Mercury (Hobart)

Jail boss skips meetings

Chief of maligned prison takes leave, misses talks on reviews

- JAMES KITTO

THE Risdon Prison boss has taken leave days before several staff meetings were to be held over ongoing reviews into prisoner classifica­tions, risk assessment­s and operations.

In a notice issued to staff on October 11, seen by the Mercury, Risdon Prison chief superinten­dent Geraldine Hayes informed workers she would take two weeks of leave ahead of “several staff meetings” this week.

The letter states meetings would instead be facilitate­d by the acting chief superinten­dent, understood to be John Pickering, and correction­al supervisor Nathan O’Dowd.

The letter states while the prisoner classifica­tion took place in September, further reviews would be conducted, as risk assessment­s were being processed and first-round consultati­ons of a new draft operating manual would begin.

“There will be several staff meetings held at the Ron Barwick Minimum Security facility over the next week to allow for questions to be asked and updates provided,” Ms Hayes’s letter read.

“I will be on leave for a period of two weeks and A/CSI Pickering will take strategic coverage of the facility.”

The revelation follows a Custodial Inspectora­te report tabled to State Parliament on Thursday calling for 90 improvemen­ts at Risdon Prison, including improvemen­ts to record keeping.

When asked why she was granted leave at the same time the prison arranged to hold a consultati­on period with its workers, a Department of Justice spokesman said: “The Tasmania Prison Service does not comment on individual staff arrangemen­ts.”

Meanwhile, the letter also details ongoing structural works to the prison’s minimum-security facility due for completion on November 15.

“We expect that the works in the visits area will be completed prior to this date. Once these works are completed the minimum inmates will again have access to the outside area of visits,” the letter read.

Ms Hayes was in charge of the minimum-security prison when prisoner Graham John Ennis used unsupervis­ed scaffoldin­g to clear a prison boundary and escape last month.

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