News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: Tories Target 'crime Conveyor Belt' |
Title: | UK: Web: Tories Target 'crime Conveyor Belt' |
Published On: | 2002-10-09 |
Source: | BBC News (UK Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 23:02:16 |
TORIES TARGET 'CRIME CONVEYOR BELT'
Young Offenders Would Be Rehabilitated
Young offenders would be lifted off "the conveyor belt of crime" and sent
to new rehabilitation centres under Tory plans for slashing youth crime,
the party's conference has been told.
In his speech in Bournemouth, shadow home secretary Oliver Letwin said a
Tory government would also give drug addicts a choice - receive treatment
or be sent to jail.
He also announced plans for a nationwide programme of parenting classes "to
help parents become better parents".
The proposals form the core of the party's new "tough, but caring" approach
to crime policy.
Under the plans 124 new centres would be opened across the UK where young
offenders leaving jail would be taught how to become "decent human beings".
Mr Letwin said the new centres would help break the "conveyor belt of
crime" which sees a hard core of 100,00 youngsters responsible for 50% of
all offences.
They would extend current rehabilitation programmes, offering training and
support for young offenders in an attempt to modify their behaviour and
stop them re-offending.
'Touchy feely'
The plan marks a major shift for the Tories, who have previously
concentrated on punishment and deterrence rather than rehabilitation.
But Mr Letwin has denied the proposals for the centres - which he has
described as a cross between "touchy-feely" centres and boot camps - means
the party is going soft on crime.
Under the proposals, young criminals would spend a year on top of their
original sentences taking part in a concentrated programme of rehabilitation.
They would take courses in offending behaviour, anger management, drug and
alcohol abuse, health, parenting and citizenship.
Mr Letwin said his programme was based on the innovative Centre for
Adolescent Rehabilitation (C-Far) in Devon.
The project was set up by an ex-marine and is staffed by former soldiers,
police and prison officers as well as social workers and probation officers.
Decent
The Tories believe the UKP 372m annual cost of providing the centres needed
for the plan would soon be offset by a reduction in re-offending.
Mr Letwin said offenders would be "taught self-discipline, personal
responsibility and generally how to behave like a decent human being"
during 11 weeks at the centres.
It would involve 14-hour days, seven days a week.
"Following this period of open custody, the offenders aren't just dumped on
the street," said Mr Letwin.
"Instead they are given nine months or more of intensive mentoring to find
them jobs or further education and accommodation and to keep them on the
straight and narrow.
'Ghastly'
"It is tough, but it isn't uncivilised. It is caring, but it isn't a pushover.
"And it works, the reconviction rate is hugely reduced."
Mr Letwin said that at present many young offenders were caught, jailed and
then returned to the community for "in little time, the next mugging, the
next courtroom, the next jail and onwards in a ghastly round of
self-destruction and social destruction".
"We tolerate the recycling of the persistent young offender as if it were a
fact of nature.
"This is indeed a conveyor belt of crime, and we fail to intervene
effectively at every stage," he said.
He said drug addicts would be given a choice - to undergo treatment
programmes or be sent to jail.
Limits
Too many young people addicted to cocaine and heroin were simply "dumped"
back on the streets when they finished their sentences, he said.
Treatment programmes would be expanded tenfold under the Tories, he said,
following a series of pilot projects were introduced.
He said a Tory government would also introduce parenting programmes
nationwide "to help parents be better parents, showing them how to play
with their children, praise them, discipline them and set limits for
acceptable behaviour".
On asylum, he said "small, effective, fast accommodation" centres were
needed to speed applications and a new treaty with France in order to send
asylum seekers arriving in the UK back to France to have their applications
processed.
On policing, he said he would introduce proposals for neighbourhood
policing over the next few months.
Young Offenders Would Be Rehabilitated
Young offenders would be lifted off "the conveyor belt of crime" and sent
to new rehabilitation centres under Tory plans for slashing youth crime,
the party's conference has been told.
In his speech in Bournemouth, shadow home secretary Oliver Letwin said a
Tory government would also give drug addicts a choice - receive treatment
or be sent to jail.
He also announced plans for a nationwide programme of parenting classes "to
help parents become better parents".
The proposals form the core of the party's new "tough, but caring" approach
to crime policy.
Under the plans 124 new centres would be opened across the UK where young
offenders leaving jail would be taught how to become "decent human beings".
Mr Letwin said the new centres would help break the "conveyor belt of
crime" which sees a hard core of 100,00 youngsters responsible for 50% of
all offences.
They would extend current rehabilitation programmes, offering training and
support for young offenders in an attempt to modify their behaviour and
stop them re-offending.
'Touchy feely'
The plan marks a major shift for the Tories, who have previously
concentrated on punishment and deterrence rather than rehabilitation.
But Mr Letwin has denied the proposals for the centres - which he has
described as a cross between "touchy-feely" centres and boot camps - means
the party is going soft on crime.
Under the proposals, young criminals would spend a year on top of their
original sentences taking part in a concentrated programme of rehabilitation.
They would take courses in offending behaviour, anger management, drug and
alcohol abuse, health, parenting and citizenship.
Mr Letwin said his programme was based on the innovative Centre for
Adolescent Rehabilitation (C-Far) in Devon.
The project was set up by an ex-marine and is staffed by former soldiers,
police and prison officers as well as social workers and probation officers.
Decent
The Tories believe the UKP 372m annual cost of providing the centres needed
for the plan would soon be offset by a reduction in re-offending.
Mr Letwin said offenders would be "taught self-discipline, personal
responsibility and generally how to behave like a decent human being"
during 11 weeks at the centres.
It would involve 14-hour days, seven days a week.
"Following this period of open custody, the offenders aren't just dumped on
the street," said Mr Letwin.
"Instead they are given nine months or more of intensive mentoring to find
them jobs or further education and accommodation and to keep them on the
straight and narrow.
'Ghastly'
"It is tough, but it isn't uncivilised. It is caring, but it isn't a pushover.
"And it works, the reconviction rate is hugely reduced."
Mr Letwin said that at present many young offenders were caught, jailed and
then returned to the community for "in little time, the next mugging, the
next courtroom, the next jail and onwards in a ghastly round of
self-destruction and social destruction".
"We tolerate the recycling of the persistent young offender as if it were a
fact of nature.
"This is indeed a conveyor belt of crime, and we fail to intervene
effectively at every stage," he said.
He said drug addicts would be given a choice - to undergo treatment
programmes or be sent to jail.
Limits
Too many young people addicted to cocaine and heroin were simply "dumped"
back on the streets when they finished their sentences, he said.
Treatment programmes would be expanded tenfold under the Tories, he said,
following a series of pilot projects were introduced.
He said a Tory government would also introduce parenting programmes
nationwide "to help parents be better parents, showing them how to play
with their children, praise them, discipline them and set limits for
acceptable behaviour".
On asylum, he said "small, effective, fast accommodation" centres were
needed to speed applications and a new treaty with France in order to send
asylum seekers arriving in the UK back to France to have their applications
processed.
On policing, he said he would introduce proposals for neighbourhood
policing over the next few months.
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