Monday, October 04, 2010

Welfare discourages prisoner rehab

Surely the following statement will provoke the same response in most readers;

More prisoners are undertaking job training and literacy and numeracy education than ever before, Corrections Minister Judith Collins and Associate Minister of Corrections Dr Pita Sharples said today.

In the 10 months to July 2010 the number of prisoners in employment and job training increased 9 percent (from 4415 to 4791). More than half the prison population was in some form of employment or training during the 2009/10 year.



What the heck are the rest doing?

According to Corrections;

The 20 prisons situated throughout New Zealand house over 8,000 prisoners. The majority of these prisoners have limited education or work experience. The last prison census (2003) identified that 52% of prisoners had no formal qualifications and only 45% were in paid work before going to prison.

My own data from OIA requests shows that in 2009 there were;

4,192 cancellations of a benefit for reason ‘going to prison’
3,496 grants of a benefit for reason ‘leaving prison’


The problem is that prisoners only participate in employment or training on a voluntary basis. Whereas a beneficiary can be sanctioned for refusing the same, there is no penalty that can be applied to a prisoner. But it does appear that for many people who have been on a benefit prior to incarceration, prison actually presents a real opportunity to learn some useful skill. And an uptake and acceptance of just over half is pretty appalling. Perhaps if inmates knew there would be no benefit on release they might be more inclined to make the most of what ever is on offer.

So there is yet another example of how welfare has a perverse and unintended effect. It works against rehabilitation.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Or perhaps it's because so many people are in prison for short periods of time and don't qualify for education and training programmes?

Lindsay Mitchell said...

The number in prison for short periods should be significantly less under the new sentencing regime of more community sentences and home detention.

Anonymous said...

Granted it was 2008/09 but to me that looks like most people are serving less than 6 month sentences. See graph 3.10 here: http://www.corrections.govt.nz/research/offender-volumes-report-2009/prison-sentenced-throughput.html

I also don't think remand prisoners have access to programmes of any kind so that would remove about 2000 from the 8000+ (last I heard we were up to 8800)