Who wants to work in a prison?
Posted on Tuesday, March 13th, 2007 by Home Office WatchCategory: Prison
There’s something of a prison staff crisis in many of our prisons, figures released this morning show. Belmarsh is 57 officers short - meaning more than 1 in 10 posts is vacant.
Other prisons facing problems are Manchester, Woodhill, Chelmsford, Wakefield and Frankland, all with over 30 vacancies. For Chelmsford that’s 13% of the staff.
This comes on top of serious problems with staff recruitment for the proposed new prison in Kennet, Merseyside. John Reid tells us they’ve only recruited 30 staff so far. At the end of January, the Home Office took the Prison Officers’ Association to court for apparently encouraging industrial action prompted in part by the Kennet proposals, which the POA believe (and here) could make staffing shortages worse.
It’s all getting pretty messy, that’s for sure.
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April 21st, 2008 at 12:13 pm
Build new prisons so Prison officers don’t have to deal with all the situations that arise from over crowding. When building - plan decent office and rest areas for staff - and only give the legal minimum accommodation and amenaties for prisoners. Get tough on crime, stick to sentences and prison officers would get job satisfaction. No wonder nobody wants the jobs as things are today.