INDEPENDENT NEWS

The Opportunities Party Criminal Justice Policy

Published: Mon 14 Aug 2017 09:53 AM
Getting Tough on Prisons the Opportunities Party Criminal Justice Policy
New Zealand’s burgeoning prison industry is a political crime that has been aided and abetted by successive governments, according to The Opportunities Party.
What is more, leader Gareth Morgan said today in launching the party’s criminal justice policy, the economic cost of incarcerating thousands of offenders is only going to grow as long as political parties try to outbid each other on who can offer the most $273.00 a night beds.
TOP has an innovative nine-point plan to reduce our prison muster and catch young offenders before they become part of the criminal population. We’re not planning to combat crime by putting more police on the street but by putting fewer criminals into society.
“There’s no good reason why New Zealand should continue to enjoy the dubious distinction of caging more people per head of population than any other western industrialised nation this side of the States,” Dr Morgan says.
“Even the current government accepts our prison growth is an abject moral failure,” Dr Morgan says, “yet to appease redneck voters National is now planning to open a boot camp detention facility in Waiouru to further harden our most challenging young offenders”.
TOP aims to reduce the prison muster by around 40%, down from the current level of 210 inmates per hundred thousand Kiwis, to the OECD average, by 2027. That alone would save $4.5bn.
This vision turns on new strategies to deal with at risk young people, and extending the more progressive and less punitive jurisdiction of the Youth Court to all offenders under 20 years old. The role of restorative justice will be expanded, drug addiction and substance abuse will be properly dealt with, and political gimmicks like the three strikes law will be dumped.
“The situation we are in now isn’t a result of having the world’s worst offenders,” Dr Morgan says, “It has come about because New Zealand has some of the world’s worst and most outdated criminal justice policies.
Positive Justice
Prison isn’t the solution
If it were, we would know by now.
New Zealand is stuck in a vicious cycle. Every year we lock up more people. That doesn’t tackle the causes of crime (which are more about social and economic conditions – addressed by some of our other policies). The evidence, in fact, suggests that prison is one of the significant causes of crime. Given that, it is just not smart for our criminal justice system to keep locking up more and more people.
New Zealand prison population rate (prisoners per 100,000 of the general population) - 1950-2016
An expensive record
As a proportion of its general population, New Zealand has the 2nd highest prison population in the western world (after the United States). It is 84% higher than the developed country average of 114. This fact alone should be enough to ring alarm bells and make policy change a priority.
Prison is expensive. Each occupied prison bed costs about $100,000 a year. The cost of running New Zealand prisons is now $900m a year, an increase of around 400% since 2000.
The vicious cycle
Every year we lock up more people, many of whom need help with basic literacy, mental illness and drug addiction. Prisons are not good places to deal with these problems. But worst of all, prisons nurture crime – they help criminals to network and gangs to recruit.
People leave prison more likely to commit crimes than before they went in. Six months after being released, around 18% will be back in prison. Within 5 years, around 50% will be back in prison and around 70% reconvicted of some offence. So there’s no evidence here that prison reduces reoffending.
Prisoners are not the only people affected, so are their families. At any one time, something like 20,000 children have a parent in prison, and sadly those children are 5 times more likely to end up in prison than a child whose parents are never in prison.
No end in sight
Our current criminal justice policy will almost certainly see a steady growth in the prison population. The Government acknowledges this when it tells us it is spending $1bn on a new 1,800-bed prison. By our calculations, it will need another $1bn prison by 2025.
Successive Governments have tightened bail conditions, lengthened custodial sentences and made parole harder to get; in short, put more people in prison for longer. These are the drivers of a soaring prison population. Given the evidence that prison is not the answer, this has to change.
TOP – break the cycle
Our objective is a justice system that focuses on rehabilitation rather than incarceration. We want to get the prison population back to near the developed country average of 114 prisoners per 100,000 of the general population, or a total of no more than 6,000, by 2027.
We calculate that the difference between reducing the prison population to 6,000 over the next 10 years and allowing it to steadily grow is conservatively $4.5bn. This money could be better used to kick start a virtuous cycle of rehabilitation, reduced crime and lower costs (and on good social policies).
Getting positive not more punitive
TOP will reverse the changes made by the Bail Amendment Act 2013. The Act assumes some people are guilty until proven innocent, making bail harder to get with the result that the remand prison population (people awaiting trial or sentencing) is now almost a third of the prison population.
The savings from lowering the remand population will be invested in parts of the criminal justice system that are known to reduce offending and are cheaper than prison:
• Raise the Youth Court age to 20;
• Sentence more people to alcohol and drug treatment - they go to prison only if they don’t complete their treatment; and
• More Restorative Justice.
Many offenders end up in prison not because a judge believes that it is best for the community but because the court has no other good options. We need to invest in programmes that give judges other options and are focused on genuinely rehabilitating offenders rather than the dumb and lazy option of imprisonment.
For example, the US justice system has had success with ‘Parenting with Love and Limits,’ a 20-hour program for parents of children with serious difficulties. Juvenile offenders take it rather than go to prison. For each dollar spent on it, there is an estimated benefit of $22.91.
New Zealand will not simply copy the US; we have our own innovative solutions, but they almost never get properly evaluated and expanded if they work.
We will dial back legislation that strips the rights of prisoners and undermines their ability to reintegrate into society: return to prisoners the right to vote in elections; repeal the ‘three strikes’ regime; amend the Parole Act, and strengthen the Clean Slate Act.
ENDS

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