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November 23, 2006: New Bill: Offender Management and Probation Privatisation? A new Offender Management Bill was published today. The government argues that it aims to reduce re-offending and better protect the public by improving the way in which offenders are managed. In particular, the bill seeks to remove the public sector monopoly on the provision of probation services and enable the Secretary of State to commission services from the best available provider in the public, private or voluntary sector. The bill also:
The government view is that the main aim of the provisions in the bill is to enable NOMS to be more flexible in the way that it provides services. This, it is argued, will ensure that communities are served by the best possible probation service. Speaking at Wormwood Scrubs prison
earlier this month, Home Secretary
John Reid emphasised that the probation service has delivered improvements
in performance over recent years, but that the effective tackling of
re-offending requires a broad coalition of effort.
Speaking about the bill, the Under-Secretary for Criminal Justice and Offender Management, Gerry Sutcliffe has stated:
The bill will achieve this end by transferring the statutory duty to make arrangements for the provision of probation services from the 42 local probation boards to the Secretary of State. It will create new public sector bodies to be known as probation trusts. Regional commissioners, acting on behalf of the Secretary of State, will be free to contract for probation services across organisational and geographical boundaries. In line with the roll-out of the offender management model, the focus will be unremittingly trained on the offender, and what is needed to protect the public and reduce re-offending. Commissioners will not do this in isolation. They will be required to conduct statutory consultations on a regional basis so that they are able to deliver services targeted to meet the specific needs of local communities. A Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA) of the offender
management bill is available, as well as an RIA for the proposed new
arrangements for provision of probation services and an RIA for the transfer of
powers to contracted prisons and secure training centres. It also contains a
Race Equality Impact Assessment. These RIAs are
available online. |
November 28, 2008: Call To End Orange Clothes For Community Payback November 25, 2008: Legislation Protects Victims Of Forced Marriage November 24, 2008: Tasers For Police November 11, 2008: Independent Review Alleges Prison Service Incompetence October 17, 2008: Sanctions For Reckless Traders, Says Napo October 15, 2008: Jobs Axed in Probation, Prisons, And Courts October 3, 2008: IPCC On Double Fatal Shooting October 2, 2008: Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair Resigns October 1, 2008: New Met Police e-crime Unit September 25, 2008: ID Cards Update September 22, 2008: New Prostitution Rules Supporting Trafficked Women September 19, 2008: Mandatory Polygraph Tests for Sex Offenders September 12, 2008: Prison Transfer With Vietnam Agreed September 4, 2008: Reoffending Rates: New Figures September 1, 2008: Tougher Community Work For Offenders August 26, 2008. Summary Justice Widening Criminal Justice Net August 21, 2008: Tightening Controls For Sex Offenders July 15, 2008: Explaining The Rise In Prison Numbers
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