Government failure to meet re-offending targets disappointing – Salvation Army

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The Government’s hoped for 25% reduction in re-offending rates has more or less slipped from its grasp according to the Department of Corrections’ 2015/16 Annual Report released on Friday. 12 month recidivism rates climbed for the second year in a row pointing to a clear failure in Correction’s prisoner rehabilitation model. Corrections have not published their 24 month recidivism rates which it normally does as part of its statutory reporting obligations.

Salvation Army’s Social Policy and Parliamentary Unit Director Lieut. Colonel Ian Hutson says ‘the failure is disappointing given the Government’s efforts to reduce prisoner re-offending but the results are clear proof that the approach to re-integrating and rehabilitating prisoners is just not working’.

Better Public Service Target set for the Department of Corrections in 2012 was for a 25% reduction in a composite re-conviction/re-imprisonment rate. ‘Good progress was being made toward this target until February 2014 when the cumulative reduction reached 12% but it has been downhill since then” says Colonel Hutson. ‘In June 2016 this progress has halved – slipping back to just 6%’.

With only a year to go to get to the 25% reduction, the Better Public Services target now looks almost impossible’ ‘While we cannot deny the Department’s commitment to reaching this target its present approach is inadequate’, Hutson says. The Corrections Department now acknowledges that many of the influences around re-offending by released prisoners are outside of its influence so this should be a reason to look for radically different approaches’. ‘

Re-integration of former prisoners happens in the community not in prisons and while released prisoners continue to face problems around unemployment and homelessness on their release, the risk of them falling back into crime are a lot higher’ ‘Ideally Government needs to fund NGO and iwi groups to provide released prisoners with support and guidance for months and perhaps years beyond the time they leave prison’. . “There are no cheap fixes to correct recidivism as the Government’s recently announced plans to spend a further $1 billion on larger prisons illustrates very well” says Hutson.