Mercury (Hobart)

Ashley cans sweet deal

Junk foods cut as report reveals detainees’ unhealthy habits

- EMILY BAKER State Political Reporter

ASHLEY Youth Detention Centre has stopped letting detainees take snacks back to their units after the young offenders were caught eating up to 24 icy poles a day — leading to 70 per cent putting on weight.

ASHLEY Youth Detention Centre has stopped letting detainees take snacks back to their three and four-person units after some units had gone through up to 24 icy poles a day.

Custodial Inspector Richard Connock has written up to 70 per cent of offenders were believed to gain weight while in detention, which he attributed to access to unlimited food, inactivity and the increasing use of icy poles, lollies and chocolate as incentives.

“Sweet snacks are used as rewards in education programs and extra snack foods are made available on movie nights which can result in an accumulate­d amount of less nutritious foods being con- sumed by residents,” Mr Connock said. “The inspection team was advised that two to three years ago these foods were only available to residents occasional­ly but now the kitchen must supply them when they are requested, and units with three or four residents can go through a 24pack of icy poles in 24 hours.”

Units were also eating up to one litre of ice cream flavour- ing between them a day, Mr Connock said.

Prepared meals were “of good nutritiona­l value” with plenty of hidden vegetables, Mr Connock wrote. However, detainees who did not like the meals presented to them could ask for extra bread, noodles and cheese, then eat that instead of their dinner.

“This is wasteful and costly as well as nutritiona­lly disad- vantageous,” Mr Connock said.

Dessert was provided seven nights a week as well as what the centre referred to as “slab” — a plate of slices and/or biscuits, or cheese and cold meats.

On Friday nights, detainees were also allowed to buy extra snacks from the centre’s canteen, which was stocked with junk food.

Mr Connock wrote there had been resistance from youth workers to calls to stop serving dessert on Friday nights because they could not access slab and “still wanted to be served dessert”.

The centre ultimately decided to reduce dessert to two nights a week and provide healthier snack options in the units, the Communitie­s Department said. Icy poles and “other such snacks” were removed from the units entirely.

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