Gordon Campbell on the Waikeria Prison decisionFirst published on Werewolf
So much for the easy part on prison policy. Yesterday, the coalition government announced its decision to build a smaller 500 bed high security prison at Waikeria, with a 100-bed mental health unit attached – rather than the huge 2,000-3,000 bed American style mega-prison originally envisaged by National. Reportedly, some of the money saved will be put into related services to do with rehabilitation, such as housing. (Clearly, you can’t release prisoners on bail or parole, unless they have somewhere to go.)
The hard part is yet to come. When and how does the government propose to change the laws and regulations to do with
bail and parole, both of which remain key drivers of New Zealand’s bizarrely high – and economically unaffordable –
rates of imprisonment? And how does the government propose to re-assure the public that such changes will (a) not put
them at undue risk but will instead (b) enable the same resources to be spent on far more constructive community needs?
Already, National is beating the drums of community alarm at the prospect. In response to the Waikeria decision,
Corrections spokesperson Mark Mitchell has been stoking public fears at the possible release on bail of people “ who
should be in prison”. So much for Sir Peter Gluckman’s hopes that New Zealand can have a evidence-based debate on
prisons, and come up with a rational prison policy that weighs all of the social and economic costs (including the
opportunity costs) of locking up vast numbers of people at rates far in excess of what happens in almost every other
developed country outside the United States.
National’s stance – and its readiness to play the fear card – is depressing. Afer all, it was the populist law’n’order
policies pursued by National (including the ‘three strikes’ policy that its Act Party colleagues imported from the
United States) that helped to create the current prison overcrowding problem in the first place. While it is up to Her
Majesty’s loyal Opposition to oppose government policy that role, surely, also includes an obligation to put up opposing
ideas.
Yet on prison reform, National appears to have no alternative solution apart from continuing down the same ruinous
American road of fuelling the prison-industrial complex. This process consists of inviting corporates to invest in
prison building, and then ensuring that official law’n’order policies will generate a steady supply of inmates to fill
them. Ultimately, taxpayers can be relied on to foot the bill, provided they can be sufficiently motivated by (largely
irrational) fears to do so.
Labour and the Greens say they want to break that pattern. (New Zealand First can’t seem to grasp that there will be
less money for hip operations if it clings to the three strikes policy at all costs.) There is talk of the coalition
government putting more funds into rehabilitation, literacy, work skills and (in some cases as required) into mental
health care. These are very long-term processes, though.
In the short to medium term, the problems of overcrowding will persist. So, apparently, will the pernicious practice of
double bunking, albeit within the bigger cells that the new Waikeria will provide. The only successful relief for
overcrowding though, will require changes to this country’s bail and parole laws. The rules that have reduced the
eligibility for bail at one end of the prison process, while also raising the ratio of sentences that must be served at the other, must be reviewed, and have to be changed.
This surely, is the only immediate source of relief to the overcrowding problem. Earlier this week, this column pointed
out that there are nearly 3,000 remand prisoners within our current prison intake, alongside the 7,443 who have actually
been sentenced for a crime, for a grand total of 10, 394 prisoners. Other countries (outside the US) manage to exist in
relative safety with having more people out on bail, and with shorter sentences for less serious offences. Meanwhile, we
are currently imprisoning people at a rate of 220 per 100,000 when the rate for Ireland (which has almost exactly the
same population) is only 82.
With some reason, New Zealand likes to pride itself on the advances made on bi-culturalism since the Treaty-led
resurgence began in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Yet by some measures, the imprisonment rate per 100,000 population
for Maori may now be as high as 660, and while Maori comprise only 14.5% of the population, in February 2018 they were a
lopsided 50.3% of the prison population. Under National and despite the presence of the Maori Party in its governing
arrangement, the 2017 Waitangi Tribunal report Tu Mai Te Tangi found that Corrections “does not have a specific strategy or target to reduce Māori re-offending.”
Funding by PPP
The coalition government will run the new facility at Waikeria, but it will – reportedly – be funded by a public-private
partnership. While it is re-assuring that the state will control the Waikeria prison management (including the
staff-to-inmate ratios) it remains to be seen just where and how the profit incentive will be extended to private sector
players, to motivate them to participate in this venture. Where’s the profit to be made, if it isn’t to consist – as
Serco showed – in slashing the labour costs via unsafe staff-to-inmate ratios?
Overall, the political advantage that PPPs offer to any government is that they serve as an accounting fiction, by
shifting at least some of the costs off the government’s books. On overseas experience however, PPPs also lock taxpayers
into arrangements with the private sector that can endure for decades. Commonly, these arrangements end up being far,
far more expensive than if governments had picked up the tab in the first place.
Unfortunately, we may never know the real score. Because another pernicious aspect of PPPs is that the alleged
“commercial sensitivities” involved will end up hiding the contractual details of just how (and for how much) the
taxpayer has been put on the hook. As I said, the easy part was deciding to build a smaller Waikeria. Everything else is
fraught with political and socio-economic risk. Unfortunately, Corrections Minister Kelvin Davis is not the Cabinet’s
safest pair of hands – and neither is he the government’s best salesman of new and controversial ideas.
The Singapore Cave-In
Even on its terms – de-nuking to be rewarded by the lifting of economic sanctions – the Singapore deal looks far, far
worse than the Iran deal, which had built in strict steps towards de-nuclearisation, and solid timetables and external
inspection and verification procedures. Nothing of that sort is even mentioned in the allegedly “comprehensive”
Singapore agreement.
Regardless, North Korean media are already reporting that Trump has pledged to lift economic sanctions. Simultaneously
South Korea has been thrown under a bus, in that US/South Korean military exercises are being suspended without Seoul
being consulted, or even advised beforehand. At his press conference, Trump cited the cost of flying US planes from
Guam, and suggested that South Korea wasn’t playing its way. Or doing its bit on trade. So much for the 60 year alliance
with South Korea.
North Korea is not alone in thinking that for now, the US has simply caved in. As many have noted, the Singapore
agreement’s key commitment to “work towards the de-nuclearisation of the Korean peninsula” is almost entirely
meaningless. “De-nuclearisatuon” was a convenient weasel term coined 25 years ago and it has been flouted by Pyongyang
ever since. It is also regarded by North Korea in exactly the opposite way that the US regards it.
To Pyongyang, the “de-nuclearisation” term is code for the US dis-engaging itself from the defence of South Korea, and
that impression has already been re-inforced by Trump’s unilateral cave-in over military exercises. Having done his best
for Putin at the G-7 to destroy the West’s alliances in Europe, Trump is now seeking to unravel the existing defence
pacts in the Asia-Pacific, while taking the payoffs from China. Such a payoff has already been made by China for Trump’s
business deal in Indonesia, and for his daughter’s trademarks in China with more pending. In turn, Trump has
reciprocated by offering regulatory relief to the Chinese firm ZTE as [art of his newly found enthusiasm for saving
Chinese jobs. Reportedly, Ivanka Trump and her husband have made $82 million last year, while still being on the White
House public payroll.
If all that was bad enough, we also got the weird video, which – among other things, puts the US president and the North Korean dictator on an equal footing, as joint global
saviours. In Singapore, we had the fulsome praise and back pats showered on Kim Yong Un, despite North Korea’s vile
human rights record, which Trump dutifully defended on the grounds that the human rights record of other countries is
also “rough, by the way”. (Phew. At least Kim isn’t a despicable fiend like Justin Trudeau.)
Once Trump can stand saluting the return of the remains of US soldiers killed in the Korean war, North Korea can
probably expect some lifting of economic sanctions. They should enjoy their good fortune while they can, because they
too, will inevitably in time be thrown under a bus. It happens to everyone who deals with Trump. Key phrase, from the press conference transcript:
I think he [Kim] will do these things. I may be wrong. I may stand before you in six months and say, hey, I was wrong. I
don’t know I’ll ever admit that. I’ll find some excuse.
Footnote: Besides the American people, South Korea and Japan, the big loser from the Singapore summit was Iran. With North Korea
off the radar as a threat to US interests, Iran is now in the uncomfortable position of being the Last Man Standing, of
those countries that comprised the original US axis of evil. If it made accidental war with North Korea less likely,
this week’s Singapore summit made the intentional US war with Iran far more likely. Not-co-incidentally, the Saudi-led
coalition yesterday launched a fresh military onslaught against the civilian population of Yemen, where its efforts have already put eight million people at risk of famine. Trump is such a useful distraction, at home
and abroad.
Prison songs
Literally and metaphorically, prison has always been a fertile ground for musical inspiration. Without being sentimental
about the reasons for being in prison, Bukka White’s “When Can I Change My Clothes” uses his first own experience in
Parchman to convey the loss of identity that prison garb involves:
So many days I would be
Walkin' down the road
I can hardly walk for lookin' down on my clothes
I wonder how long
Before I can change my clothes?
I wonder how long
'Fore I can change my clothes
Never will forget that day
When they taken my clothes
Taken my citizen's clothes
And throwed them away
Wonder how long
Before I can change my clothes?
If prison lies at one end of the spectrum, trains like the Midnight Special signify the sense of freedom. Here’s Bukka
White again, with what is maybe the most exhilarating song ever written about the joys of hopping a freight train, on
one warm summer evening back in the late 1930s. Grab your shoes, ‘cos if you can’t catch it as the crossing, you can
catch it at the bend…