Monday 24 February 2014

Bidders - 5 Reasons To Say No!

I don't know what other people think, but if the comments on this blog over the last few days are anything to go by, there has been a definite mood change as more and more probation staff at last wake up to the stark realities of this TR omnishambles.

I've been genuinely shocked by the degree of ignorance and complacency, despite a thorough airing of the issues over many months, about what is in store for staff transferring to both NPS and CRC. It really has to be a case of 'better late than never' but trying to stop this whole sorry mess now is quite an uphill struggle. Realistically the only way is to seriously put the wind up as many potential bidders as possible, so in that vein and to kick things off, here are some reasons to give the whole thing a miss and it's specifically directed at the likes of Sodexo, Capita and Interserve.

1.You will be employing an army of subversives

You probably don't know much about probation staff, particularly probation officers and probation services officers, but they are a canny, tenacious and principled bunch and make no mistake, they're angry! Just a casual glance through the comments section of this blog or the Napo Forum pages should suffice in obtaining the picture. 

Apparently Grayling has instructed or 'imposed' on probation trusts an 8 week 'practice' of TR operating procedures from 1st April 2014. I'm sure a strategy of non co operation could be devised by someone in the know in probation. Apparently the stuff sent out by MOJ/NOMS is laughable, compromises public safety, duplicated processes, hinders joined up communication and working and undermines service users involvement etc etc. NAPO should insist that this 'practice run' should follow the TR operating procedures to the letter, immediate split working, transfer of cases between NPS and CRC, admin split, use of new forms etc. 

If probation staff/trusts try to mitigate the obvious flaws in TR operating model then it's not a real and valid practice, and is a pointless exercise, unless cynically Grayling is not bothered about the 8 week 'practice period' it's just so he can say that he has done it. Use this blog, napo blog, tweeter and Facebook to highlight and shame any trust which is seeking to tinker with the practice period to make it look good (WHISTLE BLOW SO EVERYONE CAN HEAR IN THE PRESS). When the going gets tough, the tough get going - Grayling not playing by Queensbury rules so fight fire with fire.

They are not going to roll-over and meekly go along with this shit. By the time they reach your employ, they will largely be bereft of their former probation ideology and ethos because they know full well they will fall victim to the first restructuring that comes along. They will not be assisting with smoothing out any teething troubles, will work rigidly to job descriptions and be more than willing to whistle blow at the first opportunity.

Back to Dan Shaw's File on 4 programme and we have a fairly clear picture from the non-answer by Phil Andrew (Working Links):

Shaw - will you keep the probation staff in place, the experience that they bring?

Andrew - the aim that we have is to pretty much take the organisation on as it is and then look at it over a period of a year or so. If we're bringing in probation in a particular region, into a national company, there are synergies to be had there, particularly from a back office perspective...

Shaw - ... that means cutting staff doesn't it?

Andrew - ... that means cutting costs, doing things more effectively... 

Shaw - ... which inevitably means fewer staff?

Andrew - ... it may mean fewer staff, at the end of the day our focus is to make a social difference by reducing reoffending we create savings for the taxpayer and if we make a small return, and it will be a very small return on top of that, then that's entirely appropriate, but its not our primary objective.


So there's a bidder with a clear one year shelf-life for probation staff.

Richard Johnson (ex-Serco Welfare to Work) spoke of the "winner's curse", where the contract winner has offered to do the job at the lowest price, then has to cut corners to achieve results - and in working with offenders that will put the public at significant risk. 
The obvious corner to cut at this stage must surely be the expensive PO grade staff in the CRC?

2. You know zilch about the work

Because this will undoubtedly be a new venture for you, you will have to rely initially on the expertise of highly experienced probation staff. Some will be enormously flattered at the offer of promotion, increased salary and a company car but, as we all know, within two years they will all be dispensed with when they've imparted all their vast knowledge and experience. You will then be left with an increasingly in-house-recruited and trained workforce and you will think that will be sufficient to service the contract effectively. You will be disabused of this notion in short order because this work is highly complex, clients are not widgets and the MoJ have devised a bureaucratic nightmare. 
   
3. It will seriously damage your reputation

Your company's reputation is important to you and your shareholders, but it will take a severe bashing the first time one of the low or medium risk people you are supervising goes out and murders one or two people with an axe. You will have to hope that they have been seen regularly and that the computer record is up to date. You will have to be prepared to explain to an angry press, public and Minister why you didn't know they collected axes for a hobby and 'didn't like people looking at them funny'.

When you've culled most of the expensive probation staff and replaced them with the low-paid and poorly trained, you will have to explain why they've been found to be sleeping with clients and searching the computer database for their mates. None of this will look good on the front page of the Daily Mail and you will not be particularly assisted by the changes to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act:-

'It will remain the case that fuller disclosure of cautions and convictions will continue to apply to a range of sensitive occupations and activities' 

- but NOT THE CRCS! Take a look at the Target Operating Model and it's clear that, unlike in Probation now, CRC applicants will be covered by the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act! Better still, with the changes announced to the act now being introduced an applicant will be legally entitled to conceal a conviction for an offence attracting a community order just 1 year after the order expires. Looks like Grayling wants to be certain that there's a wider pool of 'old lags' for the CRCs to call on, never mind the risk they could pose to vulnerable clients!

                    
4. It won't work

Clients are not widgets and cannot be processed as such. There isn't a day that goes by that doesn't see the government making the process of rehabilitation that much more difficult for probation clients. Many have serious health problems, but Atos assessments pronounce them fit for work. A lot lead chaotic lives due to mental health issues or drug and alcohol dependency and often miss appointments. They get sanctioned by Job Centre Plus and have no money. They become homeless quickly due to rent arrears brought on by the bedroom tax or any number of other new taxes being dreamt up by Chris Grayling.

Imprisonment will no longer be a way of starting afresh with a clean slate because there will be that £600 bill to pay towards the cost of the court hearing and only the much-lauded £46 with which to make a down payment. 

Anyone convicted of a crime will be required to pay a charge of up to £600 under Government plans to force offenders to contribute towards the cost of running the country’s courts. Convicted criminals will be forced to pay the levy, even if they plead guilty to the offence, the Justice Secretary will announce this week.

Chris Grayling hopes the proposals will raise up to £80 million per year to cover a portion of the cost of running criminal trials in England and Wales. Currently, offenders are not charged for the cost of administering their case when they are convicted of a crime. In some cases, judges can require criminals to pay fines, and compensation to victims, as well as to make a contribution towards the costs of the prosecution lawyers in the case.


They are not going to be happy bunnies, the under 12 month people, because they've been round the system a few times and are used to coming out with no interference from authority. They are going to kick-off big style at 12 month supervision, drug testing and having to wear a tag. They are not just going to be belligerent, they will not co-operate, will have to be breached and some will undoubtedly be threatening and violent towards staff they don't know and who they find out work for a private company. This from the Financial Times:-

Persistent death threats against staff who decide whether sick and disabled people are eligible for benefits have forced the private company employing them to seek an early exit from a £500m government contract. With opposition Labour MPs also stepping up criticism, Atos Healthcare said the political environment had become untenable and that it was no longer fair to employees to leave them vulnerable to attack.

“It is becoming incredibly difficult for our staff; it’s pretty unpleasant,” people close to the company said. About 163 incidents of the public assaulting or abusing staff were recorded each month last year, Atos said. At protests outside 45 Atos offices this week, names of individual doctors were chanted, while many of the 2,000 staff employed to carry out the work had received death threats both in person or on Facebook and Twitter, as well as bullying at the company’s assessment centres. Examples on Facebook include: “murdering scumbags . . . won’t be smiling when we come to hang you bastards”. Another says: “Know anyone who works for Atos? Kill them.”

5. You won't make any money

The whole point about bidding for this poisoned chalice is to make money. You can't because you won't be able to deliver on the Payment by Results element and the Fee For Service will depend on cutting costs. Not for you will be all this bollocks about 'co-locating' with NPS and having to pay those ridiculously high MoJ rents, but that just increases the bureaucratic nightmare you have to cope with in connection with the NPS interface. The MoJ computer systems are shite - ask any probation officer - and there will be costs associated in developing your own. 

The MoJ's own risk register puts TR in the highest category of failure. Their track record on contracting for court interpreters, court administration, IT delivery, electronic tagging, Unpaid Work, etc has been a disaster. What makes you think TR will be a success?     

You have to ask yourself - is all this really worth the hassle?

28 comments:

  1. Just in case anyone is unsure of how to 'whistle blow' I've added the links for some of the most read papers.

    Get your stories in now and keep all emails/written instructions for evidence. As Julius Caesar one said: fuck em all!

    http://www.theguardian.com/help/contact-us

    http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/296174/Contact-Us.html

    http://www.mediauk.com/newspapers/5705/the-times

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/article-1227210/Contact-Us.html

    If bidders are reading this, please take note of Jim's comments. We will, at the drop of a hat, both go out of our way and do our best to ensure that you do not make a sows ear from a silk purse!!

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  2. I have said for decades, never under-estimate Probation staff's capacity for deviance!!

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  3. A very good piece Jim, nailing completely just what WILL go wrong. However, I do not think that the companies are interested in the PbR aspect as they will have to reduce re-offending by 4% before they get any bonus. Their money will be made by cutting overheads (and that's the first time I've ever been called that!!) which means that expensive but well trained staff will be replaced by the reverse.

    I hope you don't mind me asking, but is there any chance that I can send the link to this post to one of the above websites? It's about time this whole bloomin shambles was given more airing and the mainstream papers are just the people to do it!!

    If you are ok with this, I urge all other readers to also send this link to the papers. Lets get the whole bloomin thing stopped as it's complete madness and will do little to reduce re-offending (if that was ever the case from the off!!!).

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  4. Oh I certainly think the bidders should get a copy! Please circulate far and wide as you see fit.

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  5. Straying a bit, but with offenders now a commodity, I thought this article highlights how private companies care for their stock.
    You can't even report them to the RSPCA, even though chickens are afforded that protection.

    http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/revealed-fatcat-landlords-squalid-hostel-3178185

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    1. THE owners of a hellhole hostel are banking more than £1.5million a year in taxpayers’ cash.

      Ron Barr and Kenneth Gray have become wealthy from a rat-infested slum bought for just £65,000. Up to 160 men, many with addiction and mental health issues, are crammed into the so-called hotel in Glasgow’s east end.

      And the desperate tenants’ housing benefit of up to £199.25 a week for tiny cell-like rooms and shared squalid toilets and bathrooms adds up to a fortune for the landlords.

      The Bellgrove Hotel is awash with drugs and alcohol, and residents often lie passed out in pools of their own urine.

      Brothers-in-law Barr, 80, and Gray, 69, are directors of the firm who bought the premises in 1988.

      They are the top-earning private landlords from housing benefit at Scotland’s largest local authority, Glasgow City Council.

      Both men live in luxury homes in Glasgow’s south side and have made their family members shareholders in the venture.

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  6. I missed this article from last month, probably because I can't access the whole thing.
    But if one of the prime bidders for TR have to pay off a £17m loan by next year, not only are they so desperate for a contract that they'll bid extreamely low to ensure they get one, but when they do get one they'll have to make massive cuts to services aswell. But don't feel sorry for them they're like a lot of the other bidders- steeped in fraud.

    http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/business/Companies/article1367398.ece

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    1. Can't get the whole article, but here's a snippet:-

      THE welfare-to-work provider that was rocked by allegations of widespread fraud crashed to an £11.5m pre-tax loss last year.

      A4e — whose owner Emma Harrison resigned as chairwoman and stepped down as David Cameron’s “back to work” tsar as the scandal broke — slipped deeper into the red in the 12 months to last March, the accounts show.

      Revenues fell 14% to £167.1m but its lenders, the Co-operative Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland, gave it breathing space by extending a £17m loan to the end of 2015.

      A4E, started in the late 1980s by Harrison’s father to help redundant steel workers in the Sheffield area find new careers, is one of the biggest private agencies involved in moving unemployed people into work.

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    2. Here is the rest: -

      "Last year the Department for Work & Pensions assigned it 86,600 jobseekers to retrain as part of the flagship Work Programme.

      Last November, the Crown Prosecution Service charged nine A4E employees with “numerous acts of fraud”, such as falsifying papers to get “reward payments” from the government for jobseekers who had never attended A4E or had not found work. The offences are alleged to have taken place between 2009 and 2013. The CPS charged another four people last month.

      Harrison has never been accused of wrongdoing and still owns 85% of A4e. The 50-year-old was criticised for taking an £8.6m dividend in 2011. There was no payout last year, though she and her staff shared more than £2m in 2012.

      Sir Robin Young, who replaced Harrison at the company, said: “The significant working capital requirements needed to deliver the government’s flagship payment-by-results Work Programme had a direct impact on our ability to generate profit in the first part of the year.”

      But the service had improved as result of “substantial investment”, he added, and “although our full-year results show a loss, we moved into profitability in the final quarter of the year”."

      http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/business/Companies/article1367398.ece

      Costs about £8 - £9.00 a month to subscribe to Times and Sunday Times on line and there are various discounts and freebie tickets for cinemas etc.

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  7. Ever wondered how G4S are coming along with their corporate renewal?

    http://m.invezz.com/news/equities/9103-g4s-share-price-security-firm-faces-fresh-accounting-allegations

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  8. Fresh allegations have emerged about accounting irregularities at G4S (LON:GFS), the Financial Times reported yesterday. The security and support services company is already facing a criminal investigation for allegedly overcharging the UK government.
    According to court proceedings obtained by the newspaper, Malcolm Batki, who was a finance director at G4S Integrated Services until January 2011, has claimed that G4S made an internal charge of as much as £4 million to a key unit to conceal how profitable it was, while the subsidiary in question -- Care & Justice -- was negotiating contracts with the UK Ministry of Justice.

    The whistleblower, who lost his unfair dismissal case, also alleged that that Nick Buckles, G4S’s former CEO who stepped down in May, engaged in insider trading. An email from Buckles was cited from October 2009 before a G4S results announcement about the year to September, asking recipients ‘to post the best possible results’ and defer ‘major one-off issues’ to the October-to-December accounts if possible, the judgment states. A month later, Buckles exercised his G4S share options, buying shares at £1.1 million and immediately selling them for £2.3 million, according to regulatory filings at the time.

    Buckles, who was not a party to the proceedings, told the FT: “Any share sales or purchases made by me have always been undertaken in accordance with the company’s rules on share dealing and with the relevant approvals. Also on this occasion some of the options were reaching their ten-year limit and needed to be exercised.”

    The tribunal did not make any findings over the accounting charge or Buckles’ transaction. It said Batki’s allegation over the former did amount to a so-called protected disclosure under whistleblowing laws, however.
    G4S said it took any allegation “very seriously” but would not comment beyond its evidence to the tribunal over the accounting charge. It also said Buckles’ share transaction was authorised, announced, and not during a close period.

    Inside sources have revealed to the FT that Batki’s allegation of an improper accounting charge is now being investigated by the UK Serious Fraud Office (SFO).
    G4S’ Care & Justice subsidiary, which represents about eight percent of the group’s £8 billion revenues worldwide, is already at the centre of an investigation by the SFO over whether it overbilled the UK taxpayer by £24 million for electronic tagging and prison escort contracts. G4S must demonstrate that it has improved compliance when bidding for new government contracts.

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  9. This stinks so bad, what the hell is going on ? It beggars belief that Grayling is still steaming ahead with this. The warning signs are so obvious, why, why why???

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    1. Because the likes of Grayling think they can get away with it and have the police and military backing to cope with any civil unrest in due course and because it is a small part of a much bigger project of some in The Conservative and Liberal Democratic Parties to have much less public services provided directly by the State as they believe the market and human initiative can make things work better for us all, although obviously, those who are most vulnerable will need to rely on charity and some my react criminally.

      I am not confident that things will be much better with a Labour Party Government as they are also in favour of public services being delivered at the front-line by private companies.

      Some suspect that despite us having a Parliament and Sovereign Government much policy is being dictated by global commercial organisations such as proliferate in the USA who have done things like let whole cities go bankrupt (check out how things are in Detroit)

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    2. Bit like Liverpool Andrew?

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    3. Last time I visited Liverpool - probably 2 or 3 years ago - it seemed far from bankrupt - though there are some very deprived areas which seem almost ignored by Public Authorities.

      One evening I walked between Moscow Drive & Old Swan going via Green Lane and Prescott Road and was on the edge of being shocked at how poor the whole environment was - I was certainly beyond surprise - earlier that day I had strolled around the shiny "Liverpool ONE" & been on the wheel thingy - which seemed smart but lacked what I might describe as a sense of 'warmth' I recall from my days in the Inner City - the outer suburbs, which I did not visit - like Dovecot,Page Moss, Cantril Farm, Belle Vale and the swathes of Speke - always had a bleak 'feel' to them.

      The Detroit I saw in a TV programme was far, far worse than the Liverpool I am familiar with now or then. There are just miles of civil devastation - I cannot imagine our Westminster Government not intervening if any City was abandoned like that. Although I understand some former mining areas have been left in great dereliction, but I am not personally familiar with any.

      The Programme on BBC 4 the other night about Ian Nairn and redevelopment blight was interesting - especially the bits about Newcastle Upon Tyne. I am not aware of any large areas in UK now left in a state of utter dereliction, maybe some reader will comment.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03vrz4h

      As a probation officer I have certainly picked through rubble to do HVs and particularly remember some hard to let 'new' gangway upper floor maisonettes, near Everton Brow in the very early 1980s - but my memory is uncertain of the precise location

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  10. Focus people!
    What are we going to do?
    1. wait for "someone" to save us? Be that Judicial Review, the passage of time so that a general election looms, Lord Ramsbotham????
    2. Willingly split ourselves asunder and go along with this crap ????OR
    regroup and take stock, the key issues appear to me to be:
    a. CRC POs feel they have no role in the future so what should be happening now?
    Involve the unions, have you been made functionally redundant ? Where is the plan for you? If there is no role that surely is the definition of redundancy? Go and see your MP in person and tell them how you have been treated DO SOMETHING NOW. Email your trust HR Department as they are still your employer and ask for your job description, express your concern so it is registered and KEEP THE EMAIL. IF you do not receive a suitable response REGISTER A GRIEVANCE. Then write to the CEO of every bidder asking for your job description, see if they have thought of their future staffing.
    b. NPS staff need to be sooo careful about having responsibility for risk escalation LEARN THE PROCESS TO THE LETTER AND FOLLOW IT. RAISE ANY CONCERNS IN WRITING AND KEEP COPIES, that's your protection.

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    1. To my mind if you don't have a job decription you don't have a job. You can't be protected by normal employment laws. What if you injure yourself at work? Were you operating within the parameters of what your job description states? I don't think you can be covered by your employers insurance policy with no job description-how could you be?

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    2. Contracts of Employment

       All employees have an employment contract, regardless of whether they have anything in writing. A contract is formed by your employer offering you a job and you accepting it. You and your employer are then bound by the terms offered and accepted. Contracts can therefore be oral, written or implied (or a mixture of any of those): if a contract is not written it will be more difficult to say decisively what are your contractual rights and duties, but it doesn’t mean that you don’t have a contract. If you have a contract, and you think your employer has breached the terms of it, you should seek advice straight away. There are very strict timescales for bringing cases to an employment tribunal.All employees are entitled (under section 1 of the Employment Rights Act 1996) to a “written statement” setting out certain particulars of their employment. This should be given to you no more than 2 months after you start work, even if you will only be employed for two months. Your written statement, by law, has to contain the following information:your name and your employer’s nameyour job title or a brief job descriptionthe date when your employment beganyour pay rate and when you will be paidyour hours of workyour holiday entitlementwhere you will be working (if you are based in more than one place it should say this along with your employer’s address)sick pay arrangementsnotice periodsinformation about disciplinary and grievance proceduresany collective agreements that affect your employment terms or conditionspensions and pension schemesif you are not a permanent employee how long your employment is expected to continue, or if you are a fixed term worker the date your employment will endany disciplinary or dismissal procedures that your employer has, including who you can apply to (either by name or description, for example job title) if you have a problem in the workplace or are not happy with a disciplinary or dismissal decision.A written statement is not, in itself, an employment contract and it won’t necessarily cover all of the terms of your employment, but it can be strong evidence of what you have agreed for certain terms.If your job offer letter and/or employment contract contain all the information listed above, there is no need for a separate written statement. If you do not receive a written statement, it is best to raise this informally first with your employer. If you still don’t receive a written statement (or receive a statement which doesn’t include all the required information), you can refer the matter to an employment tribunal.

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  11. What I don't get about all this is that the Work Programme and Court interpreter contracts were really straight forward and are still failing...not complicated at all really. Probation though is so INCREDIBLY complicated. Have they got a clue how complicated just the administration behind Court Orders is, before you even get to thinking how you work with chaotic and sometimes dysfunctional people to move them towards desistance. That is why I think only the mutual should have any chance of winning these contracts, because surely the private companies will pull out of bidding with their heads spinning, or look so ridiculously naïve about practice that their bids will just be so poor in terms of detail about operating models. Of course, does Grayling care? That is the problem, but is he is so ignorant that he doesn't know what he is letting any successful private bidders in for? I don't think even he wants to be seen as a dangerous laughing stock amongst his private buddies.

    As for the third sector, let's please sit up and smell the excrement. Our WYPT CRC ready teams already have caseloads of nearly 100. Third sector organisations like caseloads below 25. Get real - this work will deviate you away from your charitable objectives.

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  12. Jim I think you've missed one off the list – one that I don’t think has ever been discussed
    6 THE CIVIL SERVANTS ARE AFTER EVERYTHING
    I saw an old friend at the weekend who lets just say, has a lot of knowledge of the civil service. We discussed TR and she started to talk about the civil service's role in all of this. I was intrigued as I wasn’t sure what she was getting at. So this was the gist of the conversation which got me very concerned and to be honest sounded very plausible indeed and for once TR became very clear to me. Right, you have Chris G who is sitting in office thinking hmm “probation, they’re a bunch of lazy, good for nothing time wasters” (and by all accounts this is exactly what he does think) lets privatise them. He speaks to the civil servants who think “is there anything in it for us, nah...crack on chris” After a bit of to and fro Grayling decides to privatise some but keep a small section for the civil service. Ahh, now things really get going. Senior civil servants ears prick up, rub their hands and think “there’s definitely something in this for us.” The civil service can then begin to dictate what they want out of the deal. After all my friend led me to understand that civil servants will do anything to justify and keep their positions and if they can increase the amount of civil servants in their particular departments, all the better. So are senior civil servants within moj creating an empire? Off point slightly but in a recent paper introduced which claimed the civil service could be run with 3000 staff was soon thrown in the bin when the department with the most staff decided this was not good idea when they saw how may would be cut. But this demonstrates the simple idea of having strength in numbers.

    So, back to TR. Civil servants begin to look at NPS. “ err, chris, I think nps should write all of the psrs...oh and also i think they should be responsible for high risk and mappa...oh approved premises goes hand in hand with this so we better keep this too...oh and while you’re at it I think the court should remain NPS” The rest is privatised off. I see on here and also hear a lot of comments at work such as “how the hell can Grayling be so naive, ignore every single bit of advice which says this will be a disaster and that stupid to think TR will work, it’s dangerous and anyone with any common sense understands this” Well, trust me, he knows exactly what he is doing, he knows that it will fail and dare I say, seems as if it has almost been set up to fail – anyone hurt or killed in the process is just collateral damage. The civil service has ensured that they have a golden share in CRC so at the first sign that they are failing or a string of SFO’s are hitting the headlines they can swoop in with their gold share trump card and take over the lot thus ensuring the continued work for the civil service. Will Chris G and co care that everything has gone wrong and all of his critics proved right – no! He and the tory government are likely to be long gone and the schoomsing he has done along the way to set these contracts up with the likes of G4S, Sodexho , Serco et al will have paid for a very nice retirement indeed and enough to think “oops, made a bit of cock up with that one...oh well, pass me my next bellini”
    My friends was very surprised no one had actually realised this yet as it seemed very obvious to her.

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    1. Very interesting where are these investigating journalists, this is a story worth looking at. This should generate plenty of comments

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  13. Interesting stuff. sounds the most the plausible explanation really when you look at this whole sorry mess. If I was a potential bidder this is what would really put me off and put the final nail in the bid coffin. TR will probably run for a couple of years before there's too many obvious mistakes ie SFO'sThe likes of serco and G4S can walk away pretty much unscathed. The CEO will be sacked but the companies will carry on just as they have after every other disaster leaving the smaller bidders in complete ruin.

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  14. Ok Civil Servants looking after themselves - I buy that. Chris Grayling looking after himself - I buy that too. Politicians looking after themselves - yep. It's about time we started looking after ourselves. - lets pull together.

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  15. Reasons to be Fearful, part three. Loved the civil service stuff, but it felt a bit Richard Curtis- twee, a bit over crafted, almost Sir Humphrey but without the edge. It gave NOMS too much influence within the Whitehall model - something I don't believe they have. However, I do agree that Grayling and others are operating as sideshows within a bigger script. The timescale for building to today (& beyond - its far from over) was set when Thatcher's bastards evicted her. Look at her eyes in those pictures on the day she left. She was full of hell. This is payback by the ultra Thatcherites. Blair, self-serving weasel that he was born to be, steered us nicely into the ambush. He knows what an utter traitor he is, why else hang around in the Middle East? And we, the UK, are simply being punished. Meantime Thatcher's chums and acolytes are creaming billions from global business, avoiding UK tax like it doesn't exist, selling off the lefty scum services to their mates so they can play the asset strip poker, and generally partying like its 1979.

    I just can't work out who's taken her place, the iron fist behind the curtain.

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  16. Re anon 18.06... Basically grayling is nationalising part of the probation service, this is so opposed to tory ideology that there must be a further explanation nationalising part of a successful trusts, making the state bigger, reducing local influence yes this is the tories the nationalising party something is going on I smell a rat

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    1. Centralising power is certainly part of Tory ideology, regardless of the guff about "localism". Particularly if they see lefty probation officers as part of the awkward squad who keep going on about social issues (just like Michael Gove's recent complaint that social workers learn too much theory).

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  17. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/revealed-how-the-cps-betrays-victims-of-crime--numbers-of-staff-assigned-to-look-after-witnesses-falls-by-57-in-just-three-years-9150172.html

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  18. The Crown Prosecution Service has cut the number of staff it employs to look after witnesses – some of whom are victims of crime – by more than half in just three years, an investigation has revealed.

    Research by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism for The Independent has found that since 2010, the number of Witness Care staff has fallen by 57 per cent across England and Wales.

    Last year alone, the service was cut by 24 per cent in a year, from 131 people employed in 2012, to just 100 employed now. There were 80 Witness Care Units in January 2012 and approximately 45 in January 2014.

    The CPS claims that the cuts have been the result of consolidation of Witness Care Units with the police taking on greater responsibility for supporting those called to give evidence in court.

    However over the same period the total number of police staff in England and Wales has also dropped by 17 per cent.

    The changes appear to contradict a promise by David Cameron to put victims’ rights at the heart of the criminal justice system.

    Police, courts and the probation service are supposed to adhere to a voluntary code protecting the rights of victims. But it has been criticised as toothless and Mr Cameron is examining proposals to put it on a statutory footing.

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