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New secure centres may be scrapped

Posted: 17 October 2002 | Subscribe Online


The Youth Justice Board said this week that it was "extremely worried" about the possibility of its proposals to build five secure training centres for young offenders being scrapped.

The YJB believes its four-year plan for five centres, which would provide 400 places for persistent young offenders, could be scrapped as part of the dispute between home secretary David Blunkett and chancellor Gordon Brown over how the money announced in the spending review in July will be spent.

"It seems very odd when our corporate plan was ratified by ministers back in February," a YJB spokesperson said.
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The proposals aim to remove the most vulnerable 15 and 16-year-old boys, and all girls, out of Prison Service accommodation and into smaller privately run secure training centres, which the YJB believes would better accommodate them.

The YJB shares concerns with the chief inspector of prisons, Anne Owers, and the lord chief justice, Lord Woolf, about the care of children in young offenders institutions because of pressure on custodial places as a result of overcrowding. The prison population is now 72,000, while the juvenile estate population is now 3,000.
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The YJBsays that because the new secure units are smaller, more adaptable and have a better staff-to-children ratio, they can provide a better regime.

A Home Office spokesperson said details of how the extra money from the spending review will be spent would be announced shortly. She could not yet say whether any of the £60m announced this week for an emergency prison-building programme would be spent on the juvenile estate.


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