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Government sets out programme of new juvenile justice measures

Posted: 11 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Legislation will be introduced to establish an intensive supervision and surveillance order as an alternative to custody for serious or persistent young offenders, the government announced last week.

The new ISSOs will be one of four community sentences available to courts and will be similar to intensive supervision and surveillance programmes. Programmes combine community-based surveillance with a focus on tackling offending behaviour and are non-custodial. However, they are currently available only as part of another court order.
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The changes are outlined in the government's response to its consultation on youth justice published alongside the Children Bill last week.

The response says that preventing offending is the main purpose of a custodial sentence imposed by a court on a juvenile for a criminal offence and will legislate to clarify this. However, courts will also be required to have regard to other factors including welfare, public protection, punishment and reparation.

Detention and training orders, under which juveniles spend half their sentence in custody and half in the community, will be retained. Currently, 12 to 14 year olds have to be deemed both serious and persistent offenders to warrant receiving a DTO. But the government will amend this so that courts can impose the order on this group of children for either serious or persistent offending. The maximum term for an order will be reduced from 24 to 12 months.

The government's response also highlights its intention to work with the Youth Justice Board to improve the juvenile secure estate.

Self-contained units to separate young women under 18 from adult women will be developed and the government proposes to legislate to treat 17 year olds on remand and on bail as juveniles rather than adults.
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There will also be legislation to enable the government to vary the core membership of youth offending teams to ensure flexibility to deal with changing circumstances. As a result, professionals from the housing sector may be added to the core membership, the response says. Yots will also be able to operate within children's trusts "where that makes sense locally".

In addition, Yots and the YJB will have the task of preventing antisocial behaviour.

Under the Children Bill, young offenders institutions will have a new duty to safeguard children. The bill also removes the current power to take children in breach of a child safety order into care at a lower threshold than allowed by the Children Act 1989. It also extends the maximum duration of the order to 12 months in normal circumstances.

All planned action will depend on resources and parliamentary time.

Youth Justice - The Next Steps: Summary of Responses and the Government's Proposals available at www.homeoffice.gov.uk/docs3/youthjusticeresponse.html


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