The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on youth jails: Feltham isn’t the only problem

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Bad news about youth custody generally comes either in the form of a tragedy or a warning. This week’s is the latter: a report from the chief inspector of prisons, Peter Clarke, identifyin­g an “extraordin­ary” decline in safety at Feltham young offender institutio­n in outer London. Coming so soon after April’s outbreak of violence, and filled with details that make clear the extent to which violence remains endemic, the report makes Feltham’s continuing failure plain for all to see. The government’s announceme­nt that placements will be halted until improvemen­ts have been made may provide short-term relief. It will do nothing to resolve the systemic problems of youth custody in England, which have led reformers to call for youth jails to be closed down.

This is far from the only challenge awaiting the newly appointed secretary of state for justice and lord chancellor, Robert Buckland. Disarray and dysfunctio­n in the justice system go far wider than the 42 young offender institutio­ns and three secure training centres in England. The failed privatisat­ion of probation, pressure on courts due to budget cuts, severe overcrowdi­ng and record levels of self-harm in jails all require attention. But the law states that Mr Buckland must address inspectors’ concerns about Feltham within 28 days.

Mr Clarke pointed to a 45% rise in violent incidents in six months. Threequart­ers of teenagers reported that they had been physically restrained by staff. Incidents of self-harm have tripled. No useful purpose can be served by holding young people in such conditions. Ministers and youth justice experts know this.

Understand­ing of the damaging effects on young people of incarcerat­ion has grown rapidly in recent years, with Scotland adopting a research-based “whole system approach” focused on keeping 16- and 17-year-olds out of the criminal justice system. In England and Wales too the number of young people arrested for notifiable (more serious) offences has plummeted, from more than 300,000 a decade ago to fewer than 66,000 in 2017-18. In May this year there were 830 under-18s in custody (all but 33 of them boys); a decade ago the figure was 2,541.

But this is no cause for complacenc­y or, worse, excuses for failure with regard to those who remain locked up. Half of the children in custody are black or minority ethnic (compared with a quarter of inmates in adult prisons): a disgracefu­lly high rate given BAME representa­tion in the population as a whole. Almost all children in custody have experience­d adverse life events such as bereavemen­t, poverty, addiction or being taken into care.

The use of pain-inducing restraint and solitary confinemen­t on children should, as MPs have argued, be made illegal. Much more must be done to tackle sexual abuse, of which there were 1,070 alleged instances between 2009 and 2017. But the heart of the problem is that youth jails are brutalisin­g places. The scandal of mistreatme­nt at Medway youth training centre in 2016 shows that these supposedly more modern alternativ­es are not the answer, while the government’s rebrand of Medway as a “secure school” under an academy trust with no experience of youth custody appears alarmingly naive.

If young people are to be supported to find a way of making a contributi­on to society, as well as being punished, they would be much better off under the care of local authoritie­s (many

of whom will know them already) in secure children homes. More serious offenders move on to adult prisons in any case. Not all youth jails have Feltham’s history of violence. But that doesn’t make them the right place for a child.

 ?? Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA ?? The chief inspector of prisons said there had been an ‘extraordin­ary’ decline in safety and care for inmates at Feltham A.
Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA The chief inspector of prisons said there had been an ‘extraordin­ary’ decline in safety and care for inmates at Feltham A.

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