While there are doubts about the overall effectiveness of mentoring with offenders, mentors at a scheme in Birmingham are enjoying some success in helping young offenders to resettle. Katie Leason reports
The merits of mentoring programmes for young offenders have recently been questioned in a Youth Justice Board report.(1) It found that the young people referred to 80 YJB-backed mentoring schemes often did not want to participate in them and many of those who did failed to engage with their mentors. It also found that the programmes were more expensive than equally beneficial options, such as YJB education, training and employment schemes. Overall, the evidence is stacked against a widespread roll-out of mentoring programmes to help tackle youth crime.
The mentee
It was Gareth Harrison’s probation officer who suggested that he meet a mentor. A heroin addict at the age of 17, Gareth, now 25, is on his second probation order after committing theft. Homeless for a year – he had gone into private rented accommodation but was evicted when he could not pay – he started to shoplift when the money he received through jobseeker’s allowance was stopped because he failed to attend a required course. He has avoided prison but has spent a night in a police cell.
He first met his mentor in a coffee shop in the Bullring shopping mall. His first impression of Danny Fontaine was positive and he liked him immediately. “He was sound. He sort of listened. He didn’t judge me through what I was saying.”
He soon found that Fontaine would give him advice that he valued “instead of someone giving advice about the way they would do it”.
Now, more than six months since that first meeting, the pair meet weekly, usually in a fast-food outlet where they buy a drink and chat. They talk about what Harrison has been doing during the week, discuss any problems and decipher any letters or documents that Harrison is unable to understand – he is dyslexic and cannot read. The plan is to find a library that stays open late so they can read together.
Over the months, the pair have become more like friends than mentor and mentee.
Harrison says: “At first, if someone asks you where you are going you say you are going to see your mentor but now it’s more like going to see a mate. They have to become friends so that you can tell them important stuff and trust them.”
Harrison says that he feels comfortable being with Fontaine and that he can be himself.
“I can talk about anything,” Harrison says. “If I talk to my family or closest friends I argue, but I don’t argue with him. Because of my past I don’t go out. It’s hard to meet new people. If I tell them about the past and that I’m an ex-heroin addict they distance away from you. Danny doesn’t do that and really understands.”
Harrison also appreciates being able to contact Fontaine at any time of the day or night. “Mentors are good because you can get them 24/7. You can phone at 3am if there’s a problem. With everyone else you can’t do that.”
Harrison would encourage other people to find a mentor. “I’d recommend anyone to go for it. In a way, I’d be lost without Danny.”
The mentor
Danny Fontaine, 43, has been a mentor for two-and-a-half years and is clear about his motivation for doing so.
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