Tory governments are better known for privatising than nationalising things;
but they have recently reversed one of their own privatisations. This is the
probation services in England and Wales, which are to be brought back under
public ownership and control thus ending the Ministry of Justice’s (MoJ)
strategy begun in 2014 that outsourced most probation operations.
This began naturally enough with the handling of low-
and medium-risk offenders. The more demanding cases were kept in the rump
public sector because they were not very profitable.
Constant complaints about the poor quality of the
privatised service resulted in an increase in reoffending rates so bad that
even a Tory government had to take notice. In December it was announced that
low and medium services would return to the public sector, with only
back-office services remaining. Now these too are returning to the public
sector with about 2,000 jobs.
March 2019 saw the chief inspector of probation
denounce the partial outsourcing as “irredeemably flawed” and the then Justice
minister Rory Stewart admitted “the current model isn’t working” while the
National Audit Office said that the privatisation was “Not only extremely
costly for taxpayers, but we have seen the number of people on short sentences
recalled to prison skyrocket”.
The
two unions in the sector welcomed the retreat. George Georgiou, GMB’s national
officer, said: “We are delighted that the Lord Chancellor
has taken this pragmatic step. All the evidence suggests it will reduce
reoffending, protect the public and save taxpayers money,” adding that: “There
is much work to do still in harmonising the conditions of service of existing
staff and filling an enormous number of vacancies.”
The
National Association of Probation Officers added that there is “still have a
long way to go to ensure that we have a fully functioning and effective
probation service that enables probation professionals to carry out the work to
the standards they want”.
Spy Jobs at Risk
Civil Service union PCS has started
a campaign to save the jobs of some of Britain’s spies.
Their jobs are
at risk because their nominal employer, the British Council, has been forced to
close 44 out of its 47 English language schools across the globe.
The British
Council was founded in 1934 by the wife of the Head of MI6, “to create in a
country overseas a basis of friendly knowledge and understanding of the people
of this country, of their philosophy and way of life, which will lead to a
sympathetic appreciation of British foreign policy”. Its language schools and
other cultural institutions have for decades provided useful cover for spies.
Funded by the Foreign Office, it has already received a
£60 million emergency loan from the Government on top of its annual grant of
£161 million. It has furloughed 18 per cent of its roughly 1,175-strong UK.
workforce. It employs about 12,000 staff in 100 countries.
PCS
welcomes the fact that its campaign has seen redundancies paused and additional
funds allocated, and British Council management reported that the union’s
campaign and political pressure was a key factor in the release of additional
funding, but fears that the future of the Council is still uncertain.
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