
make.
Those are the issues I wanted to address in opening the
debate and the key issues that our report raised. I know
that other hon. Members wish to participate, so I will
leave my observations there.
1.50 pm
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Mr (Delyn) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Evans. I am grateful for the opportunity to follow my
friend—in this context—the hon. Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst (Robert Neill), who as Chair of the Justice
Committee has ably steered our report and brought our
conclusions to the House. He covered a number of the
report’s points and I do not wish to go over the same
ground; I just want to focus on a couple of issues and
perhaps focus the Minister’s mind on a couple of the
report’s key points and recommendations.
It is clear to all members of the Committee—and, in
fairness, I think to the Government, too—that restorative
justice has a value. It is a useful tool for helping people
who have committed crimes to understand the impact on the
victims and, through that process, for helping to prevent
reoffending. There is general agreement from the Justice
Committee, the Opposition—I look forward to hearing from my
hon. Friend the Member for Neath (Christina Rees) in due
course—and the Government that there is a valuable role for
restorative justice. Indeed, when I held ministerial roles,
I propagated restorative justice both in Northern Ireland
and in the United Kingdom as a whole. There is a genuine
understanding of it.
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The Minister for Courts and Justice (Sir Oliver
Heald)
The right hon. Gentleman may recall that when he and I
served on the Crime and Courts Bill Committee, we both made
common cause for the restorative justice condition for
deferred sentences, so that it had a stronger footing.
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Mr Hanson
Indeed. As I say, there is common ground across the House,
the various parties, the Justice Committee, this Government
and, I believe, the previous Government to ensure that we
can facilitate restorative justice. There is evidence—it is
anecdotal, so it we might not give it too much weight—that
every £1 spent on restorative justice can save £8 in
further costs down the line. That is important.
The Government’s commitment of £29 million, in their
November 2013 plan, to help the development of restorative
justice is supportive and indicative of the progress that
needs to be made. However, I want to press the Minister on
a couple of points, if I may. First, I would welcome some
clarity from him on what the £29 million, which we have
discussed in the Justice Committee, has been spent on. Has
it been spent on restorative justice? I ask because it was
not ring-fenced, but was part of a general grant. Has he
produced a list of projects that benefit from that £29
million investment? If it is being spent on restorative
justice, is it for local decision making? What is the
Government’s assessment of what works best for restorative
justice? Simply pouring £29 million centrally to police and
crime commissioners without a ring fence and hoping that it
will develop the seedcorn of good, positive, evaluated,
determined restorative justice may not be enough; it may
need a little more central direction from Government.
That point leads me to recommendation 66 of the Committee’s
report:
“The Ministry of Justice is well placed to take a
leadership role in restorative justice and set out a clear
overall vision for how it expects restorative justice
services to be delivered.”
The Ministry responded to our recommendation—I would be
grateful for the Minister’s concentration on this—in
paragraph 17 of the Government’s response:
“The Government agrees it is important that all relevant
parties have a common understanding of how restorative
justice works within the criminal justice system in England
and Wales. We will consider the points raised by the
Committee before publishing a progress report.”
With due respect, that is civil-service speak for: “We
don’t know what we’re doing at the moment and we’d like to
come back to it later.”
The test for the Minister is whether he can give some
indication today of how he envisages a viable restorative
justice scheme that avoids the postcode lottery that our
report referred to. That might be through effective use of
the £29 million; it might be by picking from operational
schemes that the Ministry of Justice thinks are working
well, have an output and have proved successful in reducing
offending and giving victim satisfaction; or it might be
from both those things. It is important that he focuses in
his reply on how he envisages ensuring that people in north
Wales get the same services and opportunities as people in
south Wales, in Hertfordshire, in Bromley and Chislehurst
and in every other part of the United Kingdom—perhaps even
in Ribble Valley, Mr Evans.
We need a collective understanding of what is available, so
that people do not feel left out because they cannot access
a service. I recognise that we cannot deliver everything or
concentrate on everything. The Minister’s response to
paragraph 66 therefore needs to look at the key issues:
what works, what is good value for money, what gives best
victim satisfaction, what most reduces reoffending and how
individuals become aware of the offer in the first place.
Our report refers to the understanding of restorative
justice. I have to go back to a point that I know Members
will be aware of: someone minding their own business who
suddenly becomes a victim of crime may not necessarily know
what the courts and the police service do, what restorative
justice is, how it is available, what benefit it might
bring to them or what it might do to prevent future victims
from going through the same experience. Until the day
someone is a victim, they are not focused on the criminal
justice system. I therefore ask the Minister not only what
is available, whether it is a postcode lottery and how the
funding is used, but how victims become aware of the
facilities and support available in their local area. If
the Government’s direction of travel is towards localism,
how does someone in north Wales who is minding their own
business today, living their life peacefully and not
expecting to be a victim of crime, but who wakes up as a
victim tomorrow, know that such services are available? How
do they know how to access them? How are they helped
through at a local level?
Those questions take us back to the postcode lottery. I
have no problems with devolving funding to police and crime
commissioners or local services through community
rehabilitation companies, the voluntary sector or other
means, but my test for the Minister on his responsibilities
is how he assesses what works, who is doing it and whether
it is happening. If he is putting a pot of money in, how
does he know that it has been delivered at a local level? I
would welcome it if the progress report promised in
paragraph 17 of the Government response considered those
points.
Finally, I would welcome some information from the Minister
on what progress has been made on the victims’ law. As the
hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst mentioned, it was
promised in the Conservative manifesto and there was
promise of a Green Paper and of legislation. However, we
will have a Gracious Speech in May and there is still no
Green Paper on a victims’ law. There may be reasons for
that. I understand that this is a five-year Parliament—I
believe it is—and if that is the case, it might be helpful
to people who are interested in this topic for the Minister
to say, without breaching any confidentialities, at what
stage in this five-year Parliament he expects to bring
forward the Green Paper and at what stage he expects the
legislation to be in place, to give some support to the
principle of the victims’ law, on which, again, I would
expect general cross-party co-operation.
With those comments, I hope I can encourage the Minister to
respond in a positive way to what is a positive report.
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Several hon. Members rose—
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Mr (in the Chair)
Order. Just for hon. Members’ guidance, I shall be calling
the wind-ups at 2.27 pm, which will allow 10 minutes each
for the Minister and the Front-Bench spokespeople, and then
three minutes for Mr Neill to speak at the end. I am sure
that hon. Members can divvy up the remaining time among
themselves.
2.00 pm
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(Henley) (Con)
It is a great pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Evans.
The difficulty of coming after the previous two speakers is
that they have said everything about the report, and I am
scrabbling around to find things to say. However, I will
concentrate on two issues. The first is domestic abuse and
the second is the youth area. On the one hand, domestic
abuse is an area where restorative justice perhaps needs to
be restricted—or done very well—as opposed to the youth
area, where we should use it more and where it should be
firmly embedded in the system.
I turn first to the domestic abuse situation. I fully
accept the conclusion that we reached as a Committee: that
restorative justice should not be excluded from particular
types of offence. I do not think that domestic abuse should
be outside of the restorative justice area. As my hon.
Friend the Member for Banbury (Victoria Prentis) will say,
in the Thames valley, for example, restorative justice is
done very, very well, which is a good example of how things
can be brought together. Although some police and crime
commissioners do not seem to offer restorative justice in
domestic abuse cases, I do not see that as justified, for
the reasons I have given.
During the Committee’s inquiry, we heard evidence on this
point from both sides. We were told about one victim of
abuse who talked about how they were more “empowered” by
restorative justice in a domestic abuse situation. They
said:
“When I walked out of that meeting, I felt as if I could
knock out Mike Tyson. I could have taken on anything or
anyone.”
That is a very powerful statement about the liberating
effects that restorative justice has for some people.
On the other hand, we heard from organisations such as
Refuge, which argued that, as my hon. Friend the Member for
Bromley and Chislehurst (Robert Neill) has said,
restorative justice simply provided offenders with a means
of exerting more control over their victims. That point
needs to be taken into consideration and examined very
carefully; I will say something about it later, when I
consider the context of how the police operate in this
area.
It was interesting to hear from the then Justice Minister,
my right hon. Friend the Member for Hemel Hempstead (Mike
Penning), who said that
“it is absolutely wrong for anybody, whether it be the
police or any other part of the criminal justice system, to
push and cajole someone into restorative justice.”
I completely agree with that sentiment. It is fine to have
restorative justice as part of the domestic abuse
landscape, but it is wrong to force people to use it.
However, whichever side one comes down on regarding
restorative justice, what we cannot have is restorative
justice being applied differently in different areas across
the country. That goes back to what the right hon. Member
for Delyn (Mr Hanson) said about the postcode lottery, or,
as I have said, the possibility of people being pressurised
to take part. Again, and as my hon. Friend the Member for
Bromley and Chislehurst has already mentioned, this comes
down to how restorative justice is applied in domestic
abuse cases and whether it occurs at the street level—the
so-called level 1 area. Whatever the Ministry may think
about how things are operating, the evidence we heard was
that level 1 was still being used by the police. That is
something we completely disagree with. I accept that the
Government are going to talk to the police about this, but
the Government need to emphasise that that should not take
place. Street level is the wrong location for restorative
justice and using it there takes away all the subtlety and
all the benefits that can come out of it.
A tremendous amount of guidance can be provided by the
Ministry of Justice for the police. Also, a greater degree
of training on restorative justice can be provided by the
Ministry right across the board, but particularly in the
domestic abuse area, to take this issue forward. I would be
grateful if the Minister confirmed exactly what the
Ministry is doing to achieve that.
The second area I want to touch on is youth system, where I
think restorative justice could be used more. We were
heartened by how extensively it seems to be used in the
youth justice system. I think it is already embedded, but
more can be done to ensure that it is firmly part of the
youth justice system. Restorative justice helps both
victims and offenders to understand what has occurred, what
the implications are and why the offence should not be
committed again.
As we pointed out in our report, Northern Ireland has youth
conferences, which can occur both before and after
conviction. However, I understand from the ministerial
response to our report that the Ministry is not looking at
restoring those for the rest of the country outside of
Northern Ireland. I would ask the Minister to have another
look at that and see whether there was not something in
Northern Ireland that we could apply elsewhere in the UK.
2.07 pm
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(Congleton)
(Con)
I am not a member of the Justice Committee, but I thank its
members for raising the issue of restorative justice and
for calling for more support for it.
I am a long-standing prison volunteer, although in a very
modest way, so I know about the benefits of restorative
justice programmes from offenders and former offenders I
have talked to. Consequently, I endorse the calls that we
have heard today for greater support to be given to RJ
programmes.
If Members will allow me, I will add to the debate the
words of an offender who is still serving a sentence. I
talked to him on Christmas day and he has given me
permission to tell colleagues about his experience of the
RJ course. He said to me on Christmas day, “People here
think they’re here just out of bad luck, but considering
the consequences of your action can make you think.” He
went on to say, “I was really angry, but the RJ course gave
me an opportunity to take responsibility for my actions”.
I asked this offender to write to me and he wrote a very
long and thoughtful letter; he must have spent a lot of
Christmas day writing it, and I thank him for it. He wrote
that the RJ course he completed, which was the Sycamore
Tree course, was a six-week course for 20 offenders that is
staffed by volunteers who give up one afternoon weekly over
that six-week period to come into the prison. The ratio of
volunteers to offenders is 1:1.
I have attended part of that course myself, particularly
the sixth week, when offenders summarise what they have
learned and speak about the changes within themselves that
have occurred, and it is very moving and quite profound.
The young man wrote about
“the stand-out watershed moment when a victim of crime
comes in to discuss her/his situation. The power of
this…conversation cannot be over-emphasised. Our case dealt
with ‘Lyn’”—
I do not think that is her real name, because he puts it in
inverted commas—
“who recounted the tale of how her son was murdered in
Liverpool. This tale struck a chord with all in the room.
The first-hand experience and a media presentation of
holiday photos and photos from this young man’s life rammed
home the message of the consequences of crime. The
subsequent letters to Lyn from prisoners is a testament to
the lasting power of her presentation. All prisoners should
be exposed to such raw emotion.”
The young man said that it was such a positive tool for him
and others.
The young man’s perspective on restorative justice was that
“it is the mind of the offender we are seeking to
change…Many prisoners believe they are only in prison due
to bad luck.”
In other words, “I got caught and many others do not.” He
said that he was really angry before he did the course, but
that it was a way for him to take responsibility for his
actions. Early in his letter he says that prisoners
“must accept their own culpability. This is the first step
in an RJ approach.”
I remember one former offender who was a burglar. He used
to burgle houses regularly in the middle of the night. He
would go home and by 5 am he was fast asleep, never having
a thought about the householder he had burgled. He never
once thought about them as a victim.
The young man who wrote to me said that he had been
“cynical” about the approach taken in the RJ course,
particularly because it was somewhat repetitive and a
little childish at times. He said there were
“sketches of a burglar saying, ‘She deserved to be burgled
as she left the window open’”,
but, as he said,
“chaps really do think like that.”
By exposing them to their faulty thinking, they see that
their actions are wrong. Powerfully, he said:
“The scales falling from my eyes with this method allowed
me to release the anger that was dwelling in me.”
In another perceptive comment, the young man said,
“RJ allows the offender to recognise their culpability,
accept their actions are directly responsible for their
circumstances and realise their family are victims of their
incarceration…individuals, especially young men, need to be
supported…to stop the cycle of shame and rejection”.
He said that through an RJ discussion, the cycle and sense
of hostility can be stopped and
“remorse and forgiveness comes into play.”
Profoundly, he said:
“The past cannot be changed, but correct actions in the
future can atone for incorrect actions of the past.”
In the letter, he gave a quote—I think it is someone else’s
words, but clearly they made great sense to him—which was
that the RJ process could
“lift the fog of misunderstanding, intolerance and
recrimination that can entirely obscure the offender and
victim, but with an RJ meeting a richer perspective may be
seen and in time, may even draw them closer.”
In other words, he said that such meetings can change both
sides, as the one with “Lyn” obviously did for him.
The young man said that the RJ approach clearly helps to
stop reoffending, but that to be as effective as possible,
it needs to be linked with other forms of support, whether
that is education, drug rehabilitation, employment,
training, family contact and what he calls “engaging in the
community”. He described the example of members of the
Hallé orchestra, who come into the prison I volunteer in
and help young people learn instruments. Indeed, on that
Christmas day morning, one of the young men gave us a
remarkable performance of six different tunes, including
Christmas carols, on a brass instrument that he had been
learning with the Hallé for only 20 weeks. The young man
who wrote to me said that contact like that can
“act as a lifeline to save them from being drowned by
reoffending.”
He very much sees RJ as effective, but said that it must
sit with other forms of constructive activity. Finally, he
said:
“The first step in getting society to change its opinion of
prisoners is in getting prisoners to change their opinion
of themselves.”
2.14 pm
-
(Banbury)
(Con)
I am in an even worse position than my hon. Friend the
Member for Henley (John Howell) in following superb
speeches from all those who have spoken in the debate. They
leave me with very little to say, but it is worth summing
up by saying that we all know that restorative justice
saves money by breaking the cycle of reoffending, and we
all know that it plays an important part in victim
recovery. What we have to do now is ensure that all those
who need to benefit from it can benefit from it. I will try
to find a few crumbs that have not yet been touched on.
It is always a great pleasure to speak in Justice Committee
debates and to take part in the Justice Committee. Our
report was particularly positive, as was the Government’s
response, and that has not always been the case with our
reports. We welcome that as a Committee, particularly given
the importance of the issue.
My hon. Friend the Member for Congleton (Fiona Bruce) spoke
about the prisoner perspective, and I would like to touch
on the issue of victims. I draw the attention of those
present to an excellent website organised by Why me?,
representatives of which are present here today. It is a
fantastic website. If people have 10 minutes later today or
in the near future, it is worth a look. I will not read out
any of the case studies, because Why me? specifically asks
that that is not done, but it has excellent studies from
victims’ ambassadors on the website. I encourage anyone who
is not yet convinced or knowledgeable about restorative
justice to look them up. The case studies make it clear
that restorative justice helps a wide range of people, all
of whom have had their own very different experiences of
the criminal justice system. Some lost loved ones, but
found that meeting the perpetrator helped them to come to
terms with that loss. Other victims have seen their
confidence restored from an open dialogue with the
offender. That is a plug that I would make again and again;
the website is worth while.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
(Robert Neill) said, the Victims’ Commissioner is with us
today. She is a brave lady and an example of the many
people in this field who have made something really
positive out of their own tragedy. She brought out a report
on victims’ perspectives in November. One statistic that I
highlight—I do not think it has been mentioned—is that only
4.2% of all victims of crime are offered restorative
justice. That is a very small percentage, and I know that
everyone in this room is working hard to increase it. It is
clear that much more needs to be done to raise awareness of
the benefits of restorative justice. Only with raised
awareness will the uptake increase.
Another concern expressed by the Victims’ Commissioner that
I do not think has been touched on is that restorative
justice is often offered far too late. Nearly half of the
victims in her review said that they were informed about
restorative justice only after the offender had been
sentenced, and that brings me to one of the major barriers
to the provision of restorative justice, which sadly is the
considerable pressures facing our prison service at this
time. It is clear that used properly, early and often,
restorative justice can help us to reduce the prison
population by helping to reduce reoffending. At the moment,
with the considerable difficulties experienced with
prisons, prison officers have limited time for supervision
and building up the relationships that we know aid
rehabilitation.
It is even difficult at the moment to find sufficient staff
to move prisoners to the rooms they need to go to for
restorative justice sessions. The NOMS capacity-building
programme that was launched in January 2012 included
training delivered by Restorative Solutions. It had limited
success because of the organisational changes and
difficulties in the Prison Service. It may be unrealistic
to expect major advances in restorative justice in prisons
until the bigger issues of staff shortages and safety are
tackled. Nevertheless, governors should be instructed to
facilitate meetings wherever possible and to view that as
part of the wider picture in reducing reoffending and the
number of people in our prisons.
We are currently half way through the pilot on restorative
approaches to conflict resolution in prisons. Would today
be a good moment for the Minister to comment on the data
that have come in to date? Otherwise, we will not hear for
probably another year; I believe that the pilot is ending
in the autumn and then responses will have to be collated.
If possible, it would be helpful if he could comment on the
material that has come in and the response of the Ministry
of Justice to it.
There is a widespread lack of understanding of the benefits
of restorative justice. We need to ensure that other parts
of the criminal justice system, including the police, the
probation service and other charitable organisations, play
an increasing role in delivering restorative justice. We
need to provide consistent solutions across the country, as
the right hon. Member for Delyn (Mr Hanson) said.
At the moment, we find pockets of real success. I am glad
to say that in my own area, as my hon. Friend the Member
for Henley mentioned, the Thames Valley restorative justice
service has been a leading light in the field. It recently
celebrated its 15th anniversary and has worked closely with
the Ministry of Justice throughout that time. It was one of
the first organisations in the UK to be awarded the
Restorative Justice Council’s restorative service quality
mark and has, at its centre, a belief in a sense of
fairness and inclusion. In its written evidence to our
inquiry, which I found particularly helpful, it made it
clear that a proportion of the service’s time is now
rightly spent assisting other areas with restorative
justice programmes, pointing out that,
“provision of RJ services is patchy and inconsistent across
the country and different areas may be resourced to deal
with different types and seriousness of crime. For example,
some areas will work with sexual offences and some won’t,
some prisons will support facilitation in such cases and
some will not. Some areas appear not to be resourced to
provide any RJ service provision whatsoever.”
Sharing best practice is essential. I welcome the
Government’s commitment to work with police and crime
commissioners, who will undoubtedly play a part in that,
but I am not sure they can or should remedy the
inequalities of provision all on their own. It has been
helpful to have information on the spend of individual PCCs
for the preparation of the report. I am glad that the
Government are considering publishing those figures as we
go forward, as well as, more generally, a progress report
on the nationwide state of restorative justice. I would be
grateful for anything the Minister can tell us about the
frequency and detail of such publications.
Data sharing is a persistent problem, and I draw attention
to the sections of the report that deal with that in some
detail. We welcome the Government’s work in preparing a
national data-sharing toolkit. That work cannot be done
soon enough.
This is a positive report, with a positive response from
the Government, but these are still very early days for
restorative justice. I look forward to it becoming a fully
integrated and properly used part of the criminal justice
system.
2.23 pm
-
(Dumfries and
Galloway) (SNP)
I see that I am starting four minutes late; with the snow
gathering over the Ribble Valley and the west coast main
line heading towards Dumfries and Galloway, you will no
doubt be pleased, Mr Evans, that I will not be taking my
allocated 10 minutes. There is no need for me to reiterate
the comments that have been made, the extensive conclusions
of the report or the positive response from the Government,
but I will sum up, make some comments on the points that
have been raised today and add a few brief points of my
own.
I add my support to the praise from the right hon. Member
for Delyn (Mr Hanson) for the Chair of the Justice
Committee and my good friend, the hon. Member for Bromley
and Chislehurst (Robert Neill). He steers the Committee
very ably and I have been impressed with his work during my
time in this place. He started the debate succinctly,
describing this as an important issue, and he was right to
say that this should always be victim-based, but that
victims should never be forced to go through the process.
He was also right to say—this was corroborated by other
hon. Members—that awareness is absolutely crucial. I would
add to his call for the Minister to explain how we can
better improve the measure of the effectiveness of
restorative justice.
The right hon. Member for Delyn, who brings a wealth of
experience, made the point clearly that there is common
ground and consensus. It is not often that the Justice
Committee produces a report that has that consensus, and I
think that the Government’s response corroborates that
position. He also made the crucial point about awareness.
He gave a very vivid description of somebody going about
their life, having never been involved in the criminal
justice system, who becomes a victim of crime. The prospect
of that person being asked to meet the offender of the
crime, without knowing anything about restorative justice
or understanding what it is that they are going to be
doing, could be counterproductive and might set things back
rather than moving them forward—moving forward is principle
we are all striving towards.
The hon. Member for Henley (John Howell) talked vividly
about the effects and reiterated some of the vivid evidence
that we heard in Committee, particularly the phrase used by
one victim that they could go and “knock out Mike Tyson.”
Although that was clearly a liberating experience for the
victim and had a tangible confidence-building effect,
perhaps that course of action might be counterproductive to
what we are trying to achieve, although I think we all
understood what she was trying to say. The hon. Gentleman
made a point about consistency of approach and the fact
that it is more widely used in the youth justice system,
which I suppose is for obvious and good reasons.
The hon. Member for Congleton (Fiona Bruce), who is not a
member of the Justice Committee, put us all to shame by
explaining extensively all the constituency work she was
doing on Christmas day. I did send a couple of messages but
clearly did not work as hard as she did. I was very taken
by the letter she received from her constituent who had
been incarcerated, and I was struck by her point that the
first step to rehabilitation is when an offender starts to
understand the consequences of their crime, and departs
from the position of, “Well, they left their window open so
they deserved it” and starts to understand how the victims
feel. That is the first step in rehabilitation. It was a
powerful point well made—but I urge the hon. Member to take
some time off over the next festive season.
The hon. Member for Banbury (Victoria Prentis) said that,
rather peculiarly, she was stuck for words, but clearly she
never is. She was right to point out that the Government
response was positive, and to criticise the fact that only
14% of victims are offered restorative justice.
-
It is 4.2%.
-
Only 4.2%, which is a rather shocking figure, in
circumstances where Opposition parties, Government parties,
Ministers, stakeholders and interested parties all agree
that restorative justice has a crucial role to play. If we
do not strive to increase that figure, we surely ought to
feel a wee bit ashamed.
I am a progressive social democrat; I believe in
rehabilitation and community justice, and I do not believe
in short prison sentences. I believe that victims, wherever
possible, should have the option of restorative justice
across the criminal justice system, although it should
never be compulsory. It can provide closure and can be the
first step in the rehabilitation of offenders.
In Scotland, we use restorative justice across the criminal
justice system. The procurator fiscal can even use it as an
alternative to prosecution. It can be used from the point
of arrest to the point of release from incarceration. Of
course, it is not perfect and we still have much more to
do, particularly on the point of raising awareness, and I
think that point is the most powerful one to come out of
today’s debate. It is all very well having a system of
restorative justice, but if victims and offenders do not
understand the principles and the process and embrace them
with open arms and an open mind, it will fail to work. We
have to increase the numbers, but we also have to
dramatically increase awareness.
2.28 pm
-
(Neath)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is always a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mr Evans. I thank the Chair of the Justice Committee, the
hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst (Robert Neill), for
his customary eloquent delivery. I commend the work of his
Committee, of which I used to be a member, and thank all
the hon. Members who have given some tremendous
contributions today. I will do my very best not to repeat
anything that has been said. Overall, I strongly agree with
the key issues highlighted in the report as being the most
salient to progress restorative justice. It clearly
identified the key blockers to restorative justice in
England and Wales.
It is excellent that all offences and all points of the
criminal justice system are to be treated the same, in
terms of victims’ access to good-quality services, in line
with many countries in mainland Europe and elsewhere, such
as New Zealand, Canada and Australia. I am glad that there
is the caveat that there needs to be scrutiny of properly
trained staff, especially for specialised areas such as
domestic abuse and sexual offences. We know that victims
can and do benefit when restorative justice is offered and
facilitated with supportive systems wide of restorative
justice, but there is a danger that it can become a
profit-making industry unless quality assurance is built
in. I am concerned that, unless a clear timeline is set out
soon for progressing local and national developments, with
a clear cross-party, long-term action plan, tighter
legislation, mandated resourcing and, ideally, milestones
in places, there will be a major time gap between the
initial pump-priming and the ring-fenced funding, which was
introduced three years ago.
Current and emerging projects need to be sustained and
grow; they cannot wait for more short-term planning or
occasional one-off funds. New systems need three to
five-year core budgets to flourish. Many new local
services, initially resourced when police and crime
commissioner funding began, were not sustained as funds
were subsequently diverted when the ring-fencing of funding
for restorative justice within the victims service funding
was removed.
Restorative justice provision is not joined up, except in a
few best-practice areas in England where provision was
strong already and where there were restorative justice
advocates in police and crime commissioner offices, and in
service areas that persevered, so this has been
personality-driven. A solution that would lead to more
regional best practice would be to mandate that police and
crime commissioner area restorative justice steering groups
are established across sectors, which should definitely
include the third sector, to join up knowledge and share
and co-fund delivery capacity. That is evidenced in
best-practice models such as Cambridgeshire, Avon and
Somerset, and the already-mentioned Thames Valley. There
needs to be a clear pathway from early intervention
restorative approaches and diversionary activities to
high-end restorative provision for victims, offenders and
communities, with a well advertised and clearly signposted
single point of contact for anyone to access on a local and
regional basis.
Although the police have an important role to play in
engaging with and advocating restorative justice, their
core job does not give them the time or the expertise to
deliver much more than level 1 or 2 restorative justice,
except in specialised roles, so training everyone beyond
that level is sometimes a false investment. The focus only
on restorative justice conferences is limited for victims,
offenders and families, as not everyone can safely meet
their offender and many do not want to, although they may
want to understand the other side’s perspective better to
move forward.
We also need to teach restorative skills at an early stage
in schools to all pupils and staff working with children,
young people and families so that society can benefit from
those principles and skills over time. That would empower
individuals and communities to act restoratively themselves
without depending on agencies, and it would prevent the
escalation of problems and allow them to be resolved
quickly.
In Wales, the Welsh Government recognise that, for their
education reform, a restorative justice approach is best
practice for preventing harm and responding in schools.
Involving Families First and recognising the whole
restorative team around the family and in social services
is best practice. Often the same families are known to all
agencies and have the greatest needs. They frequently cause
the greatest harm to each other and others and are a drain
on resources, so targeted and joined-up work is essential.
The Crime and Courts Act 2013, which was welcome, the
antisocial behaviour powers, the Ministry of Justice
restorative justice capacity building and the victims’ code
all promised great things and were long-awaited, but they
were introduced alongside an unprecedented rapid upheaval
and huge cuts across the criminal justice system, so no
wonder the situation today is patchy. Access to restorative
justice is an inconsistent postcode lottery for victims and
offenders, and there is no guarantee of quality. That meant
that it was highly unlikely for the brand-new provision to
be sustained beyond the initial flurry of political
statements and activity. Only pre-existing,
long-established restorative services and the larger
private or third-sector restorative justice providers have
been able to gain or maintain training or delivery
contracts.
The report highlights that the third sector might be better
placed to increase capacity, so the issue of the growth of
local provision is a key point. Restorative justice is
suffering in the same way that other innovations have
suffered from the concurrent break-up of systems. Probation
service and community rehabilitation company delivery of
restorative justice is dependent on tendering from private
providers. Police and crime commissioners have been
introduced, and victims’ services have been retendered
across several areas with different providers, so the
courts and witness services sometimes have different
providers from those of the victims’ support services.
Cuts to the Ministry of Justice’s budget were spread across
NOMS and all community and police services, and prison
staffing was cut at the same time. Prisons are full beyond
capacity, so the capacity of prison offender managers to
contribute to restorative justice has been pushed to the
limit. Restorative justice is less of a priority when
mandatory tasks are hard to complete.
Will the Minister provide details of the Government’s
timelines? When will they be ready to introduce a
legislative right for victims to access restorative justice
services? Will he consider threading restorative justice
through any new legislation and victims services across the
criminal justice system, so that it is an embedded
principle as systems change, rather than a separate,
optional add-on, which it risks becoming? Does he agree
that there needs to be a more radical rehabilitative and
restorative justice mindset? The risk is that the UK will
have the highest rate of imprisonment, cycles of family
breakdown and inter-generational offending.
Restorative justice is about rehabilitation and
relationship building, as well as repairing the harm for
all. It is about social justice as well as criminal and
community justice.
-
Mr (in the Chair)
You have all been incredibly disciplined on time, so the
Minister has plenty of time to respond.
2.37 pm
-
The Minister for Courts and Justice (Sir Oliver
Heald)
As usual, it is a great pleasure to be in your charge, Mr
Evans.
I will start by making some general remarks, and then I
will come on to some of the points that have been made in
the debate. We have had a good debate, opened by the Chair
of the Justice Committee, my hon. Friend the Member for
Bromley and Chislehurst (Robert Neill), in his customary
way. He drew on his experience and made a number of very
important points, which I will come to as my speech unveils
itself.
We were lucky to hear the wisdom of the right hon. Member
for Delyn (Mr Hanson), who has a lot of experience in this
area, both as a Minister and a very constructive Member of
the Opposition during, for example, the passage of the
Crime and Courts Act 2013, which makes provision for
restorative justice. My hon. Friend the Member for Henley
(John Howell) made some excellent points about domestic
abuse and the position of young people. My hon. Friend the
Member for Congleton (Fiona Bruce) came up with a very good
way of illustrating the advantages of restorative justice
by pointing to the experience of particular prisoners. I
must say I am rather impressed by the fact that she was so
busy on Christmas day, as I know what a special day of the
year it is for her. My hon. Friend the Member for Banbury
(Victoria Prentis) mentioned the charity Why me?, which I
intend to mention in a moment. The Front-Bench Members also
made some very constructive comments.
It is critically important that victims get the support
they need to help them cope with the trauma that crime can
cause, and whenever possible to recover from it. I believe
that restorative justice can be part of that. I pay tribute
to all those involved in providing restorative justice and
enabling it to happen, including the Restorative Justice
Council. We need the council, which brings together the
various bodies that provide such services and which has
innovated to tremendous effect in the area, exactly because
in restorative justice we have seen a lot of innovation by
particular individuals, groups and bodies. In a way, we are
on a journey, from the early days when restorative justice
tended to be seen as a way of helping young offenders to
realise the nature of their actions through to the existing
position in which we see it as valuable for victims, so
giving it a wider remit than previously. In the code of
practice for victims of crime, for example, there is now a
substantial section dealing with restorative justice, from
page 34 of the document.
In 2013, as I mentioned, the right hon. Member for Delyn
and I served on the Public Bill Committee considering what
is now the Crime and Courts Act, which I was taking through
as a Minister. With all-party support, we introduced the
restorative justice condition in the context of deferred
sentences. Restorative justice is the process that brings
those harmed by crime into communication with those
responsible for it. It allows everyone affected by a
particular incident to play a part in finding a more
positive way forward. A fundamental element is dialogue
between offender and victim, although that does not need to
be face to face.
Where a person has committed a criminal offence and a
criminal justice response is appropriate, it is not right
that restorative justice activity should take place on its
own; it should be alongside, not instead of a criminal
justice response. We know from research in this country and
abroad that restorative justice can be a positive
experience and empowering for victims, as was mentioned by
my hon. Friend the Member for Henley—I would not
necessarily suggest that they go in for a fight with Mike
Tyson. The point that my hon. Friend made was quite right,
however, that restorative justice can change the way in
which individuals feel about what was a dreadful experience
for them.
Restorative justice can also help offenders to reduce their
reoffending. My hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst, with his 30 years of experience at the bar—I
can probably admit a fair amount myself—my hon. Friend the
Member for Congleton and the SNP spokesman, the hon. Member
for Dumfries and Galloway (Richard Arkless), all made it
clear that many people simply do not consider their
actions—they have no insight into them. Restorative justice
can do something about that, so it is important in that
way.
As far as victims are concerned, some present may remember
reading about Paul Kohler, the well-known law professor who
suffered a most brutal attack during a burglary.
Photographs published in the media showed the terrible
injuries he sustained, in particular to his face. Paul has
spoken powerfully about how he and his family accessed the
restorative justice process and how it had been important
for them. The Under-Secretary of State for Justice, my hon.
Friend the Member for Bracknell (Dr Lee), who is the
victims Minister, recently met Paul through the restorative
justice organisation Why me? to learn how his first-hand
experience of restorative justice had helped him.
There are therefore reasons to be supportive of restorative
justice. As the Justice Committee report makes clear,
however, it is important that we develop our understanding
of the area and what it can deliver, in particular with its
effects on victims. We need to do that through proper
research and effort. Our vision is for good-quality,
victim-focused restorative justice to be available at all
stages of the criminal justice system, which was a point
made earlier. It is essential that victims who want
restorative justice can access it at the stage that is
right for them. Every victim participating should feel safe
and in control. I know not every victim will want to
participate. Restorative justice should remain voluntary.
With domestic violence in particular, which was mentioned
by a number of colleagues including my hon. Friend the
Member for Henley, we must continue to ensure that no
victim feels pressured into taking part. That is key to our
approach.
As we highlighted in our response to the Justice Committee
report, in recent years a lot of work has been done to make
that vision a reality. Police and crime commissioners now
receive funding to provide or commission restorative
justice services for victims as part of a range of services
to support victims of crime. The figure is about £23
million over three years, but it is of concern that the
budget has not been spent in full—the money has been spent
on victim services, but not all of it on restorative
justice services. We need to look into why and at the
effectiveness of the spending.
Measures such as the restorative service quality mark and
the training provider quality mark, which were developed by
the Restorative Justice Council with Government funding,
offer assurance to those commissioning services and to
victims that services are of a high standard. As is known,
the national probation service is working closely with the
council to produce guidance on that. We also funded the
council to work with a range of criminal justice
organisations to develop targeted information packs aimed
at helping criminal justice practitioners better understand
restorative justice and its benefits.
-
The Minister is giving a comprehensive response, for which
I am grateful. Does he accept that the need to ensure that
the money is properly spent and well spent, as he referred
to, is precisely the reason why it is important to press
ahead firmly with the annual collation and publication of
the spend by PCCs, so that we have genuine transparency and
build the evidence base that he is seeking to achieve to
make progress?
-
Sir
My hon. Friend the Member for Bracknell is looking at that
at the moment. The other concern, however, is that although
much is about gathering information—I fully accept
that—this is an area with an absence of objective research.
We need to grab the information about what is effective,
why the spending is what it is, and the national picture
showing the differences between areas.
-
Mr Hanson
Does the Minister know what the allocated £29 million was
spent on?
-
Sir
Twenty-three million pounds was allocated, and £11 million
was spent on restorative justice, so the concern is the
gap, which is where we need to gather and work through the
information.
-
Mr Hanson
The point I made in my contribution was that if the
Minister allocated £23 million, he needs to know what it
was spent on and what he allocated it for.
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Sir
Of course the money is not ring-fenced, so police and crime
commissioners who receive it are able to spend it on other
victim services. However, the right hon. Gentleman is
absolutely right that the amount for restorative justice
was £23 million, so questions need to be answered. He asked
us to say something in our update report on the action
plan, which I will mention in a moment, and I will
certainly bring that point to the attention of those who
are preparing the response.
As we build on those foundations, we will take account of
the Justice Committee’s work and the recent review of the
Victims’ Commissioner, as well as working closely with
police and crime commissioners and their association. It is
excellent that the Victims’ Commissioner has been able to
be in the Public Gallery for our debate. On a personal
note, having attended a Crown Prosecution Service
conference at which she spoke a couple of years ago, I was
very impressed with the personal commitment she made to
this area after experiences in her own life. Her role is
very important and the way in which she performs it is
admirable.
The priority now is to be satisfied by the evidence that
the restorative justice services being funded or delivered
meet the needs of victims of crime throughout England and
Wales. Victims’ needs must be met. There is good practice
in delivery, which it is important to share. My Department
will work with a number of police and crime commissioners
and the Association of Police and Crime Commissioners to
identify and share good practice and to obtain the data I
mentioned that will not only help us but help areas to
assess how well they are doing compared with other areas.
In the long term, we want to introduce consistent outcome
measures across all victim services, including restorative
justice, which will allow us to take a more detailed and
systematic approach to identifying and sharing good
practice and driving up performance. It will also provide a
firm evidence base on which we can make decisions about the
future landscape of victim services. I should have said
that we are also looking carefully at the range of
proposals made by the Victims’ Commissioner and others.
I should perhaps say that if I do not finish dealing with
all the points that have been made, we will go through them
and write to the Committee.
I was asked about the action plan. The original plan for
the period until March 2018 was published in November 2014.
Ministers decided to publish a progress report covering
that period. However, written evidence to the Committee
highlighted the progress so far. We explained, for example,
that we had the national conference in 2015, regional
workshops to share best practice, and successful
awareness-raising campaigns in both years during
International Restorative Justice Week. Ministers have
decided to continue with the action plan and refresh it.
The victims Minister has been engaged in that detailed work
since November, and we are not far away from publishing it.
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I am grateful to the Minister for that information. Can we
therefore take it that, precisely as he says, the plan will
be refreshed but there will not be a fresh plan, as has
been suggested at some points?
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Sir
Yes, we aim to publish the update—if I can call it that—or
refreshment of the plan as soon as possible. As I say, the
victims Minister is working hard on that at the moment.
My hon. Friend the Member for Banbury mentioned the
national protocol for information sharing. The significant
changes in the criminal justice landscape in the last few
years—the introduction of community rehabilitation
companies, the greater involvement of the private and
voluntary sectors, and so on—have changed the
information-sharing equation, so we have had to do further
work on that. A national protocol may not necessarily be
the final outcome from that, but it is certainly an
important issue to address.
I have mentioned the position on victims’ participation in
restorative justice and the need for undue influence not to
be imposed. Someone asked about the paper on the use of
restorative justice in domestic abuse cases that is
mentioned in the ending violence against women and girls
strategy for 2016 to 2020. We are working on that with
stakeholders, and we certainly intend that paper to go
ahead as previously announced.
I was asked about the police’s use of what is often
described as first-tier restorative justice, among other
such names. It is made clear in the victims code, which I
referred to, that community resolutions by the police are
not restorative justice, but it is clearly wrong that that
sort of approach—saying, “There has been a discussion
between the parties and therefore nothing else should
happen”—should not be taken, particularly in domestic
violence cases. It is contrary to guidance, it is not in
the victims code, and we continue to press to ensure that
that is not the way things happen on the ground. We are
certainly not keen to encourage that street-level or level
1 RJ, and it should not really happen.
My hon. Friend the Member for Banbury asked about
pre-sentence restorative justice. Police and crime
commissioners are best placed to determine how to meet the
needs of victims in their areas. Given that there are
innovative bodies in this area that are prepared to try
particular approaches to restorative justice, there are
advantages in allowing several approaches to be tried, and
it is important that we do not make things so restrictive
that we lose those advantages. However, we moved to put
restorative justice in a legislative context through the
Crime and Courts Act 2013, which I have dealt with, and the
national probation service is working with the Restorative
Justice Council. Those measures, which are designed to
ensure that there is a standard approach, but not so
standard that there is no innovation, are all moves in the
right direction. There is of course a lot of detail about
exactly what is going on.
I was asked about the role of probation. I have mentioned
the guidance that is being prepared. There has also been a
big effort to raise awareness in prisons. The national
probation service has positioned itself not so much as a
direct provider of restorative justice—although the
community rehabilitation companies provide a direct
service—but as a referral agent that seeks to ensure that
knowledge, experience, capacity and value are maximised and
best practice is shared.
I was asked about the differences in the victims code in
the availability of restorative justice for offenders of
different ages. As my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley
and Chislehurst said, that is a historical matter. Because
restorative justice was first provided for young people, it
is in some ways more advanced for young people than it is
for adults. We are certainly looking at the points that
have been made about extending availability to victims on
the basis of not so much the age of the offender but merit.
How do victims find out about restorative justice? Several
things are happening here. The victims code requires
victims to be informed about restorative justice, and PCCs
have a duty to advertise it on their websites. We are also
taking awareness-raising measures in prisons, which I think
have been alluded to, and doing work to encourage
professionals to understand the importance of restorative
justice.
I probably have time to mention the ring-fencing of
funding, which we used to do. Police and crime
commissioners feel that flexibility is helpful, so we are
keeping that under review, but it is certainly not
acceptable that spending on restorative justice should fall
too low. I conclude by saying that the Select Committee
produced an extremely valuable report about an extremely
important area, and I am glad that our response was
acceptable.
2.57 pm
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I thank the Minister for the care with which he has responded
to this considered and constructive debate, and right hon.
and hon. Members from across the House for their input.
People have been kind enough to help me during my time as
Chairman of the Select Committee. As we know, Select
Committees work best when they work as teams. Fortunately,
the Justice Committee is a good team.
I am particularly pleased that my hon. Friend the Member for
Congleton (Fiona Bruce), who is not a member of the
Committee, also made a contribution, which I thought was
powerful and underlined the significant point about changes
in thinking and behaviour. I suppose that Christmas day is
not a bad time to think about redemption. The previous
Secretary of State, my right hon. Friend the Member for
Surrey Heath (Michael Gove), of course was not afraid to
refer to redemption as well as rehabilitation in our criminal
justice system. Ultimately, part of our work on restorative
justice is to try to change mindsets so that there can be
redemption and rehabilitation as well as closure and comfort
for victims.
As the person in the room whom the snow will probably reach
last, I will not delay matters any longer, other than to say
that I, too, was delighted to see , the Victims’
Commissioner, here. Our Committee is always grateful for her
co-operation and her remarkable personal efforts, to which we
all pay tribute. I am grateful to all those who have
contributed to this constructive and positive debate. I
believe that there is a cross-party view on this issue.
Progress is being made. There is more to do, but I hope that
we will be able to work constructively with the Government to
take this important agenda forward.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the Fourth Report of the
Justice Committee, Restorative justice, HC 164, and the
Government response, Cm 9343.
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