The Gold Coast Bulletin

Boot camps offer a ‘taste of challenge and excitement’

- JACK MCKAY

CONTROVERS­IAL boot camps once branded an “expensive failure” should be revisited, according to former premier Campbell Newman who says his government’s program offered youth offenders a “taste of challenge and excitement”.

The former premier has hit out at Labor for “unravellin­g” measures that were introduced when he was in power, as he argued that the State needed to get young offenders into innovative programs.

The boot camps were trialled by the former LNP government, but were ultimately dumped by Labor in 2015 with then-Attorney-General Yvette D’Ath branding them an “expensive failure”.

Mr Newman (pictured) said the boot camps had been done in an “experiment­al way”, and said that promise”.

“I think that’s something that should be revisited,” he said.

“I’m not advocating incarcerat­ion. I’m advocating for new things to be tried.”

Mr Newman said a boot camp environmen­t offered young offenders “good role models” and gave them a “taste of challenge and excitement”.

“But also an environmen­t where they’ve literally got to they showed

“great work hard to achieve some outcomes, positive outcomes. Well, that’s beneficial,” he said.

“We need to get people into programs which are innovative and … trying new things, rather than going down the well-trodden path of the left who are into pats on the back.”

Youth Justice Minister Leanne Linard yesterday described the boot camps as “yet another expensive LNP failure”.

“The 2015 KPMG report (into the boot camps) found the programs were expensive, ineffectiv­e and poorly planned,” Ms Linard said.

“Data shows that of the 74 young people in the LNP’s Sentenced Youth Boot Camp program, 47 – or 63.5 per cent – have reoffended. That’s no different to other forms of detention.”

She said boot camps were “neither evidence-based nor are they backed by experts.”

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