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December 28, 2007: Offenders Do 6m Hours Of Work
Over six million hours of compulsory unpaid work has been carried out by
offenders who have received a community order in England and Wales this
year. The Ministry of Justice has
stated that this is the equivalent of £33 million (calculated on the
National Minimum Wage, currently £5.52 per hour) that has benefited local
communities across the country.
The work has brought derelict areas and buildings back into public use.
Clearing church yards, repairing park benches and removing graffiti,
offenders are put to hard work to make communities better places to live and
they often carry out work that would otherwise not be completed.
Justice Minister David Hanson said:
'Community Punishments are hard work, restrict liberty, but crucially
encourage rehabilitation and reduce re-offending. It is physical work for
the offenders but also has tremendous benefits for the community.
'Last year there were 55,514 completions of unpaid work across England and
Wales, providing million of hours of free labour for communities. In 2006-07
the National Probation Service had its best performance year with the
highest ever rates of enforcement, record numbers of offenders completed
accredited programmes and unpaid work, and more offenders starting and
completed drug rehabilitation than in any previous year.'
Other data released shows examples of what community sentences have achieved
in the 12 months since January 2007. Over three million hours have been
spent on environmental and community projects this year. Offenders have
spent over two million hours helping charities in the UK .
Evidence has found that offenders who commenced a community sentence in the
first quarter of 2004 had lower reoffending rates than predicted (50.5% vs
54.1% respectively). During the same time period, actual reoffending rates
for offenders serving custodial sentences of less than twelve months were
over 73.4% against a predicted rate of 73.5%.
Community orders are made up of one or more of 12 possible requirements. A
community order can last for up to three years but individual requirements
can be for different lengths. Requirements may be combined to produce an
individual package for each offender. The requirements available for use
within a community order are:
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Unpaid work
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Activity (for example, employment, training or education, counselling or
mediation)
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(Accredited) Programme (including those tacking anger management, internet
sex offending, substance abuse and drink driving)
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Prohibited activity (including being banned from entering pubs of licensed
premises, being banned from contacting individuals, working with certain
groups or living or staying in the same household as certain groups)
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Curfew (normally this is electronically monitored)
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Exclusion (for instance from pubs, town centres, the vicinity of a
victim's home or workplace, from a shop, and so on)
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Residence (at an approved premise or private address)
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Mental Health Treatment
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Drug Rehabilitation
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Alcohol Treatment
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Supervision (attending regular appointments with a probation officer)
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Attendance Centre (for adults aged 18-24 only)
Offenders who fail to comply with their community order are breached and
returned to court. The court can re-sentence the offender for the original
offence and might impose a custodial sentence. Alternatively, the court can
extend or add requirements and allow the community order to continue.
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