Showing posts with label Interserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interserve. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 November 2020

Russell on the Future

So, how did Her Majesty's Prison and Probation Service do yesterday in the Spending Review? It's a pay freeze for probation staff and £4billion over four years for 18,000 new prison places - to create jobs of course. This forced marriage really isn't working too well on any level is it? Whilst the reality sinks in, HMI Justin Russell recently gave an interview to Civil Service World:-  

Probation inspector Justin Russell on coronavirus, Transforming Rehabilitation and the Spending Review

After years of funding cuts and the looming renationalisation of outsourced probation services, Russell calls for extra funding to be “baked into the baseline” for the Spending Review

This summer, HM Inspectorate of Probation did something it had never done before: it began conducting entirely remote inspections of probation services for the first time. The change came around a year after Justin Russell was appointed to lead the inspectorate – for the first few months of which, the job was pretty much what he expected. “And then obviously, Covid happened”

When Russell speaks to CSW, the inspectorate has just published its first entirely-remote report on the North Yorkshire Youth Offending Team. It’s now inspecting several other youth-offending services, as well as thematic inspections of the impact of coronavirus on probation services. “We’ve found we can do that – we can do the focus groups and analyse the case remotely,” he says.

And HMIP has been looking at how probation services are adapting to the pandemic, having gone into six local areas over the summer to see how both public and outsourced services were coping. After examining around 60 cases in detail, Russell says “we were positive about how they reacted”.

“They've had to react at a very great pace, they've had to completely switch their operating model. So apart from a small number of high-risk people, everyone is being contacted by phone. They have had to suspend some basic services – certainly during lockdown, they weren't providing any unpaid work sentences for the courts, and they weren't able to start accredited behaviour programmes. They are now starting to be able to do those, but it's been a slow process of recovery.”

And the new arrangements have worked for some people, he says. Many of the probation staff that inspectors spoke to were happy about the arrangements, as well as service users who had a “reasonably stable home life – some of them actually, in some ways, preferred being supervised by phone because it meant I didn't have to sort out childcare or find public transport”.

But the changes have been harder for more vulnerable users, including those with mental health problems. “They definitely struggled a bit more and missed having that personal, face-to-face contact with the probation officer.”

One of the happier consequences of this that Russell has seen is that coordination between public agencies seemed to improve during lockdown. Probation services had more check-ins with police and social services to share information about call-outs they had had, and attendance at multi-agency risk panel meetings went up when they were held virtually. “So that felt like a positive thing.”

And providers are finding other ways to adapt to the pandemic, restarting services they had to cancel during lockdown, using smaller groups and online courses where they can.

But the inspectorate is also aware that the effectiveness of remote supervision in probation is not well understood. A literature review it did a couple of years ago found “there hadn't been any robust research” on the subject, Russell says. There have been no randomised trials exploring whether it provides better outcomes than face-to-face supervision, for example. “So we really didn't know whether phone supervision would be effective or not – and to be honest, we still don't know.”

But while feedback from both probation staff and service users has been “reasonably positive”, problems can arise when the two haven’t met before. “So where professionals have already met someone face to face and done the initial assessment, it’s easier to continue liaising with them over the phone; where you've never met and you’re doing the whole thing over the phone, I think people find that a bit more difficult. So that's where the gap is.”

Many probation services have tried to address this by having an initial meeting in an office before moving to remote supervision, and keeping up in-person appointments for people who have just left prison. Asked if he thinks there should be a standard policy, Russell says it’s for probation services to decide. “What we will continue to do is inspect the quality of the work they're doing, whether they do that face to face, or by telephone.” As it inspects more cases, the inspectorate will be able to build up some of the evidence it lacks on how the mode of delivery affects services, he says.

In fact, HMIP began a two-month study at the end of September on how probation services are recovering from lockdown. The national inspection is looking at six local areas and 250 cases – some that started before and others after lockdown measures were introduced – to see how well services’ planning and recovery is panning out.

“That will start to give us some insights into the quality of work that they're doing, as well as the quantity of it,” Russell says. “It's a big enough sample that we'll be able to hopefully start to get into what's the quality of work that's been done over that period. You know, recovery is a slow process. I think all the regional directors I'm talking to are saying, ‘This isn't going to happen overnight’.”

In the last couple of months, services have started increasing their face-to-face delivery, starting up unpaid work placements, and opening up behaviour programmes again. And with the courts now sitting again, new community sentences are coming through that the inspectorate will have to keep an eye on. But Russell acknowledges that the delivery of in-person services could start “going backwards a bit” now that the second wave of coronavirus has hit.

All this is forming the backdrop to services’ preparations for some massive reforms that will come into play next year when the National Probation Service regains responsibility for low and medium-risk offenders, which was handed to private Community Rehabilitation Companies in 2012. The Transforming Rehabilitation outsourcing programme is widely acknowledged to have been a failure – Russell’s predecessor, Dame Glenys Stacey, concluded last summer that it was “irredeemably flawed”.

But Russell says preparing for the transition next June is a “really big challenge for probation leaders and directors” already dealing with the consequences of the pandemic. The inspectorate will be following their progress closely and will be doing an inspection on transition planning by the end of this year.

He also warns that bringing services back under public control is no easy fix because “structural change by itself very rarely solves all of your problems – you need the resources to back it up.” Probation officers in both CRCs and the NPS have been struggling with huge caseloads due to a lack of resources, and services have suffered as staff have become more and more stretched – but HMIP’s inspection reports of CRCs have been particularly critical.

While there are signs of improvement in some areas – some CRCs have improved their performance in the most recent round of inspections – some just aren’t getting better. He says a “three-tier” probation service has emerged, “with the NPS continuing to perform okay – although it's got its own issues; two or three providers actually do reasonably okay now; and then some that are still really struggling.” Of particular concern are those in the Midlands and some of the Purple Futures partnerships, which are led by Interserve, the contracting giant that was sold last year after financial trouble threatened it with collapse.

Russell is concerned that shifting the CRCs’ massive caseloads to the public sector without a serious funding injection to hire more staff and spread the load is “not necessarily going to improve quality”.

“And you're going to potentially have issues as people are transferring over, there might also be a loss of focus during that transition process,” he adds. CRC staff moving over to the NPS must get adequate training before they take on high-risk service users.

As with most things, Russell says the success of the latest reforms rests in no small part on whether they are properly funded, noting that “the history of probation funding over the last 10, 20 years has been one of increasing cuts.” For one thing, the Ministry of Justice’s budget has not been protected under the austerity measures that began in 2010. The impact on violence in prisons has been well documented, but Russell says there have been some “big impacts” on probation too.

In fact, there has been a 40% real-terms drop in probation funding per case since 2003 – as HMIP’s submission to the Treasury for the upcoming Spending Review points out. “That's a big gap to make up going forward, and that's why it's so important that the Spending Review does start to address that gap.”

That funding is critical because when probation officers are having to supervise 70 or 80 people at a time, it doesn’t just affect staff wellbeing – although Russell notes the inspectorate has seen very high sickness rates. “It just becomes unsustainable if you're trying to keep an eye on what's happening in their lives,” he says. Things can get missed – things like if a service user changes their address, meets a new partner or moves in with someone who has children, or if the police fail to share the information about an arrest.

“In every service, we look at a sample of the cases they’re supervising and we are consistently finding the area of weakest performance is around managing the risk of harm to people's families or to the wider community,” Russell says. At private providers, fewer than half of cases are being satisfactorily supervised in relation to risk of harm. That figure is slightly lower at the NPS, but still too high.

As well as the funding issue, services are finding it hard to fill vacancies. HMIP has no nationwide data for CRCs, but found the NPS had 600 vacancies in June 2019, and was having to use agency staff to plug the gaps.

Does Russell believe ministers have grasped the enormity of the problems in front of them? “Very much so, and the HMPPS leadership certainly does as well.” He points to a £150m funding increase for probation this year, as well as a capital funding boost that he hopes will address the “pretty shocking” conditions on some premises. And HMPPS has meanwhile committed to hiring 1,000 probation-officer trainees by January.

But he stresses that the extra funding cannot be a one-off, but has to be “baked into the baseline” for the Spending Review. Not only do services have a shortfall to make up after years of cuts, he adds; the government’s pledge to reverse cuts to police forces by recruiting 20,000 more officers in three years will generate extra work “over and above just closing existing funding gaps”.

He says it’s difficult to know whether the Spending Review will deliver that critical extra funding – and adds that it’s not only probation-specific funding that matters. “It's the funding for all of the other services that they work with. There's a whole ecosystem of support that goes around probation and mental health services, drug services and support services. And all of those suffered as well over recent years.”

Homelessness is one such area, he says. HMIP published a study earlier this year showing 11,000 people leave prison into homelessness, including 3,000 higher-risk offenders. It also found the proportion of people who got called back into prison or reconvicted was twice as high for people who didn't have stable accommodation after they left prison services, “so it’s potentially a really big driver of crime and reoffending”.

“So there's a huge need for decent and stable housing for people coming out of prison, which needs to be invested in. Ten or 15 years ago, the probation service actually had its own budget to commission its own accommodation for offenders. That's gone.” Instead, it can only commission a small number of so-called “approved premises beds” for the people at highest risk, which can only accommodate people for 12 weeks.

Another “really big gap” is support for substance abuse, he says. He points to Dame Carol Black’s ongoing review for the Home Office on the misuse of illegal drugs, which has shown funding for drug treatment had plummeted, while Class-A drug deaths are at a record high.

“So it's all very well funding probation, but you also need to fund the services they refer on to, to make a big difference,” Russell says. He hopes the cross-government group on crime and reoffending – which is chaired by the prime minister and is being given evidence on these matters – is a sign things could change.

This is a subject Russell knows well, having spent a year at the University of California Berkeley earlier in his career on a fellowship looking at substance-abuse treatment programmes for offenders in the US, and what could be learned for the UK. “That was a really key year in my career, where I went from being someone with a research interest to a much broader policy interest and realised the difference the government could make in some areas,” he says.

The ideas he brought back from that led directly to the introduction of the drug testing and treatment order, a community sentence including treatment and rehabilitation for people with a record of drug-related offending, in the 1998 Criminal Justice Act. Russell was a policy adviser to then-home secretary Jack Straw at the time. “So that's very satisfying to see that translate into a direct policy initiative,” he says.

“The reason that was so seminal a year was that it sparked off that interest in evidence-driven policymaking and looking at different innovations at the front line and thinking about how you can translate that into practice – and how things roll out, and the interaction of politics and government and evidence and social-policy experts... that ended up being what I've done in my career.”

Beckie Smith

Sunday, 4 October 2020

Napo Annual Report 2019/20

The Annual Report stretches to 82 pages and I notice that the NEC met 5 times since the last report:-

"The NEC has met five times since the last annual report was written: scheduled meetings in September and November of 2019 and in March and June of 2020; and a Special NEC in July 2020. The Special NEC was to consider constitutional amendments to go to AGM in October. The NEC oversees the work of all Napo’s standing committees and networks and receives regular reports from them. Much of the business conducted by the NEC is therefore reported in other sections of the Annual Report."

Probation Negotiating Committee

1. The Committee carried one vacancy in Bands 1-3, one vacancy in Band 4 and one vacancy in Bands 5+. It has met in November, March, May July and August since the last annual report was written. The Committee would also want to thank former PNC members Esther Barton and Dino Peros for their work over previous years. 

2. The items below were discussed at meetings and incorporated regular updates by Link National Officials for their respective CRC areas. 

3. Probation Reunification update. The announcement in June this year that Interventions and Programmes would follow Sentence Management into the NPS, completed the first part of Napo’s campaign to return Probation back to full public ownership and control. 

4. Since the first announcement in May 2019 the General Secretary and National Chair have been involved in intensive negotiations on a new staff transfer and protections agreement to facilitate this major project, and after the new announcement in June 2020 the negotiations changed to accommodate the new plans. 

5. At the time of writing it is expected that there will be a CRC members’ ballot on the outcome of the negotiations in the summer. 

6. NPS Pay. The two year NPS pay deal ended in March 2020 but it became clear late last year that agreement on a Competency Based Framework model that was to provide the basis for future pay progression with effect from April 2020 would not be possible. This was through no fault of the recognised trade unions but a failure by the NPS to sufficiently resource this project. 

7. After further negotiations, the employer agreed that pay progression would be awarded to NPS staff in April 2020 and that unless the CBF was in place for a 12-month period prior to April 2021 then pay progression would also be enacted at that date. 

8. Unfortunately, the election of a new 80-seat majority Tory Government in December saw a hardening of attitude in respect of the pay remit policy and we heard the bad news that pay progression for NPS staff would be delayed. 

9. Napo were among many trade unions who had expressed concern prior to the General Election at what another Tory Government would mean for public sector pay. 

10. Obviously, the trade unions expressed outrage that our members were facing this unjust scenario and several meetings have taken place with the Director General for Probation and the Justice Minister over recent months. We have been reassured that pay progression will be paid when the 2020 pay negotiations are concluded. 

11. At the time of writing NPS Pay negotiations are at last set to resume. 

12. Pay Unity Campaign. Napo National Officials have maintained pressure on CRC owners to take positive steps to redress the imbalance between CRC and NPS pay rates, and recognise the significant recruitment and retention challenges across the whole of probation. 

13. On-Going HR Process issues, including PAYE and Pensions. Whilst further progress has been made in addressing the high number of members who continue to suffer from PAYE, pension and HR processing errors – including over and under payments. There have been intermittent problems since the last AGM. 

14. Representations on these systematic failings continue and Napo has continually raised the loss of trust and confidence in these systems with Ministers, as they must inevitably impact upon confidence in how safely staff from CRCs can be absorbed into the NPS when the CRC contracts come to an end in June 2021. 

15. CRCs Negotiating Items: 

a) Kent Surrey and Sussex CRCs/Seetec (including ex-Working Links owned CRCs) 

• Pay. After months of hard work by reps and national officials from Napo and our sister unions, SEETEC KSS CRC, made a pay offer at the turn of the year covering staff across all of their regions for 2020/2021. This follows an earlier joint pay claim and the declaration of a pay dispute which led to further talks between the parties. 

• It is fair to say that the improvement in industrial relations between senior SEETEC Management and the Unions since SEETEC took over the CRC contracts in Wales and the South West from Working Links, was a major factor in this pay offer being made. 

• SEETEC KSS CRC were the first employer to declare that they were prepared to match the current NPS pay rates. This was a major step forward in Napo’s long running campaign to achieve pay parity across both arms of the Probation service. 

b) The SEETEC offer 

• Realignment of all salary bands to the current NPS Pay bandings (if this results in less than a 3% increase for any employee, SEETEC would apply an unconsolidated payment for the % differential) 

• This proposal resulted in staff moving directly to the 2019 NPS position. Increasing the maxima of the band enabled employees at the top of the current pay band to receive an actual increase on their base pay. The employers offer meant that that the new minimum salary for any employee would be £19,977. 

• Mirroring the NPS bandings resulted in 74% of the workforce receiving an increase of 4% or above, and 52% of the workforce receiving an increase of 5% or above. 

• The offer was subsequently overwhelmingly accepted by members 

c) Interserve CRCs - pay 

• Following the 2018-19 award which was paid in February 2019 and was back dated to April 18, Napo and UNISON submitted a pay claim for 2019-20 in March 2019 for a minimum 3% increase for all Interserve CRC employees to be achieved through the payment of an annual increment on 1 April, restructuring of the pay spine and an unconsolidated payment if necessary. 

• An initial offer was rejected by 92% of Napo members and a series protracted pay talks ensued. Eventually a new offer emerged which was accepted by Napo members in July this year as follows: 

- April 2020 to November 2020 - one spine point increment. This was paid in May 2020, for all eligible staff; 

- April 2020 to November 2020 - an unconsolidated amount of £200 for those at the top spine point for their grade (This is pro-rata of the £300 full year amount taking it to December 2020);

- Removal of pay band overlap between bands 4 and 5, effective from 1 April 2020; - 5 December 2020 to June 2021 (at which point the CRC contract ends)

- NPS pay parity which will be paid in December 2020 payroll; 

- April 2021 to June 2021 (at which point the CRC contract ends) - one spine point increment to those eligible as per the NPS national agreement reached with the unions; 

- Allowances will remain unchanged. Any agreed changes with the NPS will take effect when pay parity is implemented in December. 

d) Sodexo CRCs 

• Pay. Napo and UNISON have held a number of further meetings on pay with Sodexo since the last AGM. Significant progress was made and the employer has recognised the importance of delivering pay reform in these discussions. 

• The Sodexo Pay agreement covers the six Sodexo CRCs for the years 2020/21 and 2021/22 (up to the CRC contract end). The offer was designed to modernise the pay structure so that staff will reach the top of the scale within a much shorter timeframe. 

• The main terms of the offer comprised for 2020/21 a 2.5% Non-consolidated payment for those at the top of their pay band A minimum pay increase for all other staff of 2.0%. For most this will be achieved through incremental progression however in instances where incremental progression is less than 2.0% a non-consolidated payment will be made. 

• The 2021/22 Pay Offer is a 2.5% non-consolidated payment for those at the top of their pay band 4 and a minimum pay increase for all other staff of 2.0%. For most this will be achieved through incremental progression however in instances where incremental progression is less than 2.0% a nonconsolidated payment will be made. 

e) Durham Tees Valley CRC 

• Pay. The second instalment of the two year pay agreement reached with Durham Tees Valley CRC has been enacted 

• This comprised a deal for 2020/21 and 2021/22 covering the remaining 15 months to contract end in June 2021. The pay deal provides a guaranteed minimum pay award of 6%, payable from April 2020 and assimilation onto the NPS pay scales. This means that the new pay scales will significantly reduce the time to progress through each pay band and the value of progression will be larger than in the current pay structure. Also, the offer guarantees each member of staff a minimum increase of 6% and some staff will receive a greater increase. As this offer met Napo’s demand, that the pay scales at DTV CRC are aligned to the NPS, Napo recommended acceptance of the pay offer. As a result Napo members voted overwhelmingly to accept the offer. The result of the ballot was 92% accept and 8% reject with a 50% turnout. 

f) MTC – London and Thames Valley 

• Pay. Whilst MTC have proposed a series of initiatives to help recruit and retain more staff across London and Thames Valley, where the problem continues to undermine workloads and performance, progress on taking forward the issue of pay beyond incremental progression has been very slow. 

• At the time of writing it was hoped that the employer would soon be in a position to make a realistic pay offer to the unions but the business case was awaiting central clearance. 

g) RRP: Staffordshire West Midlands and Derby, Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire & Rutland 

• Pay. At the time of writing the company CEO is hoping to be in a position to make a formal pay offer to the unions once the business case has been cleared. The pay offer is only from October 2020 onwards but is a better position than was originally offered. Napo are working with RRP to push the MoJ into signing off the proposal as soon as possible. 

h) WWM CRC: Warwickshire West Mercia 

• Pay. WWM have only been able to make incremental progression payments and have been slow to address the wider issues of excessive workloads and staff shortages. At the time of writing a business case has been made for the opening of formal pay talks in September when the CRC believes it may be in a position to offer an increase for the last 6 months of their contract running from January 2021 until June. 

16. National NPS JNC and TU Engagement Meetings 

a) Privatisation of NPS Approved Premises - Double Waking Night Cover 

• Napo has continually raised the issues arising from the privatisation of DWNC at senior levels of the NPS and with Ministers. The results of a review of the project is expected later this year and we have made it clear that we do not believe that these contracts should be extended. 

• Regular reports on the impact of these flawed arrangements have been made to the PNC by the National Link Officer Siobhan Foreman (Vice-Chair) on which valuable feedback has been provided by PNC members. 

b) Approved Premises – Transition of Approved Premises to Community Interventions 

Regular reports on the progress of this project have been made to the PNC by the National Link Officer Siobhan Foreman (Vice-Chair) on which valuable feedback has been provided by PNC members. 

c) AP Staff Rota 

Trade unions have regularly raised issues around the impact of the national rota and this is now under review at the AP TU meetings. 

d) AP Pay Issues Update 

The unions have raised the issues around inconsistencies with pay in particular pay- protection, toil, overtime, unsocial hours and SSCL errors. 

e) National Facility time agreement update 

• The NPS presented an offer calculated on the basis of Cabinet Office rules i.e. the entitlement to facilities is a proportion of the pay bill. We have not yet accepted this and continue to discuss the actual allocation of time needed to support the employer in their reform programme. 

• The emergency measures introduced as a result of C-19 has meant that Napo has successfully sought additional time for our representatives to undertake Health and Safety duties. 

• Once circumstances allow it is intended to resume the negotiations and it is hoped that the introduction of a new Regional structure within the NPS will facilitate these exchanges. The changes to branch structure will further support negotiations at regional level. 

f) Offender Management in Custody 

• This has been a complex and difficult issue and the following summary reports the position that has been reached at the time of writing. 

The consultation process. Napo have been consulted by the employer on the plans to implement OMiC. This is a consultation not a negotiation and although we can raise concerns and make suggestions and requests, we are not in a position to agree (or fail to agree) the plans. We are aware that many members have significant concerns over the fundamental design of OMiC and we have communicated these concerns. 

The implementation process. There are Divisional Implementation Boards (DiBs) which are made up of both prison and probation representatives. These boards have now all submitted their OMiC implementation plans and Napo reps should have been consulted on this locally via the NPS JCC (Joint Consultative Committee) for the division/region. 

The Women’s Estate. The model for the Women’s Estate varies in that the allocation of resource is based on complexity of need rather than risk. In the most complex cases (around 19% of the total) the POM will carry out the key work rather than having a separate keyworker allocated. This, it is hoped, will aid continuity and relationship building. 

The contracted out estate. These are the privately run prisons and the original plan was to require (via the contracting process) them to have an SPO who holds a Probation Qualification but not to require these prisons to have Qualified Probation Officers holding cases as POMs. More work was undertaken on the plans for the contracted out estate following representations that Napo and the NPS senior leaders have made about this. Napo’s position is that Offender Management should only be done by someone who has the appropriate skills and qualification for the role they are carrying out and who are offered the appropriate support and remuneration for doing so. 

• The current position is that there will be POMs with a Probation qualification in each contracted out prison and they will either hold high risk cases or oversee the work done on these cases using the Case Management Support model. This does not necessarily have to be a member of NPS staff however it is reported that most of the private prisons have requested a staff loan/secondment arrangement from the NPS which will have a further impact on staffing. 

Workloads for SPOs and POs working in OMiC 

The current method for looking at SPO workload is on a ratio basis. In community teams this is 1:10 FTE (full time equivalent). Under the OMiC model it will be up to 1:14 FTE. This means that some prison SPOs will have a high workload in terms of team members reporting to them in addition to the other tasks they need to undertake in their role. Napo have made representations on this, as well as the fact that the SPOs will be managing a team made up of staff from differing employers who will have different terms and conditions and potentially differing expectations in terms of line management. We will continue to press the employer on these issues and a review is underway. 

• The introduction of EDMs during the Covid-19 crisis highlighted the issues relating to NPS SPOs being line managed by Prison Governors. There have been reported tensions between expectations of prisons and NPS and the plans for line management have not been fully implemented as yet. We continue to use every opportunity to press HMPPS to rethink this part of the model. 

IT solutions. There is a new IT based allocation system for use in prisons. This is to assist with the allocation of cases to either Prison staff OMs or NPS OMs within the team. The tool has been tested with some users and further work and testing will be carried out. Napo have asked that this tool is properly tested for AT compliance by end users before it is rolled out. We have also asked if an aspect of workload measurement can be built in to further assist the SPO will allocation decisions and this is in progress. Further work is being done on digital tools for the project and we are being consulted on them. 

g) Workloads 

• Workloads remain a critical issue across probation. It is hoped that the reunification of the service will allow for a wholesale review of the workload measurement and management process and the mis-match between demand and staffing levels in both CRCs (where they have not recovered from often cutting staff at the start of contracts) and the NPS (where they have not recruited enough POs after under-estimating how much work would remain in the NPS at the time of the original staff split). 

• Current data is still being gathered from CRCs, but at time writing there is a 23% + vacancy rate for POs across the NPS. Napo’s work in the wider reunification campaign has featured the fact that staff routinely report a normal case load allocation that places them at 130-140% on the workload measurement tool. This is dangerous and unsustainable. 

• Napo have also issued guidance to branches and members about how to protect themselves from excessive workload, including how to serve a foreseeability notice on their employer ahead of likely injury. 

• PNC has also focused much discussion on the particular pressures that increased workload and excessive additional HR burdens have placed on SPOs in CRCs and especially the NPS. Overloading SPOs creates wider problems – mistakes occur that stall HR processes; local employee relations become tense, reducing engagement and productivity levels; staff feel unsupported or isolated so become more prone to mistakes; and higher than expected sickness amongst SPOs has a disproportionate multiplying factor on all the other challenges. 

h) Serious Further Offence (SFO) procedures

 • There continue to be a number of high profile (as well as less high profile) SFOs coming to light. Napo has supported members who have been involved in resulting processes such as capability and disciplinary as well as those called to give evidence in Coroner’s Courts. HMPPS has consulted on both updates to SFO investigation and reporting guidance (making this more streamlined and the report more of a narrative than tick box as well as updating disclosure guidance) and updated guidance to support managers who, as a result of information that comes to light in an SFO process, need to consider taking action using either capability or disciplinary processes. 

• Throughout these consultations we have successfully argued for the consideration of workloads and have ensured that managers are always prompted to consider ‘no action necessary’ as an outcome. SFO investigations are necessary to ensure that organisations learn from these tragic events. We support all efforts to do this, especially where lessons can be learned by the organisation(s) involved however we will use whatever steps necessary to protect members from being unfairly scape-goated for organisational and systemic failings.

Saturday, 22 August 2020

Transfer Process Begins

Yesterday's Napo bulletin confirms that a Staff Transfer Agreement is close to being concluded for CRC staff and as a consequence there is likely to be considerable anxiety and concern. As with the 2014 process, I suspect it would be beneficial and supportive if information was shared here. 

Probation Reunification 

Update – Staff assignment process underway. CRC members ballot to take place soon on National Transfer Agreement

Whilst Napo members have welcomed the announcement of the Government U-turn on the future of the Probation Service, your union has worked hard to try and tackle the many operational and HR challenges that have arisen following this decision.

A New Staff Transfer and Protections Agreement

Napo and our sister unions have almost concluded formal negotiations on a new Staff Transfer and Protections Agreement (STAP), and will be reporting the outcomes to our respective CRC members very soon. This process will also include the launch of a ballot for members currently employed by the Community Rehabilitation Companies on whether to accept the agreement. The ballot will only be open to members of a trade union and it’s never been so important for CRC staff to consider signing up to Napo membership.

Meanwhile, as part of the work to assist CRCs to exit their contracts next June and ensure sufficient lead in time for the Probation reunification process, a staff assignment scheme is now underway. Essentially, this will identify those current CRC staff whom it is expected will transfer to either:
  • the National Probation Service (NPS), or
  • a dynamic framework provider who will offer support services for Intervention and Programmes to be commissioned by the NPS.
CRCs have been asked to complete an indicative staff assignment by the end of September.

What this means for CRC staff

During or soon after the week commencing Tuesday 25 August 2020, CRC staff will receive a letter from their CRC Director. This will explain their indicative role assignment to the NPS or the dynamic framework.

If individual staff disagree with this indicative assignment, they will have 15 working days from the date of the letter to appeal.

What information is being used for role assignment?

Your CRC employer’s intranet has information on role assignment and the appeals process. It is important to note that the assignment process is not something that is negotiated with the Trade Unions so although HMPPS has shared it with us it is not something that was, or could be, agreed by Napo. Please see the paragraph below ‘Mechanism of Transfer’ which explains this in more detail. In summary the following will be used for staff assignment:
  • HMPPS guidance – the updated HMPPS Role Assignment Guidance (August 2020) We have attached this for reference, CLICK HERE
  • Your current substantive post - if a staff member is providing temporary cover in another role or on secondment, the role assignment will be based on your substantive post,
  • Your job description
Support for Napo members involved in the assignment appeal process

It is likely that the majority of CRC staff will find the assignment process to be straightforward, but Napo will seek to support individual CRC members through any appeal process. If members wish to appeal they should do so within the timescale and contact their local Napo representative. We are requesting additional time from CRC employers for our Branch reps to engage in this work, which will be supported by our Napo National Officials where required.

Further material on the outcome of the national negotiations with HMPPS and planning for the CRC members ballot are currently being prepared. These will be the subject of a recommendation from Napo’s Probation Negotiating Committee who will meet soon and whose decision will be relayed to members as part of the ballot process.

The mechanism of transfer

The mechanism for transfer from a CRC to the NPS is a statutory staff transfer scheme as this is a reorganisation of public services involving a public sector employer. This is the same as the mechanism of transfer used for the TR project in 2014. The mechanism of transfer from a CRC to a Dynamic Framework provider is TUPE as no public sector employer is involved. This is a complex area of law but recent caselaw examples are the basis for the decision by HMPPS that this should be the case. The STAP will apply to all transfers but there will be a separate agreement for those staff transferring to the NPS (including those former CRC staff from Wales who transferred into the NPS last December). This includes harmonisation to NPS terms and conditions including NPS pay scales. Those transferring to the Dynamic Framework will have their CRC terms and conditions protected.

Maintaining your Napo membership

Irrespective of whether you eventually transfer to the NPS or a dynamic framework provider, it's vital that you make the switch for the payment of your Napo subscriptions by Direct Debit as the previous ‘Check Off’ arrangements carried out by your employer will cease at the date of transfer.

In order to assist the Napo membership team in managing our data base please do not delay in making that switch and consider doing so as soon as possible. You do not have to wait until your assignment is known, and you will also see that your subscriptions will reduce when you do so. Please click here to make that change!

Please look out for more information on Probation reunification and the many other issues that impact on your terms and conditions, and consider taking part in your local Napo Branch meeting.

Ian Lawrence General Secretary
Katie Lomas National Chair

--oo00oo--

Thanks go to the reader for forwarding the following from Interserve:-

20th August 2020

Dear colleague,

As you will be aware, as part of our transition process we need to understand which staff will go where in the new unified model, and in order to get this moving the Authority (the Ministry of Justice) have requested that we, along with all current CRC Providers, undertake a formal assignment process. This includes all directly employed and supply chain staff, and will determine which colleagues are likely to transfer either to the NPS or to a dynamic framework provider or those that are unlikely to transfer (for which a clear rationale will be provided).

We have been requested to complete the assignment activity by the end of September after which the Authority will work closely with us to finalise and conclude the assignment process. We anticipate this finalisation activity will take place during October.

The plan therefore is that over the next couple of months, we will work internally with each of the CRCs through the local senior managers to ensure assignment activity is undertaken according to the methodology set out by the Authority. When this is done, you will receive written confirmation of an indicative assignment outcome and at this point it will give you just that, the assignment outcome. We will be working with the Authority to understand details such as locations, line management etc as the next stage that follows on. I appreciate that for many staff, it is this layer of detail that will be of more significance that the indicative assignment outcome, but we need to work through the stages incrementally.

You will have a right of appeal against the indicative assignment outcome and details of the appeal process will be outlined in the outcome letter. Please note, although we undertake the assignment process ourselves using the Authority methodology and guidance, the Authority can still challenge our decisions, and therefore the final outcome of the assignment is conditional on there being no justifiable challenges by the Authority on the assignment of individuals. This is why it is termed an ‘indicative’ outcome at this stage. Should this be the case, we will get in touch with you promptly with a view to resolve the issue in an effective and timely manner.

Please be assured that throughout the process, we will work with you to address any concerns or queries you have. If you have any questions regarding this letter, then please contact Daniella Sinagoga via e mail. For any general queries please email HR Operations via email hr.operations@interserve.com

This is the beginning of a number of communications with you over the coming months on the transition and assignment process, and we are working through the various details to be able to share them with you properly and in a timely way as the changes progress.

Kind Regards

Kim Thornden-Edwards

Director of Justice
Interserve

Friday, 3 July 2020

Latest From Napo 217

Here we have an edited version of the latest Napo bulletin posted out this evening:-

CRCs have an important role to play in the transition process

The announcement on June 13th that the Probation service is to be fully reunified by June next year has understandably seen some mixed reactions from the CRC owners. Napo’s early engagement with senior CRC leaders has nevertheless been positive in terms of a mutual understanding that the uncertainties amongst CRC staff need to be addressed quickly.

In previous mail outs we have explained our negotiating priorities, one of which is the need to get early assurances from Ministers that all CRC staff who are involved in the delivery and management of Probation services should receive an offer of employment in the NPS upon transfer in 2021.

This issue, along with the need to finalise the new Staff Transfer and Protections Agreement prior to a members' ballot has been the subject of extensive discussions between your senior negotiators and the NPS/HMPPS. We will bring you more news as soon as we can.

Meanwhile here is a round-up of some of the discussions that have been taking place across the CRC estate

Kent Surrey and Sussex CRCs/Seetec (including ex-Working Links owned CRCs)

Wales Having gone through the transition of sentence management into the NPS Cymru branch are well placed to advise on the potential problems that lie ahead for the rest of England. SEETEC for their part have moved quickly to engage with the unions on the steps that will need to be put in place for the transition process as well as their emerging plans for recovery following the C-19 Lockdown. This has led to some constructive early engagement across both arms of the expanded KSS CRC which also covers Wales and the South West regions. Our new National Official lead Annoesjka Valent has wasted no time in establishing engagement with the employer and support for our local Napo reps.


Interserve CRCs

Napo Interserve reps have been involved in pay negotiations and at the time of writing the unions await some final clarification on a pay offer and will be consulting with members very soon. Since lockdown Napo has been meeting more frequently with the employer and National Official Sarah Friday reports that significant progress has been made on a number of issues including annual leave carry over and paid special leave for staff impacted by the C-19 pandemic and individual risk assessments.


Sodexo CRCs

Business Recovery Plans: Sodexo in common with other CRCs has confirmed to Napo that they will not be operating UPW without first consulting the unions and having in place a fully formed plan that maintains staff health and wellbeing and the safety of Service users and Beneficiaries. Acting assistant GS Ranjit Singh reports that the company has given a commitment that as the organisation moves to develop a whole business recovery plan it will involve national trade union representatives and consultation with local reps at an early stage. A pay offer covering two years has recently been overwhelmingly accepted by Napo members.

Durham Tees Valley CRC

Again good progress has been reported on the employer’s approach to staff well-being and support from the employers business partners to staff. DTV CRC has made an early commitment to meet regularly with the unions to discuss their exit plan from the EDM. A pay deal covering 2020/21 and 2021/22 was recently overwhelmingly accepted by members. This, and the earlier settlements across SEETEC and Sodexo has raised the stakes in terms of yet to be concluded pay negotiations with other CRC providers. 


MTC – London and Thames Valley CRCs

Early engagement has taken place with senior MTC management on their plans for recovering unpaid work services in the first instance and wider operations involving a gradual increase in face to face supervision. Meetings are also underway to look at the considerable challenges posed by the transition of services and staff into the NPS next year. Following some initial difficulties there has recently been constructive dialogue on how the parties can move forward on a partnership basis to the tasks ahead of us.  Talks on pay are also expected to commence again very soon and Napo has made our aims very clear in this respect.


RRP CRCs: Staffordshire West Midlands and East Midlands

Encouraging progress on recovery planning has been reported by National Official Tania Bassett, but Pay talks with RRP got off to a very bad start. Following an intervention by Ian Lawrence General Secretary who wrote to the RRP Board to express Napo’s disappointment, pay negotiations have recently resumed and more news from the employer is expected soon.

Warwickshire West Mercia CRC

A similar position has been reported in terms of engagement with the employer and Pay talks are due to commence soon after a long delay, which Napo has told the employer is simply unacceptable.


Time for Napo H&S Reps to help the recovery process

Following a personal commitment from Probation Director General Amy Rees to the General Secretary that additional time should be granted to union representatives involved in the recovery discussions with NPS Divisions, Napo has forwarded the names of existing Health and Safety reps as well as a welcome number of new reps who have come through the excellent training organised by Sarah Friday.

We need union collaboration on Health and Safety

Our National Officials are also in touch with CRC owners to encourage them to mirror these arrangements. Ian Lawrence says: ‘I am greatly encouraged by the enthusiasm being shown by our vital network of local safety reps who are stepping forward to help secure the safety of staff in the recovery process. I should also make it clear that I expect a collaborative approach to be taken between the recognised unions in this respect and that Napo has an important role to play as we look to combine our resources across all employers.’


Napo HQ

Thursday, 4 June 2020

Latest From Napo 212

Here we have the latest Napo mailout sent yesterday evening:-

Probation Programme developments

Last week’s news that the Justice Minister had ordered the suspension of the proposed Probation Provider bid process until further notice, has obviously caused a number of questions to be raised with us by members. We met today with Probation Programme leads and understand that a further update on the PDP competition and the wider reform programme can be expected this month.


The pause of the PDP competition provides the unions with another opportunity to again set out our case to the Prisons and Probation Minister Lucy Frazer, that Interventions and Programme work should follow the transfer of Sentence Management functions into the NPS which is still scheduled to take place in June next year. Meanwhile, we want to reassure members that negotiations with HMPPS continue on a new Framework Agreement to underpin the move of staff to new arrangements. It is hoped that these will conclude some time over the summer. We await further developments and will be in touch again with members as soon as possible.

News from the CRCs

MTC

Early engagement has taken place with senior MTC management on their plans for recovering unpaid work services in the first instance and wider operations involving a gradual increase in face to face supervision.

Following an extremely productive first meeting the trade unions were very concerned this week at the apparent gap in communications that have emerged since then, in terms of the Company racing ahead to try and get UPW projects underway despite advice to the contrary from their contracting authority HMPPS.

Napo have made our disappointment very clear and we await sight of the plans and, alongside our sister unions, are insisting that a thorough and transparent risk process must be conducted on each and every plan.

It is clear that a number of MTC leads are doing their best to ensure that trade unions are properly consulted and nobody doubts the veracity of that commitment. Unfortunately, the company has some way to go to in demonstrating a sufficiently joined up approach in this respect and we hope to reach a better level of understanding going forward.

SEETEC Kent Surrey Sussex CRC

In marked contrast, SEETEC KSS CRC have worked extremely hard to ensure that managers and unions are fully sighted on their emerging plans for recovery. This has led to some constructive early engagement across both arms of the expanded KSSCRC which also covers Wales and the South West regions.

Detailed talks will follow on their emerging recovery plans and this represents further evidence of the huge improvement in industrial relations that has been jointly achieved since SEETEC KSS CRC took over the contract held by the failed Working Links CRC.

Sodexo

Sodexo has confirmed to Napo that they will not be operating UPW without first consulting the unions and having in place a fully formed plan that maintains staff health and wellbeing and the safety of Service users and Beneficiaries. Moreover, they have given a commitment that as the organisation moves to develop a whole business recovery plan it will involve national Trade Union representative and consultation with local reps at an early stage.

RRP

We have had initial discussion about UPW and its restart. We are due another meeting on 4th June to look into it in more detail. They have committed to engaging with the unions although their track record of doing so has been hit and miss.

WWM

The CEO has committed to fully engage with TUs in both risk assessing workplaces and UPW. There huge issues in the area of clients making their own way to site due to a lack of public transport to many of the placements. However, due to the rurality the CRC also has access to large open spaces for placements. They are in the process of risk assessing workplaces to enable staff to go into the office to begin the process of collating staff and clients that are able to attend UPW.

Interserve

We have had some preliminary discussions around Interserve’s recovery programme – but these discussions begin in earnest at a Covid19 Interserve JNCC which takes place tomorrow (03 06 20). Early day discussions around the Interserve recovery period have centred around UPW (where there is a push coming from HMPPS level to get this service going before other areas of CRC work).

We haven’t as yet had any discussion at national level with Interserve as regards generic Covid19 risk assessments. But it is anticipated that these talks will begin very soon.

Once these generic risk assessments are agreed, they will then be adapted as necessary for each individual workplace. Napo safety reps have a legal right to be involved in this process and this is recognised by Interserve. The role of the Napo rep is important as each workplace is different and local knowledge is essential in relation to enabling a ‘Covid secure’ workplace.

In connection with this, Napo Interserve reps took part in a Napo Covid19 health and safety seminar last week and are therefore up to speed with relevant health and safety legislation and employment law in relation to Covid19 - and they will be given help and assistance where necessary from national level.

Napo are unique amongst the Interserve probation unions in having local reps in each of the Interserve CRCs. But there are many workplaces in each CRC and it is going to be very difficult for the reps to be able to cover them all. Therefore, the Napo Interserve reps will need your help and assistance with this. In relation to this please look out for Napo comms in the very near future as regards recruitment of Napo Covid Contacts - people to be our eyes and ears re Covid related issues in each workplace.

On a slightly different note ….there have been difficulties throughout this crisis period of decisions relating to some issues connected with the Covid19 crisis (for example in relation to parental leave and carry-over of annual leave) being taken ‘higher up’ in Interserve– which we are then being told can’t be changed when they reach us at JNCC level. This detracts from our right to consultation as a recognised trade union - and in relation to health and safety related may be a breach of our legal right to consultation. We have raised problems around this many times - and will continue to do so.

Napo HQ

Saturday, 18 April 2020

Latest From Napo 208

The following Bulletin 12 was sent to members late yesterday and can be found on the website:- 

Napo maintains pressure on CRC pay

Over the last few months Napo negotiators have achieved some important breakthroughs in our longstanding campaign to seek pay parity for our members employed in the Community Rehabilitation Companies. This has been a difficult task to say the least, and the levels of engagement between CRC employers and the unions have seen a mixture of positive outcomes alongside some very disappointing responses.

Below is a summary outlining what has been achieved so far:

SEETEC

SEETEC KSS CRC eventually made a pay offer at the turn of the year covering staff across all of their regions for 2020/2021. The offer followed a marked improvement in industrial relations between senior SEETEC Management and the unions and was a major factor in the offer being possible. This was in stark contrast to the attitudes and practices that were demonstrated by Working Links when they operated in the CRC areas that SEETEC took over in February 2019.

SEETEC KSS CRC were the first employer to declare that they were prepared to match the current NPS pay rates; a signal breakthrough for Napo in our long running campaigns to achieve pay parity across both arms of the Probation service. The offer tacitly recognised the need to motivate and retain existing staff and also make the company more attractive to potential employees. Indeed, within days of the pay offer becoming public, Napo learned of a number of employees from a neighbouring CRC leaving to take on better paid jobs with Seetec. General Secretary Ian Lawrence adds: “This should serve as a serious warning to all of Seetecs competitors or any would be bidders for new Probation Contracts.”

Union members subsequently voted by a huge majority to agree to the realignment of all salary bands to the current NPS Pay Scales. This resulted in 74% of the workforce receiving an increase of 4% or above, and 52% of the workforce receiving an increase of 5% or above.

While this settlement brought the pay dispute to a welcome end, the unions have reserved the right to make further representations if pay developments elsewhere warrant this.

Durham Tess Valley CRC.

The DTV CRC pay deal for 2020/21 and 2021/22 covers the remaining 15 months to contract end in June 2021, the pay deal provides a guaranteed minimum pay award of 6%, payable from April 2020 and assimilation onto the NPS pay scales. This means that the new pay scales will significantly reduce the time to progress through each pay band and the value of progression will be larger than in the current pay structure. Also, the offer guarantees each member of staff a minimum increase of 6% and some staff will receive a greater increase.

As this offer met our demand that the pay scales at DTV CRC are aligned to the NPS. Napo recommended acceptance of the pay offer and as a consequence Napo members voted overwhelmingly to accept the offer. The result of the ballot was 92% accept and 8% reject with a 50% turnout.

Sodexo

The Sodexo Pay Offer covers the six Sodexo CRCs (Northumbria, Cumbria & Lancashire, South Yorkshire, Essex, BeNCH and Norfolk & Suffolk). The pay offer covers the years 2020/21 and 2021/22 (contract end). This offer is for a two year pay deal and is being made following the work undertaken in previous years to modernise the pay structure so staff will reach the top of the scale within a much shorter timeframe.

The main terms of the offer are below:

2020/21 Pay Offer
2.5% Non-consolidated payment for those at the top of their pay band
A minimum pay increase for all other staff of 2.0%. For most this will be achieved through incremental progression however in instances where incremental progression is less than 2.0% a non-consolidated payment will be made.

2021/22 Pay Offer
2.5% Non-consolidated payment for those at the top of their pay band
A minimum pay increase for all other staff of 2.0%. For most this will be achieved through incremental progression however in instances where incremental progression is less than 2.0% a non-consolidated payment will be made.

Despite not meeting all the unions’ aspirations Napo and UNISON believe that this is the best deal achievable by negotiation taking into account the unique circumstances we find ourselves in because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Therefore, the unions did not make a recommendation to members and it is up to the members to decide. A ballot on the offer has been initiated and will conclude on the 27 April and members will decide to accept or reject the offer.

MTC

Pay talks commenced in February. The first session since the imposition of a pay award last year backdated to April 2019 which saw Staff moved up one spinal point and a non-consolidated payment of 1%, staff at the top of their scale received a 2% payment. The back pay element of the agreement was only relevant to basic pay not overtime or allowances.

The theme of disappointment continued as MTC declared that their ability fund a pay award for 2020/21 was challenging. Napo stated that if MTC want to invest in people, then they have to pay a going wage, otherwise this would impact on attrition rates in their CRCs in London and Thames Valley. It was noted that one of MTC competitors had put out a pay offer to match NPS pay banding. Napo also said that if MTC were among potential bidders for new contracts, the employer needed to do much better on pay.

Interserve

The unions have submitted our claim (CLICK HERE) and employer has provided us with pay data, but they haven't done the work to cost our claim. For this reason a meeting to discuss the claim was postponed from this week. It will now take place in the coming week.

WWM

Pay talks are still delayed and the unions are pressing for engagement to take place soon, but the unions have submitted the joint pay claim referenced below. A further update will follow once there is more news to report.

RRP

Pay discussions have got underway after a long delay, but have not got off to a good start with the employer claiming that the company are unable to fund an additional pay award beyond the cost of annual increments .

Napo and our sister unions are now consulting with members to test their views on a range of responses, but the next step will probably be an approach to the RRP Board to express members’ disappointment. Napo will also point out that if RRP see themselves as serious potential bidders for the intended Intervention and Programme Contracts from June 2020 they will be lagging seriously behind their likely competitors.

Wednesday, 26 February 2020

CRCs Show Contempt

As the MoJ continues with its plan to issue new contracts to privateers, thanks go to the reader for recently giving a couple of examples of the contempt being shown for poor inspection reports by some CRCs. 

From HM Probation Inspectorate Northumbria CRC Action Plan

7. The Northumbria CRC should provide sufficient private interview space to allow all structured interventions and sensitive discussions to take place confidentially.

Reply: Northumbria CRC does not agree with this recommendation. Over the contract length, it has undertaken retrospective re-design in all of its service user facing buildings. This has included the creation of private interview space in each office. It is satisfied that the current estate provides sufficient private interview space to allow all structured interventions and sensitive discussions to take place confidentially. This continues to be monitored directly with its staffing group and through service user feedback. As the current contracts will terminate in eighteen-months Northumbria CRC will not make any further modifications to its estate over and above regular building maintenance.

Any activity in relation to the creation of additional private interview space and on-going estates requirements will be undertaken through the established “Estates Transition Sub-group” as part of transition arrangements. Northumbria CRC welcomes on-going observation from its Contract Management Team across the estate to highlight any concerns or issues in line with the existing contract.

Or...Hampshire and Isle of Wight CRC Action Plan

1. [HIOW should} Reconsider the ratio of senior case managers to case managers holding cases in the context of findings around the quality of service.

Reply: Due to operational and affordability reasons the recommendation to reconsider the ratio is not agreed. The ratio of Senior Case Managers to Case Managers (SCM/CM)is based on the operating model and the resulting number of SCMs required to manage SCM cases as defined by iBAT (A case allocation tool) This is sufficient for the number of SCM cases within HIOW.

4. [HIOW should] Use quality management systems to drive the delivery of high-quality work as defined by HM Inspectorate standards.

Reply: This recommendation is Not Agreed as HIOW CRC believes that the Interserve Quality Management Framework (IQMF) already reflects defined HMIP Standards  for the following reasons: 

The IQAM model for Quality Assurance operating in HIOW CRC is designed to enable continuous improvement in practice. The model’s governance framework ensures ongoing review of HMI standards and operates via a change control process to update audit and monitoring requirements as appropriate. The model has MOJ endorsement for use as our QA approach and is supported via agreement through contract management channels. IQAM is also undergoing comparison with MOJ operational assurance activity to ensure consistency. Exercises to review IQAM outcomes with HMIP outcomes have been undertaken and reflect consistency. Activities within IQAM are undertaken to assess against all elements of Domain 1, 2 and 3 of the HMI standards and this is achieved via a mixed model of QA activities including: pre-inspection programmes, audit, interview, observation and policy/guidance reviews. Our reporting processes enable the outcomes of QA activity to be reported thematically and at individual through to CRC/Pan CRC level. IQAM by content and approach is very much focused and aligned to the HMI Standards.

Other examples are available here.

So this is where I don't understand the point of having an Inspectorate paid for by the public purse, only for those who have been inspected (also paid for by the public purse) to (1) deny what the inspectors have found, (2) insist they are *not* in-the wrong &/or (3) refuse to make any changes because the contract terminates in 18 months.

Fuck the 'service users' - fuck the inspectorate - we'll do what we want - we'll pocket what we want - who will stop us? The Perfect Storm feeds itself.

Anon

Sunday, 16 February 2020

Pick of the Week 58

So much evidence, so many testimonies, a tragedy of errors; it should surely be a piece of piss for unions representing staff to address these issues? Staff are clearly at breaking point but too scared to stand up & say so, hence they are effectively enabling the shitshow to continue. If Probation staff blew the whistle it would all collapse, wouldn't it? That's not to blame staff. 

Whistle-blowing isn't an easy thing to do. I know from experience. But does make things change. And it seem that there are plenty of staff in shit situations. I'm a union steward (not NAPO), and can assure you that staff are all encouraged to speak out by me. But you can't force folk and as you say they are scared of repercussions. Very sad but true.

*****
What's a "parole officer"? Once again the media can't even get our job title correct let alone understand what we do. I shouldn't be surprised as it's not the first time and won't be the last but when Buckland went on the Today programme to stand up this reactionary knee jerk crowd pleasing bollocks he mentioned the importance of the role of every agency by name except, you guessed it, Probation! I remain heartily sick of being ignored and undervalued for my role in protecting the public by helping people change but sadly, not surprised.

*****
The Guardian offers one perspective, and one perspective only. Never liked the paper and never will. When you deal with criminals of any calibre there is no fail safe way to ensure they will never offend again. Mix and match who you like in prisons and the results are the same. You either keep your head down, and get on with your lives or you entangle yourself further into criminality. Most will give up through age and the usual social and environmental factors, and others are so far gone they enjoy and revel in what they do, it gives them satisfaction. This is the conundrum we face, but until the CJS gets a grip on itself not much is going to change. Old lag, reformed.

*****
It will always be a battle, and wearying: the really depressing thing is that from the time I started in Probation way back in the last century, we (practitioners, academics, progressives) seem to have been losing ground. I formed a view a long while back that when UK looked to Europe for influence on its criminal justice policy, things got a bit better, and when we looked to the US, things got worse. So that wearying fight looks even more desperate now.

*****
There's always reforms and policy changes in the CJS. But they're never accompanied with any explanation of how they're intended to advance the system. They're reactionary, politically motivated and short sighted. I can totally understand why people call for longer prison sentences, and an end to automatic release at the halfway mark. It should be remembered however that under the old two thirds system that many prisoners were released on parole having served much less then half their sentence, and if released after two thirds they were not subject to supervision.


Just making sentences longer changes what? If someone's sick and admitted to hospital for a week and receives no treatment, then they're still likely to be sick when they're discharged. Simply saying that they are now going to spend two weeks in hospital without any treatment just means they stay in hospital longer, but still get discharged with the same issues. Sometimes I wonder if the CJS is a too valuable political tool for politicians to really want to fix it.

*****
It's been announced that Interserve are not bidding for UPW/Interventions in the new round of tenders. Nothing on google as of yet but it has been announced to staff. Interesting times ahead.

*****
Probation Officers are using out of date risk assessment tools to ascertain risk and in my case, release was not supported by 3 probation officers including a senior one. This was not because of any serious or imminent risk of serious harm to the public but perceived and wrongly forecast risk of psychological harm to CJS professionals. The PB saw right through it and ripped all three probation officers to shreds. I'm very pleased that one resigned as an OS in HMP Downview shortly after, stating stress.


The Parole Board told probation staff that their evidence was not credible and that they could not be believed although they had conspired, and I don't use that word lightly, with the prison psychologist to get their stories straight and song from the same hymn sheet about not recommending release. The PB deemed my recall to prison for daring to tweet about how awful NPS had become, to be unlawful and ordered immediate release.


For the most part probation officers are decent, kind and properly trained but the cuts and mass exodus has left the service broken and in tatters. Unless and until there is root and branch reform of the way probation service operates, staff will continue to be overstretched and people will be recalled unlawfully and cases seriously mismanaged. Probation workers should be subject to the same scrutiny and accountability as all other social service workers, albeit they have an overriding public protection role...It's deeply worrying that staff are not accountable for bad decisions and people pay with their lives.

*****
A lot of probation staff now rely on & hide behind the pseudo-science of 'risk assessment', a growth industry in recent times. It takes far more than correctly entering data to assess risk, but it's just that approach that seems to be where many of the errors of judgement originate. It would perhaps be unkind to call it lazy; maybe more that its as a result of not enough time, not enough experience & not enough support from management.

Above observes: "For the most part probation officers are decent, kind and properly trained but the cuts and mass exodus has left the service broken and in tatters." I think it is certainly true that those being assessed pay a higher price for errors of judgement than those doing the assessments.

The risk-averse culture of organisations avoiding taking any blame means that unless there's a compelling case to answer the organisation wins out every time, and the person who feels (or who is) 'wrongly' assessed can be deprived of their liberty, deprived of their children, deprived of their rights or, in some tragic cases, deprived of their life.

MoJ says: "Criminal behaviour is influenced by a range of individual, social and environmental factors. People tend to interpret others’ behaviour as because of the sort of person they are. We often fail to see situational, environmental or social influences. Much decision making in criminal justice needs to be informed by an assessment of whether someone poses a risk to the public....

... What makes a good risk assessment tool?

It is important that the risk assessment tools we use are theoretically sound and provide reliable and valid estimates. Criteria for approving risk assessment tools is supported by advice from MoJ’s Correctional Services Accreditation and Advice Panel (CSAAP)."

*****
Was that fake news regarding Purple Futures/Interserve not bidding, or are we still waiting for confirmation?

*****
NAPO have sent all members an email confirming it and Ian Mulholland head of Interserve Justice has also confirmed it during a conference call to staff. I look forward to a blog on it. btw, managers still cracking the whip for us to tick those boxes - I think we should all go off sick so that everything fails as I assume they will still get fined until the contract expires?

*****
The assumption must be that they will be paid handsomely until the contract expires. Cute Mulholland knows how the game is played; when he was 'on the inside' he helped Spurr et al write the rules. He knows there's no risk of being fined between now & whenever the contracts actually expire. You don't get this level of protection for knowing nothing.

*****
Pay has been a major issue throughout but the NPS deal on pay worsened the CRCs position. Seetec have set the bar now but not because of union pressure. There are TR2 issues and recruitment. That pay offer is a done deal to mirror NPS pay. About time but no backdate awards says it all the unions seem powerless.

*****
Perhaps we could be told how this was specifically negotiated. What arguments were used that persuaded the employer? What researched information was submitted. When will this result be rolled out to other areas in the CRC regardless of who owns/runs them? Looking forward to this!

*****
I think for some years now social explanations for criminal behaviour and offending have been rubbed out, and been replaced with the notion that any such behaviour is largely an innate aspect of a deviant personality. A decade of Neoliberalism governance has tapped into the older Liberalism ideology of everyone being born equal in the eyes of God, ergo all have equal opportunity to follow the right path. Not to do so is a personal choice and a demonstration of an innate leaning to'wards deviance.


I think austerity has perpetrated and embedded that notion quite dramatically. It's much easier to explain huge cuts to social institutions and support networks when criminal behaviour is explained in the context of nature rather then nurture. Indeed, I'd argue that the removal of the social Work ethos of probation, and it's privatisation can be seen as a shift in ideology towards offending being seen as an innate aspect of personality. Removal of the social Work ethos is self explanatory, but privatisation saw offenders only through the prisim of risk. Ability, social status, personal opportunity and social need never really got a look in. Why? Because criminal behaviour should be seen as innate?


I think too that the drive to digitise the CJS also pushes towards the nature not nurture argument. Algorithms are being introduced everywhere from determining whether a defendant should be granted bail, whether they'll reoffend and even to what type of prison they should be held in. When technology is being applied in this fashion it surely negates many social explanations for offending? It;s a very cold and clinical approach all about process and devoid of the human understanding and knowledge that we learn throughout our personal journeys through life.


The nature/nurture argument is age old. I personally believe both play a part. We're all a little different to each other. Our genes determine parts of the way we are. That's nature's loaded gun. But I think it's nurture and our social position and understanding that inevitably decides if, when where or how we pull the trigger on that gun. All humans exhibit behavioural traits. Surely those that exhibit behaviour deemed unacceptable to society should not be seen as irredeemably flawed by nature?

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Counter-terrorism POs already exist, I think they are on the same pay as other POs. Not sure that they get much additional training. They don't supervise all TACT offenders either. I wonder what impact doubling the numbers will have, given the chronic shortage of POs. Will other POs take the strain. Given the increasing lack of diversity amongst POs, I also wonder how this client group responds to supervision by staff from different backgrounds and with different values.

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I'm no longer employed in Probation. Last week I spoke with an ex-colleague who is still employed by NPS. They told me the staff group in the area are battered & bruised, tired, frightened: "If you don't make waves you get left alone. No-one has the time or emotional space to fight. We're under-staffed, under-resourced & overwhelmed. Its head down, do the best you can & hope nothing goes wrong because there's no support from management & you're under a bus before you can blink. I'm ashamed that my passive compliance gives the green light to NPS, but that's how it is as a PO these days."

Jim - I reckon you're right on the money with your observation: "I'm rapidly gaining the impression that probation service staff must have been sufficiently cowed, purged, bullied and silenced under the dead-hand of civil service bureaucracy and central command and control by HMPPS."

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With respect, if you're paid to do a job then your employer has a right to expect you to do as you're told. People who create waves won't get far in any company or organisation, be it HSBC, Tesco, NPS or wherever. Some staff seem to want to undermine their employer at every opportunity yet are happy to bank their salary every month. My message to anybody who dislikes the NPS so much that they want to 'fight' is that they need to leave and not let the door hit them on their way out. Go and do a job that makes them less unhappy.

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The prison system is just a reflection of a broken society. It won't be fixed as long as it's seen as being separate from society, it's part of our social structure, and solving the prison crisis requires major change both sides of the gate. When someone is sent to prison, effectively the state take control of that persons life. They have some responsibility by taking that control, not just to that person in prison, but to the wider society as well. Yet the time in prison has no direction, no pathway to take that ownership of life back. It's just a dangerous and destructive ordeal.


Then ownership is passed on upon release to probation services. It's clear just by the comments on this blog over the years that probation services are no longer in any position to assist someone to reach a place where they're in a position to take that ownership back with the prospect of any real success. In fact the only thing that a prisoner has ownership of is responsibility for the offence they've been sent to prison for in the first place. I think it's right that someone who commits an offence should take responsibility for it, but when the state take ownership of that life they too need to take responsibility for what they do with it.


Sending someone to prison today isn't too far removed from fostering a damaged juvenile with alcoholic chaotic parents. It's not going to bring anything else but more problems. People who lose ownership of life need a route of getting it back any many need help in achieving that. There's a desperate need for penal reform, but much of what's needed to achieve that lays far beyond the institution gates.

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Having read today's blog & some of the posted comments I think it really IS all over now. So it looks like the truly nasty amoral political class have finally succeeded in their efforts to eliminate the remnants of what was a free-thinking, independent, humanitarian vocational profession by slicing & dicing, ducking & diving, slipping public money into the greasy palms of unscrupulous profiteers, and getting HMPPS to tailor a bespoke political straight-jacket for the NPS, i.e. the Civil Service.

If you build it, they will come: "My message to anybody who dislikes the NPS so much that they want to 'fight' is that they need to leave... if you're paid to do a job then your employer has a right to expect you to do as you're told." If I were to write the book it would be entitled "When Advise, Assist & Befriend became J.F.D.I."

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What have we come to? We are trained to challenge, confront and change offending (and offensive behaviour) but are we expected to simply bow, scrape and tug our forelocks to those who claim to be in control but who have driven the ship onto the rocks. Sometimes I despair.

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Totally agree and on both points. We are treated like disposable robots now, numbers and god forbid we display the very skills they incorporated in training. We are professionals in a so called career with degrees and [not] those without experience and responsible decision making. Why should we then simply shut up and follow mis management and organisational bullying and accept the stress and blame culture they place on us. Are we not supposed to be honest and fair people by nature of wanting to do a job working with others.

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I think you are missing the point; people ARE doing a job they love, they are devoted to it and want so much to do it well. But the sheer weight of work they know is meaningless and irrelevant is what makes them unhappy - they express themselves, as any good employee should do - they say "this isn't right - can we suggest change" and are told NO YOU MUST DO IT THIS WAY.


Nobody, at least not myself, is suggesting that an assessment is not required, followed by a meaningful risk management plan and a good sentence plan; I don't think most people suggest that these plans shouldn't be amended when required. But it's the sheer weight of bureaucracy which is towing them down.


The focus is ALWAYS on the OASYS filling out every box meticulously using prescribed guidance under which people fear getting "Requires Improvement" (even though most do), the ARMS, the Delius risk registers, using "CRISSA format" in every single Delius entry, filling out "HETE" data.....NONE of this has any meaning to the service user, and people know this - the focus is never on what goes on in the probation room, what have you achieved with this person and how did you achieve it or if not why not?


It makes people sick and yet you say "with respect, do what your employer says, or just LEAVE".... comments like yours create the culture of fear people say they are working in. Your comments have incensed me, but would love to hear your reply.

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Excellent post. From your knowledge of the current model you clearly know how the system operates and what the emphasis is placed on. I've done thirty years in the service and stayed in offender management throughout, as Jim's article says the estate is not up to the job, the one size fits all approach simply doesn't work. What hasn't been mentioned is the fact that other Justice agencies are also failing, the police and Courts are under resourced and this has a knock on effect on what we can do as well.

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You think oasys and ndelius is bad try using mysis and msat. Didn't work for 3 days last week. No-one knows what they are doing on it. Very little information and doesn't make sense the rest of the country and NPS are using different systems.

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Did I just read correctly...YET ANOTHER OASYS QA??? Have they not realised that the first three iterations have been complete FAILURES - they demoralise staff and as pointed out, chain staff filling out irrelevant information into boxes, after boxes after boxes! I've seen some wonderful sentence plans lately, and yet, according to OASYS QA cannot technically score "GOOD" if the "assessor" and "offender" comments boxes have not been completed with a few sentences of crap. CAN THESE EPF PEOPLE NOT HEAR US - IT IS OASYS that needs changing, NOT the people using it - perhaps if we got rid of the EPF team, and all the salaries that go into paying them to churn out tools, the money can go into creating an OASYS which works? Or better still....just write assessments on a Word for Windows document generated through delius, like ARMS is.


In a climate where the NPS has just been told in no uncertain terms by the HMIP that it's not working well, in a climate where staff are leaving in droves (perhaps created by the climate of fear generated through incessant focus on spending hours and hours updating OASYS in such meticulous terms), in a climate where there are hundreds of vacancies, when will NPS understand that THEY need to change not the staff working for it?

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As for Omic as a PO being given jobs that that prison don't have the resources to cover and told that we work for HMPPS now. God knows what it will be like when we come under the line management of the Governor. They set Oasys targets and supervision targets that there is not enough time to meet because we are expected to deliver for example Court documents to offenders appealing their convictions. Cover a large amount of admin tasks, but our stationery, etc. Oh and the prison does not promote diversity as it claims nor understand we are on more flexible working patterns. Horrid but apparently less stressful than our counterparts in community offices. It sounds horrendous out there.

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I'm a bit confused. YHCOSA preventing hundreds of victims? I don't think so. Sorry but this CEO's exaggerations do nothing for the repute of Circles. COSA is a great idea in theory, but Probation rightly found it intolerably expensive. In my experience the concept of Circles works best in church and faith communities....where the volunteers come from the congregations and most likely know the core member and effectively cost nothing....the unfortunate thing about CoSA was that the volunteers were often flaky and fickle, only applying to get something on their pyschology student CVs,And like most charities this CEO seems to have struggled with credibility with funders and the more general vagaries of funding.

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Meanwhile in the grim reality of Civil Service, a whole morning spent on "briefings for staff" with no mention of anything other than processes and targets. New processes and handy guides, etc etc. I am looking forward to the day when a New Process, with Handy Guide including Flowcharts, Quality Assurance Grid, and mandatory e-learning will be issued to guide me in the decision as to whether I need to go for a pee.

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Yep, that will be next and like call centres timed on how long we go to the loo etc via our computer log ons. You can't even easily search anything in equip nor do we have the time to muck about reading the mass of instructions they spout.

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Lost in the QAGmire. Motto for NPS - "Sorry we missed you. Maybe not as sorry as the victims of your SFO but never mind..."

After the official whitewash, denials, deflections & ritual sacrifice of expendable PO/PSO staff, above rightly highlights the introduction of a whole series of 'new processes', the Civil Service's 'grown-up' version of comics down your pants when you're called to see the headmaster for a jolly good thrashing.

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Have to love the tone. It's all a process of perpetual progress and continual improvements. It's exciting times! It should however be a much more apologetic tone, "we've made such a total f*** up, we're now scratching our heads wondering how to put things back together again. That would be honest at least.


Personally I think this new design is being tailored to eventually hand the reigns of probation services over to the regional PCCs. The local sheriff will decide what goes on in this town folks! For me however, it seems all about making the model look good. For sure there's objectives, but very little meat on the bone about why and how this model will achieve them. Maybe I just need things spelling out a bit more then most, but I want to hear "by doing this we are going to achieve x, y, and z." By not doing this it will allow us to achieve d, e and f." Architect's don't just design good looking buildings, they have to make them safe and functional too! More detail please.