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Probation Services Privatised
// An overhaul of the probation service in England and Wales will see low-risk offenders supervised by the private sector, the government is to announce. //
After the fiascos with G4S and the privatised prisons, is this a good idea?
After the fiascos with G4S and the privatised prisons, is this a good idea?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I worked for the service until March this year when I retired. Privatisation for low risk offenders may seem to be a good idea, but they sometimes have more problems than at first glance seems to be the case, which the service aims to help with. There's much more to the supervision of any offender than the general public realise. I really don't think it'll work.
On paper it sounds feasable but in reality the company that takes this on will find the best way to get paid form the smallest possible effort. That's what private enterprise does, so I guess it's really about the paramters that are applied. Eg How wll the "getting paid for not reoffending" criteria be defined. How long not offending? How will "offending" be defined? It has potential but it's all about the detail.
Until the details on how they propose to monitor it are relased it is difficult to comment. First reaction is that it is bad, but that is generally the reaction to change.
The article is pretty useless, figures given for reoffending etc are for ALL crimes and not all crimes will go private so a total waste of e-space by the BBC.
I rather like the quote from this woman who has clearly not read the proposal or forgotten to put brain in gear before opening Gob:
//
Liz Calderbank, chief inspector of probation for England and Wales, queried how, for example, a positive result for someone on probation could be measured.
"If you have someone who's convicted of a serious knife crime and then they re-offend by stealing a jar of coffee, is that a failure or a success?" she said.
//
The proposal is not for serious crime !
The article is pretty useless, figures given for reoffending etc are for ALL crimes and not all crimes will go private so a total waste of e-space by the BBC.
I rather like the quote from this woman who has clearly not read the proposal or forgotten to put brain in gear before opening Gob:
//
Liz Calderbank, chief inspector of probation for England and Wales, queried how, for example, a positive result for someone on probation could be measured.
"If you have someone who's convicted of a serious knife crime and then they re-offend by stealing a jar of coffee, is that a failure or a success?" she said.
//
The proposal is not for serious crime !
More than a little dubious about this, personally. Payment by results sounds good, but the governments application of this premise so far - for example with the welfare to work programme and A4e - Has hardly been a ringing success.
It does rather seem ideologically driven, and a rather disguised way of cutting the cost of the service at that.
As for Grayling - He said something today in the House along the lines that the previous govt was obsessed with pilots - sometimes you should just give stuff a go - Well that might be a good attitude for, say a parachute or bunjee jump, or any number of one -off endevours in ones private life, but implementing wholesale changes to public services on a whim and without evidence is a recipe for omnishambles, in my opinion...
http:// blogs.c hannel4 .com/fa ctcheck /factch eck-has -chris- graylin g-unloc ked-the -prison ers-dil emma/11 879
It does rather seem ideologically driven, and a rather disguised way of cutting the cost of the service at that.
As for Grayling - He said something today in the House along the lines that the previous govt was obsessed with pilots - sometimes you should just give stuff a go - Well that might be a good attitude for, say a parachute or bunjee jump, or any number of one -off endevours in ones private life, but implementing wholesale changes to public services on a whim and without evidence is a recipe for omnishambles, in my opinion...
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It will help a relatively tiny amount of people, and they may well have gone straight without help anyway.
So you can bet the figures that will get spewed out from time to time will be yet another load of skewed statistics to attempt to show it works.
one stat you can be sure of...is that the private companies will make small fortunes out of this wheeze...no surprise there then !
So you can bet the figures that will get spewed out from time to time will be yet another load of skewed statistics to attempt to show it works.
one stat you can be sure of...is that the private companies will make small fortunes out of this wheeze...no surprise there then !