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A new intensive supervision programme for persistent young offenders is to be rolled out across the UK from next January.

Thursday 27 February 2003 16:25

A new intensive supervision programme for persistent young offenders is to be rolled out across the UK from next January.

The six-month ISSP, first launched in summer 2001, combines intense supervision with the toughest surveillance of any community programme.

More than 4,000 persistent young offenders each year will be subject to surveillance, such as electronic tagging or voice verification as part of a programme of education

and training, offending behaviour work and one-to-one supervision.

The programme is designed as an alternative to custody for persistent young offenders.

ISSPs currently cover three-quarters of England and Wales - a total of 50 schemes covering 119 youth offending teams.

- The number of young people locked up increased by 10 per cent to 3,034 between January and April 2002, and the Youth Justice Board has warned that this trend is likely to continue unless sentencers accept the effectiveness of new community penalties such as the ISSP.

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