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Labour turns its back on young offenders

Published: Mon 4 Aug 2014 03:34 PM
Labour turns its back on young offenders
Labour proposals to scrap Military Style Activity Camps (MAC Camps) without any alternative plan show they are prepared to turn their backs on serious youth offenders, says Associate Social Development Minister Chester Borrows.
The camps, established by the National Government in 2010, take up to 40 of the most serious and persistent young offenders each year.
“Military Style Activity Camps were created to help serious young offenders get back onto the right track before they end up in jail,” says Mr Borrows.
“They are not ‘Boot Camps’, but place intensive support around the young offenders, including the discipline and positive role-modelling provided by the New Zealand Defence Force as well as education, rehabilitation, drug, alcohol and anger-management counselling.”
The most recent results show 79 per cent of MAC graduates reduce their rate of offending. Of those who do reoffend in some way, 81 per cent offend at a less serious level, including a 53 per cent reduction in violent offending.
“No reoffending is acceptable, but anyone who thinks they have a magic solution to stop these young people offending entirely is dreaming,” says Mr Borrows.
“These are some of our most serious young offenders, so any reduction in their future offending means fewer victims, and is a huge success.”
MAC Camps are part of the broader success in reducing youth crime, which has fallen by 30 per cent since June 2011, already ahead of the Better Public Services target of 25 per cent by June 2017.
“The National Government is serious about reducing youth crime, and our policies, including MAC Camps, are delivering tangible results,” says Mr Borrows.
“Labour’s promise to scrap them, without any alternative for these young people, shows they have already consigned them to a life of crime, prison, and creating victims. Labour might be willing to give up on these kids, but we won’t.”
ends

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