Young Offenders Self-Harm Levels Revealed

February 26, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Inside

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) has been forced to reveal the true scale of self-harm taking place in young offender institutions (YOIs) following a 14-month investigation by Children & Young People Now.

The figures reveal there were a total of 2,040 self-harm incidents last year and 914 assaults on staff.

The MoJ was prompted to release the figures by the Information Commissioner after CYP Now made a series of complaints over attempts to suppress them.

The figures reveal that self-harm incidents have remained at a fairly consistent level over the past three years – 1,835 in 2007 and 2,062 in 2006. However, levels have more than doubled in the past 10 years.

http://www.cypnow.co.uk/bulletins/Daily-Bulletin/news/883571/?DCMP=EMC-DailyBulletin

Titan prisons to be rebranded as ‘cluster jails’

January 23, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Inside

Controversial “Titan prisons” proposed by the Government to ease jail overcrowding have met with such widespread opposition that ministers are considering changing their name in a “rebranding” exercise.

Jack Straw, the Justice Secretary, last year announced plans for a network of three US-style extra-large jails, each housing around 2,500 prisoners.

But the idea has been criticised by the chief inspector of prisons, offenders’ charities and opposition parties, while the Prison Officers’ Assocation has warned that it would be difficult to maintain order in such large jails.

Internal Whitehall documents, seen by The Sunday Telegraph, reveal that the Ministry of Justice is considering dropping the “Titan” name because it may send out the wrong message. Instead, the planned jails could be renamed “cluster prisons”.

By Ben Leach – Telegraph.co.uk
31 Aug 2008

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/2651123/Titan-prisons-to-be-rebranded-as-cluser-jails.html

Prison radio to cost taxpayers £2million

January 23, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Inside

The government is planning a radio station exclusively for the entertainment of Britain’s prisoners, which will cost taxpayers £2million, according to reports.

The service would broadcast shows 12 hours a day to 140 prisons in England and Wales if the Ministry of Justice approves the idea.

The Prison Service, which came up with the scheme, claims the £2million need to start up the station would be raised from existing budgets. It has been dubbed ‘con air’ like the Nicholas Cage film.

A charity might also contribute to running costs, it is thought.

Telegraph.co.uk 20th January 2009
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/lawandorder/4293852/Prison-radio-to-cost-taxpayers-2million.html

Prison art and the Koestler Trust

September 17, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Featured, Inside

They are the UK’s best-known prison arts charity.  They award, exhibit and sell artworks by offenders, detainees and high security patients.

The Koestler Trust’s aims are:

  • to help offenders lead more positive lives by motivating them to participate in the creative arts;
  • to demonstrate the power of arts activity in the criminal justice system.

The Koestler Awards attract around 5,000 entries a year from inmates of prisons, young offender institutions, secure hospitals and immigration removal centres across the UK, as well as offenders supervised by probation and youth offending services.

Koestler Trust website

Glen Parva extension plans

September 1, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Inside

Glen Parva Young Offenders Institute in Leicestershire is inviting residents to come and find out more about plans to extend the prison.

Glen Parva currently houses about 800 young offenders, up to the age of 18.

Leaflets have been delivered to nearby residents, outlining plans to extend the site to accommodate a further 360 young offenders.

Public exhibitions are being held this week at the Memorial Hall on Dorothy Avenue in Glen Parva for residents.

Read more

HMP Stocken – look inside

August 14, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Inside

BBC Leicester’s Victoria Hicks has been behind the scenes of Stocken Prison in Rutland. She spent days filming for a series on BBC East Midlands Today. Victoria shares her experiences with you…

What was it like filming inside HMP Stocken?

I found it quite difficult because I never knew what I was going to get. I also had to abide by prison routines and rules i.e. no filming whilst the corridors were full of prisoners in case it sparked a reaction.

No filming of locks and keys for security reasons. No filming of any prisoner unless they had been checked and deemed suitable to appear on television.

I filmed most of it myself. I must have walked miles with my tripod and camera around the prison corridors but it paid off. I gained a fascinating insight into what it’s like to live and work in a prison.

BBC link for 4 short videos

* Watch: A Prisoner’s Story
* Watch: Work Inside Stocken Prison
* Watch: Preparing For Life Outside
* Watch: Prison Fight Against Drugs

Why Prison Radio?

July 31, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Inside

Reducing re-offending benefits us all.

Equipping prisoners with the skills and confidence necessary to find work upon release is crucial in bringing down re-offending rates.

Prison radio aims to make best use of the opportunity prison provides to stop people offending for good in order to build a safer society for all.

Prison radio provides a unique and innovative way to engage prisoners in education, particularly those hard to reach offenders disenfranchised from the education system.

Listen to Prison Radio demo

Prison Radio Association

HMP Wolds – the Summit of success

July 26, 2008 by admin  
Filed under Inside

HMP Wolds gives prisoners free rein

How much can prisoners really achieve while inside? At HMP Wolds the levels of trust placed in inmates and officers has allowed prisoners to gain unprecedented levels of new professional skills, at the same time creating a business turning over £17million.

HMP Wolds is a category C prison five miles from Market Weighton in East Yorkshire, and is Britain’s first privately run jail. 20 inmates at any one time are employed by Summit Media at the office inside the prison ground, earning up to £35 a week – great money for inside.

Summit Media is an online marketing company with high profile clients, such as Panasonic UK, suppliers on the west coast of America and a recently added European HQ in Prague. It delivers internet marketing and website development. Panasonic UK’s manager describes the company as ‘skilful and effective’.

In the busy Wolds office the staff including inmates wear T-shirts with the company logo and work at their computer terminals where phones ring off the hook all day. With no prisoner officers supervising and a corporate, motivated atmosphere prevailing, the environment is more like any modern, thriving office on the outside, and seems a world away from the expectations of a traditional prison environ.

It’s all a long way forward from the humble beginnings in the prison grounds in a small port-a-cabin with two desks. Entrepreneurial Managing Director Hedlay Aylott and Operations Manager Charlotte Ridley have been at the helm of the operation since they founded it in 2000. They are enthusiastic about the opportunity working for
the company extends to inmates.

“Guys discover a different path here and find the respect the gain is intoxicating,” says Aylott. “I’d say some of the best people I’ve ever worked with did time here. Many swear that this is the best opportunity they ever had.”

“The Summit training I’ve been given is invaluable,” says inmate and company employee Lyndon Bairstow, 25, in for death by dangerous driving. Paul Sherrington, 40, agrees – “I’d never been on the internet before I walked into this building 18 months ago.” Now he’s the online marketing account manger. With a 12 year sentence for holding up a security van and a past including drug dealing, a gambling habit and youth custody from the age of 15, Summit is a lifeline for him – the first real chance, and reason, to decide to change.

All prisoners who get the opportunity to work for Summit get six months training in e-commerce, particularly in search marketing, and sit the IPA (Institue of Practitioners in Advertising) exams, which qualifies them to manage marketing campaigns for clients such as Google, Microsoft, Panasonic, Yahoo and 3Mobile. These are qualifications and hands-on relevant experience and skills which really prepare them to be attractive to employers in the outside.

It’s the emphasis on opportunity and building up employable skills that appeals to prison service authorities, and persuaded them to allow the controlled additional freedoms that facilitate employees to carry out the business and training. “It was a huge step allowing prisoners controlled, business-related internet access and phone calls,” says Aylott. “IT security from the prison service were very involved of course.”

The support in particular of the prison’s 61-year old director, Dave McDonnell. “Initially I was sceptical that Hedley could teach prisoners the level of skills necessary to achieve the results they’re now achieving,” he says. “[but] we must remember the high rates of prisoner re-offending within the first years after release. We must keep finding ways – ways like this – of positively influencing offending behaviour.”

He’s clear what are the main measures that are effective in bring this about. “If you can teach prisoners skills that will give them a good future income and a working day lifestyle, you’re 90 percent of the way there,” he says. In eight years, only two of the 250 inmates who have worked for Summit have re-offended.

The organisation’s contribution to helping ex-offenders build a better life doesn’t stop when the prisoner is coming up to release. The company helps men coming to the end of their sentence to find a job, either through the web or industry publications. Some stay with Summit working from the outside. Some start their own e-business or even get jobs with Summit’s clients.

Robert Barker 26, is one of the latter of these, and the latest of Summit employees’ many rehabilitation success stories. Released from Wolds last November he left behind a past of repeat offending and prison visits that began when he started stealing cars aged 16. He now works on the marketing section at Townsend Farm, a Summit client who were impressed by the work he did for them, on a salary of #17,000. “I hope I’m a senior account manager in four years.” He says, “It’s changed my life.”

Just two applicants a month get to join the company, by applying to adverts in Inside Times – the free newspaper distributed in all prisons, and making their presentation to Summit’s discerning selection panel. A transfer to Wolds is the result of selection and the beginning of a new and promising future.

As such the opportunity is still one being extended only to a lucky few. But with the positive impact of its progressive measures on the offending behaviour of inmates so visible, the project deserves to be a template for many more projects of its kind.

Editor: Andy