Treatment of young offenders denounced by coalition

    Groups from across the social services spectrum have come
    together to suggest alternative solutions to the heavy-handed
    approach of the government towards young offenders Natalie Valios
    investigates

    The increasingly punitive measures used by the government to
    deal with young offenders, backed by the public’s hardening
    attitude towards juvenile crime, have been denounced in a
    discussion document examining youth justice services.

    At last week’s launch, a unique collaboration between the
    Association of County Councils, the Association of Metropolitan
    Authorities, the Association of Directors of Social Services, the
    National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders and
    the Association of Chief Officers of Probation argued for
    community-based options.

    According to the report: ‘Punitive approaches are not likely to
    be vote-winners if the tax payer understands the true costs and the
    poor outcomes.’

    Conservative peer Baroness Faithfull said a history of Home
    Office research from the 1980s shows that locking up children does
    not work. ‘There has to be local authority-run secure accommodation
    for the few who need it, so they are near their homes and parents
    can be involved,’ she said.

    Secure accommodation should only be used as a last resort, when
    there is no other alternative. It should not be considered as part
    of mainstream responses to young offenders, claims the report.

    ‘Secure training centres are expensive and ineffective,’ said
    Tim Brown, secretary of the ADSS children and families
    committee.

    Mary Honeyball, general secretary at ACOP, said locking up young
    offenders doesn’t achieve what it’s meant to, because reconviction
    rates are high. There is a tremendous tendency to demonise
    children, “Ratboy” for example. This is inappropriate and wrong,’
    she said.

    More focus must be put on crime prevention policies. Brown said:
    ‘We have been less successful in developing overall strategies
    preventing children getting into trouble in the first place.’

    John Harding, chief probation officer, inner London, agreed:
    ‘Too much money has been spent on custodial settings, too little on
    crime prevention,’ he said.

    Helen Edwards, director of policy, research and development at
    NACRO, argued that prison was not the answer but a sign of failure.
    ‘We have to be prepared to invest in young people and that doesn’t
    just mean more prisons,’ she said.

    The report had to be built on in a way that genuinely offered
    people protection from crime, she added.

    The changing attitude towards juvenile justice, the introduction
    of secure training centres and more young people on remand, was
    going to make it ‘an uphill job’, claimed Brian Jones, the AMA’s
    assistant secretary for social services. Collaboration between
    social services, education, housing, youth services, the social
    security system and health authorities is of the essence. The local
    authority is seen as the co-ordinator in bringing together all
    agencies involved with young offenders.

    But public concerns and the victims of crime must not be pushed
    aside either.

    The report called for a radical re-think, including
    reconsidering the age of criminal responsibility; the role of
    prison custody for young people; and the place of courts in the
    decision-making process.

    Proposals included creating local forums to lead and co-ordinate
    local developments; setting minimum standards for the range of
    services and the time taken to decide which are necessary; ensuring
    decisions are made at administrative meetings, professionally based
    conferences or in courts.

    The report called for services to span family support, and
    supervision by probation staff, as well as increasing local
    authorities’ capacity to develop crime prevention initiatives.

    · A Future Of Youth Justice Services, available from ACC
    Publications on 0171 201 1500.

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