Scoop has an Ethical Paywall
License needed for work use Register

Gordon Campbell | Parliament TV | Parliament Today | News Video | Crime | Employers | Housing | Immigration | Legal | Local Govt. | Maori | Welfare | Unions | Youth | Search

 

Collins rearranges deck chairs on the ship of Corrections

Judith Collins rearranges deck chairs on the ship of Corrections

Judith Collins is captain of the ship called Corrections. Since she took over, the rehabilitation and reintegration services have been combined into one team; and two weeks ago, Ms Collins announced that Corrections is to employ 227 case managers to work directly with prisoners to reduce their risk of re-offending. Collins declared: “This is a major advance in the management of prisoners in New Zealand.”

There’s is a fatal flaw in this strategy. These case managers will only assist inmates into rehabilitation programmes in prison. But reintegration is a process that takes place when offenders are released – and very little is done by Corrections to assist ex-prisoners in the community.

1) Finding suitable accommodation is the biggest reintegration need faced by ex-prisoners. In Canada, where re-offending rates are much lower than in New Zealand, 60% of federal prisoners are released into half-way houses – funded by Canadian Corrections. But here, Corrections provides funding for only two half-way houses in the entire country - with a total of 28 beds. This means that less than 1% of sentenced inmates are released into supervised accommodation each year.

2) 90% of prisoners have alcohol and drug problems and 90% also have problems with literacy. The Department makes some attempt to address these in prison but the vast majority of the 20,000 people in prison each year receive no assistance whatsoever. These problems then become reintegration issues. But once inmates are released, the Department is more interested in monitoring compliance than helping ex-prisoners learn new skills. Responsibility for that is passed to agencies like PARS or the Prison Fellowship.

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

Are you getting our free newsletter?

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.

3) The Department provides so little funding to PARS or the Prison Fellowship that both have to rely on the extensive use of volunteers. As a result, New Zealand now has the highest ratio of volunteers to prisoners of any country in the world - a ploy which enables the Department to avoid paying for professional services. Corrections seems to have so little interest in what happens to inmates after they leave prison, it does not even bother to evaluate the effectiveness of reintegration services offered by these agencies. Dr David Wales, Assistant General Manager for the newly combined Rehabilitation and Reintegration team reinforces this attitude by referring to reintegration as 'ancillary services'.

4) Making matters worse, the Department undermines the Parole Board’s efforts to reintegrate high risk offenders by ignoring Section 43 (1a) of the Parole Act. This section requires the Department to provide the Board with all information relevant to the inmate’s offending - which obviously includes their history of substance abuse. Parole Board chairman Judge David Carruthers says that without this information, the Parole Board is ‘Flying Blind’ - which became the title of the critically acclaimed expose of the Corrections Department by Roger Brooking.

Conclusion: Corrections claims to have combined rehabilitation and reintegration services into one team. This is just an illusion - because the Department doesn’t really have a reintegration service. For the most part, it leaves reintegration up to other agencies and ignores the results. The result is that 52% of prisoners return to prison within five years. For those under the age of 20, the figure is 70%. The ship of Corrections is sinking on the rocks of recidivism - while the captain is busy rearranging the deck chairs.

ends

© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
 
 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines

Gordon Campbell: On How Climate Change Threatens Cricket‘s Future

Well that didn’t last long, did it? Mere days after taking on what he called the “awesome responsibility” of being Prime Minister, Christopher Luxon has started blaming everyone else and complaining that he's inherited “economic vandalism on an unprecedented scale” - which is how most of us would describe his own coalition agreements, 100-Day Plan, and backdated $3 billion handout to landlords... More


 
 
Public Housing Futures: Christmas Comes Early For Landlords

New CTU analysis of the National & ACT coalition agreement has shown the cost of returning interest deductibility to landlords is an extra $900M on top of National’s original proposal. This is because it is going to be implemented earlier and faster, including retrospective rebates from April 2023. More


Green Party: Petition To Save Oil & Gas Ban

“The new Government’s plan to expand oil and gas exploration is as dangerous as it is unscientific. Whatever you think about the new government, there is simply no mandate to trash the climate. We need to come together to stop them,” says James Shaw. More

PSA: MFAT Must Reverse Decision To Remove Te Reo

MFAT's decision to remove te reo from correspondence before new Ministers are sworn in risks undermining the important progress the public sector has made in honouring te Tiriti. "We are very disappointed in what is a backward decision - it simply seems to be a Ministry bowing to the racist rhetoric we heard on the election campaign trail," says Marcia Puru. More

 
 
 
 
 
 

LATEST HEADLINES

  • PARLIAMENT
  • POLITICS
  • REGIONAL
 
 

InfoPages News Channels


 
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.