The Live Wire
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ian katz | Stephens clear that once Hunt took over responsibility for BSkyB bid, any inform...
14:21Ian Katz
TWITTER
Stephens clear that once Hunt took over responsibility for BSkyB bid, any informal communication w News Corp by his officials wd be wrong
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chris dillow | Leveson's unlearnt lesson
14:17Stumbling and Mumbling
BLOG
The Leveson inquiry has drawn our attention to a fundamental political problem which hasn't had the attention it deserves. I'm referring to the fact that Jeremy Hunt supported News Corp's bid for BSky...
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politicshomeuk | Robert Jay QC describes the BSkyB takeover as a "boiling hot potato" for the DCM...
13:56PoliticsHome
TWITTER
Robert Jay QC describes the BSkyB takeover as a “boiling hot potato” for the DCMS. #Leveson http://t.co/LNFuAWOj
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Gove says King James Bible is "literary masterpiece first and foremost" and impo...
13:54Chris Cook
TWITTER
Gove says King James Bible is "literary masterpiece first and foremost" and important to "life of this nation". Hmm. http://t.co/mfnfHsqC
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politicshomeuk | Jonathan Stephens: "Management of special advisers is for the ministers who app...
13:50PoliticsHome
TWITTER
Jonathan Stephens: “Management of special advisers is for the ministers who appoint them.” #leveson http://t.co/LNFuAWOj
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Press Release
Agencies must work together to prevent reoffending and homelessness
15 September 2011
Nearly half of criminal justice staff would benefit from training around housing issues, while more than a third of homelessness workers want help to understand and address client offending, a new report reveals.
A report launched today by Homeless Link, the umbrella organisation for the homeless sector, calls for the homelessness and criminal justice agencies to work together to prevent prison leavers reoffending or ending up on the streets.
The report, Better Together: Preventing reoffending and homelessness, is based on input from more than 400 staff and 75 clients. Funded by The Monument Trust, it promotes the need for more national and local coordination and offers practical steps for achieving this.
Recommendations from the report include:
Ensuring staff have the right knowledge to do the job: nearly half of respondents from the criminal justice sector said they would benefit from training on housing needs, while more than a third of homelessness providers wanted training to help them understand and address offending.
Criminal justice and homeless agencies involving each other as key partners: homeless service providers said 44% of their clients were known to have offended in the past year, while 9% have been to prison more than once.
More action to challenge the restriction on accommodation for ex-offenders: Clients with offending histories continue to face exclusions to accommodation in many areas, including from housing associations, private landlords and supported accommodation providers.
The report comes in the wake of Homeless Link research*, which has found that:
62% of adults using homelessness, drug and other services had spent time in prison, child care or other institutions
79% of ex-offenders who are homeless are reconvicted within one year
37% of prisoners need assistance to find somewhere to live after release
20% of clients in homelessness services are in contact with probation
Over 75% of homelessness services in England support clients who are prison leavers
Commenting on the report Alice Evans, Head of Policy Analysis at Homeless Link, said:
“While our research has uncovered localised pockets of good practice, the majority of experiences show there is a need for agencies to work together more closely to prevent people who have previously offended and are now homeless falling deeper into the cycle of homelessness and reoffending.
“We are calling for the homeless and criminal justice sectors to provide services that complement each other, both on a national and local level. With greater financial pressures and a shift towards localism, joint approaches will prove crucial in meeting our shared aims of reducing reoffending and homelessness.”
Mark Woodruff, an Executive for the Monument Trust, says:
“Homeless Link has produced a superb analysis to show how prison and probation, homelessness charities and public services in the community can move from working in separate corners of the problems people present to combined efforts to motivate and maintain desistance from offending.”
Download the report:
http://www.homeless.org.uk/sites/default/files/Better%20Together%20Final%20Report_Sep11_prm.pdf
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