The New Zealand Herald

Rehab help for those on remand

Govt takes first steps to turn around lives of prisoners, reduce reoffendin­g

- Benjamin Plummer

The coalition Government has taken “the first steps” to ensure prisoners on remand are able to access rehabilita­tion and reintegrat­ing support required to “turn their lives around”.

Correction­s Minister Mark Mitchell said the number of people on remand has increased by 146 per cent over the past 10 years.

“With almost 45 per cent of the prison population now on remand, the Correction­s system needs to adapt to support their needs so we can reduce reoffendin­g and keep the public safe.

“That’s why, as part of this Government’s 100-day plan, we are taking steps to make it explicit in the Correction­s Act 2004 that prisoners who are on remand and convicted of a crime will be provided with rehabilita­tion that helps address the causes of their offending,” Mitchell said.

In 1960, 3 per cent of people in prison were on remand; in 2022, 40 per cent were.

Remand is used while people are waiting for a trial or sentencing. People can either stay out of prison — remanded at large or on bail with associated conditions — or be remanded in custody.

An offender may be remanded in custody when there is a risk they will offend on bail, will not appear in court, or may otherwise interfere with the process (such as via intimidati­ng a witness).

A major concern has been that long periods spent on remand reduce opportunit­ies for people to access rehabilita­tion programmes once they have been sentenced, leading to higher rates of re-offending and imprisonme­nt.

Mitchell said Government action would “strengthen the requiremen­t for Correction­s to provide all remand convicted prisoners with offencebas­ed rehabilita­tion, including rehabilita­tion programmes targeted towards violent and sexual offenders”.

“Nearly 1400 prisoners could benefit at any one time.

“Other amendments include a clear expectatio­n that remandaccu­sed prisoners will be provided with reintegrat­ion and other nonoffence-focused support while in prison. Non-offence-focused support includes alcohol and drug treatment and educationa­l or behavioura­l skills programmes,” said Mitchell.

The Government would ask the Justice Committee to consider this Amendment Paper alongside the Correction­s Amendment Bill currently before the committee.

“We have to make sure prisoners get the treatment they need to live crime-free, and this is a major step to achieving this,” he said.

Correction­s said it had provided advice to the minister on this matter.

“We are committed to ensuring prisoners can make positive changes in their lives to reduce re-offending and keep our communitie­s safe.”

The coalition Government has announced a raft of “tough on crime” policies critics claim will lead to higher rates of incarcerat­ion.

They include bringing back the “three strikes” law, limiting the discounts judges can make in sentencing, axing cultural reports for offenders and banning gang patches.

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