There are no quick or easy solutions to the crisis in our prisons and probation Letters

almost 2 years in The guardian

What is needed is a full workforce plan and the funding to rehabilitate offenders, writes Pam Walker, while Sheila Cross calls for a rethink on sentencingThe National Probation Service was established in 1907 with the motto “advise, assist, befriend”. This was intensive and highly skilled work. Maybe the Tory government, in the shape of Chris Grayling, found this a little too touchy-feely, as in 2014 all the skills, experience, institutional memory and expertise was swept away as the service was privatised (The Guardian view on probation: the service has not recovered from a privatisation disaster, 16 October). This was done despite the warnings of all 34 probation boards – yet another story of experts being ignored.The renationalising of the service, underfunded and overstretched as it is, has not replaced all that was lost, and while short jail sentences are not only ineffective but counterproductive, there is no capacity in the system to give out more community sentencing (Thousands of prisoners in England and Wales to be released up to 18 days early, 16 October). What is needed is a full workforce plan across the Ministry of Justice, with sufficient funding for training and equipping staff with the skills to rehabilitate offenders, and with the time and space to do so. There is no quick, easy or cheap solution to the mess made by this government.Pam WalkerFormer probation board member Continue reading...

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