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Bid to speed up community service | Bid to speed up community service |
(about 1 hour later) | |
An extra £5.5m is being ploughed into dealing with non-custodial sentences to clear backlogs in the system, the Scottish Government has announced. | |
Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill told MSPs the move would speed up the use of community service orders. | |
It came after an Aberdeen sheriff demanded an explanation when it emerged a criminal completed virtually none of his community sentence. | |
Mr MacAskill was also being quizzed about ministers' justice reforms. | |
He told Holyrood's justice committee the extra funding - £1.5m now and £4m next year - would come on top of an extra £2m put in this year to community service. | |
"Community sentences need to start on time and be enforced rigorously," the justice secretary said. | |
"But they also need to offer the support which offenders need." | |
Situation 'unacceptable' | |
Mr MacAskill added: "Most of this money will go to local authorities to help them clear their backlogs and achieve tighter turnaround times." | |
The announcement came after Sheriff James Tierney demanded an explanation over the case of George Thomson. | |
Thomson, who had admitted drugs charges, had served just two-and-half hours of a 280-hour community service order - a situation branded "unacceptable" by the sheriff. | |
Mr MacAskill appeared before the committee to answer questions on the Scottish Government's Criminal Justice and Licensing Bill, currently going through parliament. | |
The legislation includes bringing in "community payback orders" to replace probation, community service orders and some other penalties. | |
The justice secretary said the move would reduce reoffending and enable offenders to repay communities for the damage done by their deeds. | |
And he defended other measures in the bill, including a presumption against prison sentences of than less than six months and the creation of a sentencing council, which has been attacked by Scotland's senior judges. |
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