Thursday 28 March 2013

Justice committee hearing, Helen Grant

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On the 26th of March 2013 City Gateway apprentices attended the justice committee in Portcullis House in the House of Commons where The Right Honourable Helen Grant MP, The justice minister with a special responsibility for women in prison was giving evidence with 2 of her officials, Ian Poree who is in charge of commissioning and Michaels Spurr, the head of NOMS. Members of Parliament including Alan Beith, Steve Brine and Jeremy Corbyn discussed the sentences and treatment of women in prison. Debates in the House of Lords by Lord McNally during the parliamentary passage of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012, and by the Minister for Policing and Criminal Justice,   Damian Green in the House of Commons had all promised changes in the way women are treated in prison.

Helen Grant admitted female prisoners have different needs from male prisoners as they are much more vulnerable. Also, how community sentences in England and Wales are to be made more female friendly in an effort to keep women out of prison and so that they do not re-offend.

Justice minister Helen Grant wants to cut re-offending rates and offer judges reliable alternatives to custody. She says that vulnerable women offenders need help to break the cycle of crime, abuse and many other difficulties that are facing.

One of the aims that the ministry of justice officials insisted was not to lock up fewer women offenders, but to reduce the number of re-offenders and to offer  credible alternatives to custody   to judges and magistrates.

Helen Grant is setting up a new board of specialists, stakeholders within government across ministries and departments and partners outside government who provide services for women offenders, to address community orders for women and look at other issues such as locating female prisoners near to their families. She also said that mothers should receive good health care and support while they are in prison so that when they are out of prison they can build a relationship with their children. Some of the support that was discussed was that their should be family days out , working with families and  children of offenders, home work clubs so that they mothers/ fathers get time with their children and can be part of their life’s while being in prison. However they will not be getting paid for work or curfew as a punishment.

Another idea Helen Grant and the other MP’s proposed was that the women prisoners should be placed in secure hostels. The minister quoted “It costs £45,000 to keep a woman in prison for one year, while almost 45% of all women released from custody in 2010 re-offended within 12 months, committing more than 10,000 further offences.”


What they said the system does well:

Women in Holloway prison are being prepared for work for example they are writing CVs and learning how to dress appropriately for work , so that after they released  they will have something to do, this will reduces the chances of re-offending with help from eth charity Working Chance.

She said she had visited the women’s diversion centre,  Isis in Stroud in Gloucester  which challenges  women to change their lives around; they are being helped to avoid  domestic violence and build up their self confidence as they think that it will help them not to re-offend.


Things that need more improvement:

They need to identify women and men (segmentation) so that they can be put in specific groups of re-offending as they have specific needs and issues (they have been looking at this area) and these can be addressed. Cathy Robinson a former prison governor is undertaking a review of the entire prison system.

They said that a considerate amount has been done and improved in the last 6 years after the report by Baroness Corston and more to be done.

Our feelings are Mrs. Grant wants to give women opportunities and better support, besides placing them in prison. She says society should help women understand alternatives to crime and allow them to get help dealing with problems that cause them to commit crimes.













( too many prisoners not enough justice



By Parvin Nehar & Shahida Akther

Monday 25 March 2013

Questions for Rt Honourable Helen Grant, Minister of Justice

Helen Grant the junior justice minister appears in front of the justice committee on 25th March 2013 at 09 30 hrs. Whilst we welcome the coalition government's commitment to treat women offenders  from a gendered perspective, we would like to take the opportunity to ask some questions to broaden the debate.
A detailed interview outlining Mrs Grant's proposals can be found here  here


1.   Will the justice minister expand on what will happen to existing women's diversion centers and whether   NOMS will continue to fund until commissioning for transforming justice are published  which could take up to 2 years?

2. Will the minister explain how she envisages working  with existing providers to bring best practices gathered from the diversion centers  what opportunities will there be to bring new providers with experience of working with vulnerable women in the sector already? 

3. What steps are being taken to ensure vulnerable women are not further damaged by exposure to inexperienced workers subcontracted to large prime  providers with no track record or success in working with this group?

4. Will the minister  consider making the Bangkok Rules the minimum requirements for any agency wishing to work with women offenders?

5. The minister states she wishes to punish women, rehabilitate women and transform justice simultaneously.  These are 3 outcomes which require different strategies and outputs and might be irreconcilable.  Could she explain her priorities?

6. Does the minister undertake to implement gender main streaming as opposed to gender equality?  Women are not men, solutions and sentences need to reflect motherhood, discrimination and other issues specific to women.

Sunday 24 March 2013

A gendered approach to women offenders

We're delighted to welcome Justice Minister, Helen Grant's ministerial statement last Friday, prior to her scheduled appearance on Tuesday 26 March 2013 at the justice committee inquiry to give evidence regarding this government's rehabilitation transformation plans for women offenders. You can see the Kazuri submission by Imran Khan, Flo Krause and Julia Gibby here

In brief:


Helen Grant to overhaul community sentences for women

A woman opening a door in a prisonThe government wants more alternatives to custody

Related Stories

Community sentences in England and Wales are to be made more "female friendly" in an effort to keep women out of prison.
Justice Minister Helen Grant wants to cut reoffending rates and offer judges credible alternatives to custody.
She says "vulnerable" women offenders need help to break the cycle of crime and abuse many of them face.
But the new approach will include an element of punishment such as unpaid work or curfew, she stressed.
Ministry of Justice officials insisted the aim was not to lock up fewer women offenders, but to reduce the number of reoffenders and to make "credible" alternatives to custody available to judges.
'Mental health'
About 4,000 women are currently in jail in England and Wales, most of whom are serving sentences of six months or less.
Eight out of 10 were sent to prison for committing a non-violent offence.
Ms Grant is setting up a new advisory board to overhaul community orders for women and look at other issues such as locating female prisoners near to their families.
"Many female offenders share the same depressingly familiar issues of abuse, drug and alcohol dependency and mental health problems," said the Conservative minister.
"Women who commit crime should be punished, but we must not forget that a significant number have been victims during their lives and need targeted support to break the cycle of offending.
"I will provide the strong leadership required to drive these priorities forward and I'm confident that by working together with all partners we can better tackle female offending."
Expanding on the proposals in an interview with The Independent, she said: "Women offenders are a highly vulnerable group, they commit crime because of that vulnerability and earlier failures to protect and support [them]."
'Secure hostels'
The Ministry of Justice said it costs £45,000 to keep a woman in prison for one year, while almost 45% of all women released from custody in 2010 reoffended within 12 months, committing more than 10,000 further offences.
Up to 56% of women offenders have been in care and the proportion of female prisoners that report abuse in their lifetime is double that of males.
In addition, about 60% of women leave behind dependent children when entering prison.
Prison Reform Trust director Juliet Lyon broadly welcomed the government's stance but said it would have little effect if it was not backed by new laws.
"History shows that, in the absence of specific legislation, commitments to address women's different needs are often not realised, and momentum can be lost as ministers and officials come and go."
Andrew Neilson, director of campaigns at the Howard League for Penal Reform, said the proposals lacked detail.
But he added: "It does, however, reflect the fact that community sentences are a far more appropriate way of dealing with the vast majority of women currently in prison, including all those who have committed non-violent crimes."
The government is also considering the introduction of "secure hostels" for less serious women offenders in England and Wales, as an alternative to women's prisons.

via BBC website


Kazuri  will be attending the Justice Committee hearing on Tuesday and live Tweeting (if permitted)