The Public Account Committee has today published its report on reforms of the Criminal Justice System and Probation and their findings echo what Vera Baird has been saying for months – that the reforms “Carry Significant Risk”.
In relation to Probation, the Ministry of Justice intends to introduce new private and voluntary providers, bring in payment by results, create a new National Probation Service and extend the service to short term prisoners in a very short time period. The Probation Service in England and Wales supervised 225,000 offenders in 2012/13 at a cost of £853 million through 35 Probation Trusts. From the end of May, Northumbria Probation Trust, along with every other trust in England and Wales will cease to operate and be replaced by a National Probation Service and 21 Community Rehabilitation Companies.
Vera Baird said: “I have said for months that the Ministry of Justice plans for probation are wrong. Payment by results is not acceptable. In Northumbria we have one of the best probation services in the country and despite the efforts of many, we are watching the government dismantle it piece by piece.
“The contract is currently out to tender. As reality starts to hit those who have bid for the work, more bidders are dropping out. The government needs to go back to the drawing board on this – of course further improvements can be made, that is what we all want to see. We also need to see changes that come about from partnership working and listening to those who currently deliver the programme.”
The Public Accounts Committee has made a number of recommendations which include:
Vera Baird added: “The Committee welcomes the Ministry’s commitment to only proceed at each stage of the programme if they are satisfied it is safe to do so and that value for money will not be jeopardised. This hasn’t happened, Police & Crime Commissioners (PCCs) across the country have been raising concerns and these tend to have been ignored and the reforms have continued. The Justice Secretary should now make a determined effort to listen to PCCs’ concerns and act upon them.”