Ministry of Justice scraps hotel plan for offenders
THE Ministry of Justice has scrapped plans to house female offenders at a hotel in Porthcawl.
The ministry was considering using the Atlantic Hotel as a residential shelter for women convicted of low-level crime but has now ruled it out.
An MoJ spokesman said: “These centres will help tackle the causes of low-level offenders’ behaviour, reduce reoffending and ultimately keep the public safe.
“A large number of changes would be needed to make Atlantic Hotel suitable, with other shortlisted sites deemed more appropriate.”
Five locations in Wales were shortlisted for the centre including the Atlantic Hotel in Porthcawl, the Sunnyside development in Bridgend, and Willow House in Newport.
The leader and senior cabinet members of Bridgend council are “disappointed” that only one of the local sites has been dropped from the MoJ’s plans.
Council leader Huw David said: “While I appreciate the fact that the Ministry of Justice has shared our view that the Atlantic Hotel in Porthcawl would be an unsuitable location for their proposed new centre, I am bitterly disappointed that they have not used this opportunity to also discount the Sunnyside House site as well.”
Cllr David said he previously contacted the MoJ objecting to both sites being used in Bridgend county borough because it is “absolutely the wrong place” for the service.
“Not only are we already home to South Wales’s largest prison, we also feature Wales’s only youth offending institute and medium-security facilities for people with complex mental health needs,” he added.
“Despite this, the area does not receive the level of additional resource or funding required for delivering the kind of essential support associated with such facilities. We already deal with high-risk safeguarding matters in relation to HMP Parc, Ty Liddiard and the Caswell Clinic, and provide a wide range of care and support for inmates at the prison alone.
“Introducing the Wales Residential Women’s Centre into the county borough would only intensify this at a time when the council has already been forced to cut more than £60m from vital services.
“Introducing further large numbers of people who require widespread care and support would place considerable additional pressure upon services that are already in place. It would also have an impact upon primary and secondary care services, community safety and policing.”
Jamie Wallis, Conservative MP for Bridgend, said he is “pleased that common sense has prevailed in Porthcawl” and there was “a lot of anxiety” among locals regarding the plans for the Atlantic Hotel.