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National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2009-2010

National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2009-2010
Author: Stationery Office (Great Britain)
Publisher: Stationery Office/Tso
Total Pages: 78
Release: 2010-09-09
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780102967197

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The National Offender Management Service (NOMS) is an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), bringing together prison and probation services to deliver the punishment and orders of the courts in custodial and community settings in England and Wales. NOMS operates through a number of providers, including: probation services across England and Wales; HM Prison Service -125 prisons whose 45,0001 staff are directly employed by NOMS; private sector companies managing 11 contracted out prisons; contractors providing services including prisoner escort, bail accommodation and electronic monitoring of offenders; public, private and voluntary/community agency partners including health, employment and training providers. This annual report covers the key performance indicators of r2009-10 and presents examples of the type of work which prisons and probation do with offenders to meet the complex challenges of protecting the public and reducing reoffending.


Restructuring of the National Offender Management Service

Restructuring of the National Offender Management Service
Author: Great Britain: National Audit Office
Publisher: The Stationery Office
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2012-09-18
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780102977257

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The National Offender Management Service, an Executive Agency of the Ministry of Justice, faces substantial financial and operational challenges, including a vulnerability to unexpected changes in the prison population. The Service achieved value for money in 2011-12, as it hit its savings target of £230 million while restructuring its headquarters and it has broadly maintained its performance, such as in reducing reoffending. As a result of some sentencing reforms not going ahead, the Ministry of Justice lost around £130 million of savings. Given the loss of these reforms, the prison population is now unlikely to fall significantly over the next few years, which limits the plans to close older, more expensive, prisons and bring down costs. The savings target for 2012-13 of a further £246 million is challenging and an overspend of £32 million is forecast. The Service currently has a £66 million shortfall in the £122 million needed over the next two years to fund early staff departures aimed at bringing long-term reductions in its payroll bill. The Service has restructured its headquarters, reducing staff numbers by around 650 from around 2,400. Most stakeholders generally regarded the restructure positively, considering it produced a more efficient organisation with greater clarity on accountability. The Service relies on the probation profession to deliver reforms and to reduce costs, but there are some tensions in the relationship. The NAO recommends the Service continues to engage with probation trusts to address their perception it lacks understanding of probation issues.


The National Offender Management Information System

The National Offender Management Information System
Author: Great Britain. National Audit Office
Publisher: The Stationery Office
Total Pages: 44
Release: 2009
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780102954678

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The project's original aim of a single shared database of offenders will not be met, though the number of databases used has been reduced from 220 to three. The new system was to be introduced by January 2008 and was to cost £234 million to 2020. By July 2007, £155 million had been spent on the project, it was two years behind schedule, and estimated lifetime project costs had risen to £690 million. The project was halted while options to get the budget under control were sought. The causes of the delays and cost overruns were : inadequate management oversight, significant underestimation of the project's technical complexity, weak change control and absent budget monitoring. The design of the main supplier contracts precluded pressure on suppliers to deliver to time and cost. In January 2008, NOMS began work on a re-scoped program with an estimated lifetime cost of £513 million and a delivery date of March 2011.


Reshaping Probation and Prisons

Reshaping Probation and Prisons
Author: Hough, Mike
Publisher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2006-01-11
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1861348126

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The Government has embarked on a programme of radical reform for the probation and prison services with the setting up of a National Offender Management Service (NOMS). The aim is to make the two services work more effectively together, and to promote private sector involvement in 'corrections' work. This groundbreaking volume takes a critical look at the different aspects of the NOMS proposals, at a time when the Government is still working out the detail of its reforms. No other academic publication has scrutinised the NOMS proposals so closely. Through six contributions from leading experts on probation and criminal justice the report identifies the risks attached to NOMS; assesses the prospects of success; provides ideas for reshaping government plans and presents an authoritative critique of a set proposals that could go badly wrong. The report will be crucial reading for politicians, civil servants and criminal justice managers. Senior probation and prison staff will find it of particular value.


National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2010-2011

National Offender Management Service Annual Report and Accounts 2010-2011
Author: Great Britain. National Offender Management Service
Publisher: Stationery Office/Tso
Total Pages: 79
Release: 2011
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780102972771

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National Offender Management Service annual report and Accounts 2010-2011


National Offender Management Service

National Offender Management Service
Author: Great Britain. National Audit Office
Publisher: The Stationery Office
Total Pages: 52
Release: 2009
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780102954975

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Maintaining prisons at a safe and acceptable standard is an expensive and complex undertaking. This National Audit Office investigation of maintenance and upkeep of the UK prisons finds that the National Offender Management Service Executive Agency (NOMS) has obtained good value for money from its expenditure on prison maintenance. In spite of an increasing prisoner population - over 73,000 people held in custody in public sector prisons in England and Wales in 2007-08 - spending has been kept at around £320 million in recent years. Nevertheless, the Agency Service could improve its plans for maintaining assets over their economic life and how it manages risks to the effective utilisation of its assets.


National Offender Management Service

National Offender Management Service
Author: Great Britain: National Audit Office
Publisher: The Stationery Office
Total Pages: 56
Release: 2005-10-27
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780102935691

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By September 2005, the prison population in England and Wales reached a record level of 77,300, an increase of 25,000 prisoners over the last ten years, resulting in increased levels of overcrowding and stretched resources. According to Home Office data for 2004, there were 141 people in custody per 100,000 of the population in England and Wales, compared to 98 per 100,000 in Germany and 93 per 100,000 in France. This NAO report examines how the National Offender Management Service (which has responsibility for managing and accommodating prisoners) is dealing with the pressure on places and the implications for performance, particularly the accuracy of Home Office projections of the future population and the impacts of overcrowding on the adult prison estate. The report does not deal with sentencing policy. Findings include that prison population projections have proved unreliable over the longer term; overcrowding is a particular problem for local prisons; the costs of temporarily holding prisoners in police cells have been considerable; and overcrowding disrupts prisoner rehabilitation programmes designed to prevent re-offending.


National Offender Management Service

National Offender Management Service
Author: Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Committee of Public Accounts
Publisher: The Stationery Office
Total Pages: 48
Release: 2006-06-06
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780215029164

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The prison population in England and Wales has been increasing since the 1990s and by November 2005 it reached a record level of 77,800, resulting in increased levels of overcrowding and stretched resources. Following on from a NAO report (HC 458, session 2005-06 (ISBN 0102935696) published in October 2005, the Committee's report examines how the Home Office, the Prison Service and the National Offender Management Service (which has responsibility for managing and accommodating prisoners) are dealing with the challenges involved in accommodating this record number of prisoners, the construction and use of temporary accommodation and the impact on the delivery of education and other training for prisoners. The Committee makes a number of conclusions and recommendations including in relation to: the deportation of foreign nationals, the use of alternatives to remand such as electronic tagging, contingency planning to ensure greater flexibility in accommodation plans including pilot testing new accommodation to identify possible problems early on, the application of best practice in anti-suicide monitoring measures, and the impact of moving prisoners around the prison estate on their training needs.