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Fears offenders 'not monitored' | Fears offenders 'not monitored' |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Many offenders are not monitored or supervised properly because there are too many demands on probation staff in England and Wales, a report has said. | Many offenders are not monitored or supervised properly because there are too many demands on probation staff in England and Wales, a report has said. |
The comments were made by the Chief Inspector of Probation, Andrew Bridges, in the Inspectorate's annual report. | |
Mr Bridges said the probation service could not meet the public's expectation that all re-offending was preventable. | |
The Ministry of Justice said it will take his observations seriously and ministers said a review was underway. | |
This is being conducted to ensure end-to-end supervision of offenders could be sensibly implemented. | This is being conducted to ensure end-to-end supervision of offenders could be sensibly implemented. |
Public expectations | Public expectations |
Although probation budgets have increased considerably over the past 10 years, Mr Bridges says they have not kept pace with the increasing demands on the service. | Although probation budgets have increased considerably over the past 10 years, Mr Bridges says they have not kept pace with the increasing demands on the service. |
The BBC's home affairs correspondent, Danny Shaw, says rising prison populations mean there are more offenders who will subsequently require monitoring. | |
Complicated supervision schemes like drug treatment orders, prolific offender programmes and the sex offenders register have also increased workload, he says. | |
Because of this, Mr Bridges says the government's goal of co-ordinated and continuous management of offenders "risks being proven undeliverable". | Because of this, Mr Bridges says the government's goal of co-ordinated and continuous management of offenders "risks being proven undeliverable". |
This in turn, he says, will make it harder to satisfy public expectations about being protected. | This in turn, he says, will make it harder to satisfy public expectations about being protected. |
He said: "Our overall point here is not a proposal to pour extra resources unthinkingly into the problem but to highlight the contrast, which has developed slowly over a long period of time, between rising expectations and a squeezed capacity to meet them. | He said: "Our overall point here is not a proposal to pour extra resources unthinkingly into the problem but to highlight the contrast, which has developed slowly over a long period of time, between rising expectations and a squeezed capacity to meet them. |
What it means is getting to grips with policy to ensure that only those who have to go to prison go to prison Judy McKnight Probation officers' union | |
"As an organisation with a track record of taking a hard line on the issue of improving quality within existing resources or less, this Inspectorate is able to recognise when efficiency savings year-on-year reach their reasonable limits when demands are still increasing." | "As an organisation with a track record of taking a hard line on the issue of improving quality within existing resources or less, this Inspectorate is able to recognise when efficiency savings year-on-year reach their reasonable limits when demands are still increasing." |
Judy McKnight, general secretary of the probation officers' union Napo, told BBC Breakfast that the government's sentencing policy was critical. | |
"What we have at the moment is a situation where, although overall levels of crime are going down, the numbers in prison are continuing to go up and up," Ms McKnight said. | |
"What it means is getting to grips with policy to ensure that only those who have to go to prison go to prison." | |
Mr Bridges said the Inspectorate would continue to support "all feasible measures" to improve its management of offenders. |
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