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The Socialist 15 April 2009 |
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Preparing to fight probation meltdown
PROBATION AREAS in England and Wales face budget cuts of between 13% and 25% over the next three years. The National Association of Probation Officers (Napo) calculates that this will mean minimum job losses of 2,500, the vast majority being frontline staff.
Andy Ducker, Napo convenor, South Yorkshire branch
In consequence, the service may not be able to fulfil its statutory duties, the quality of supervision will deteriorate and fewer court reports will be produced. But Napo calculates that a 25% reduction in supervision and programmes will lead to the committing of at least 300,000 additional offences a year!
The level of cuts is unsustainable. The gains made in reducing re-offending over the last five years will be lost. In South Yorkshire staff members are being taken through the redundancy procedure, which includes an assessment centre, to determine which 40 people will lose their jobs this year.
Locally, the unions are mounting a joint campaign for a properly resourced, properly financed probation service that represents the communities where we live and serve the public. Napo and Unison have both held indicative ballots showing that over 95% of members who voted would be willing to take industrial action, including strike action.
We have registered a dispute locally and are urging the South Yorkshire Probation Service to remove the threat of compulsory redundancies. If they are unable to do so, we will ballot our members for industrial action.
We are trying to broaden out our fight to include all public sector trade unions working within the criminal justice system and in other public services. We will not let probation services be ruined.
In this issue
MPs' snouts in the expenses trough
Stop the slaughter of Tamils
Sri Lanka: Stop the war - fight for democratic rights
Stop the war in Sri Lanka: Protest at India House
Socialist Party election campaign
European elections: Why No2EU?
Socialist Party workplace news
Visteon workers angry and determined
National Union of Teachers conference: Battle on workload begins
London Underground: Set a new strike date
Fury at John Lewis' trickery
Preparing to fight probation meltdown
Youth fight for jobs
Youth Fight for Jobs: What next to build the campaign?
Marxist analysis: history
The Spanish Civil War: Defeat snatched from the jaws of victory
Socialist Party editorial
Deceptive denigration of Lindsey strike
Socialist Party campaigns
G20 Summit death: Bring the cops to account
Council manoeuvres in Lewisham hit school children
Parents occupy schools in Glasgow to stop closures
Fast news
International socialist news and analysis
Thailand: Battles erupt on the streets of Bangkok
Moldova: Thousands storm parliament buildings as economic crisis worsens
Sport
Rugby league: In League with big business?
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The Socialist 15 April 2009 |
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