The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Phones in cells? Scots jail chiefs track English scheme

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Scots prison chiefs are studying the impact of a pilot scheme in England which has seen the installati­on of phone lines in jail cells.

A total of 10 prisons south of the Border are testing the move which allows inmates to use phones in their cells to contact pre-approved numbers, such as family members. In 2013, Colin Mcconnell, chief executive of the Scottish Prison Service (SPS), backed the idea of having phones in cells,

Prisoners are being taught about life on Mars to help them go straight.

Jail bosses are boldly going where no one has gone before by laying on thought- provoking lectures on the possibilit­y of life on other planets.

They hope to convince inmates crime only serves to hold back civilisati­on.

Edinburgh University astrobiolo­gists have been delivering talks and workshops behind bars to criminals at Edinburgh’s Saughton prison and HMP Glenochil in Clackmanna­nshire.

Now the scheme is being rolled out across the country with some inmates even taking part in experiment­s to see if crops could grow on the moon.

The scheme has been welcomed by campaigner­s who claim it could help reduce crime rates.

Pete White, of the chari t y Po s i t i v e Prison? Positive Futures, said: “Anything that can help people in jail to think beyond that wall and beyond themselves is constructi­ve.

“The reading age of over half of the prison population is less than

11. “Many come from chaotic households where they’ve never had the opportunit­y to excel, their vocabulary is limited and education has always been linked with failure.

“And yet you’ll find that sci- fi and fantasy n ov e l s a re among the most popular reads in prison libraries because people don’t stop thinking and they claiming, “anything reasonably and safely we can do to help sustain and develop family contact, we should give it a go”.

And last year the think tank Reform Scotland proposed piloting landline phones in prison cells to help maintain contact between prisoners and their families. Glenochil to carry out a research programme in gardens tended by inmates to see whether food could feasibly be grown in soils similar to those on the moon or Mars.

Professor Cockell said: “Offenders can be encouraged to see that criminal activity merely slows progress and degrades quality of life.

“We live in a civilisati­on that faces big challenges but has huge opportunit­ies too and we are engaging people in this through space education. Whoever you are, enriching one’s view of science is invaluable.”

An SPS spokesman said: “We hope to stimulate the imaginatio­n and harness the often latent talents of those in our care.”

St Andrews University last month received a £ 150,000 grant to teach science, technology, engineerin­g and maths in jails.

The organisati­on said evidence suggests maintainin­g close family ties can help prevent re-offending.

In a written answer lodged at Holyrood, Mr Mcconnell, said: “The SPS is in contact with our colleagues in Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service to review the findings of a study carried out by researcher­s at York University into the impact of in-cell telephones on custodial behaviour and on re-offending by inmates.”

A SPS spokesman confirmed the study was under review but added there were no immediate plans to introduce phones in the cells.

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