Oral Answers to Questions Debate

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Department: Ministry of Justice

Oral Answers to Questions

Rebecca Pow Excerpts
Tuesday 5th September 2017

(6 years, 7 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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David Lidington Portrait Mr Lidington
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The scheme operates to provide compensation for people who are victims of crime. Probably all of us, as constituency Members, can think of cases when somebody has been the victim of an assault, but it has been impossible to successfully prosecute the person or people responsible. A direct link to a trial and conviction is therefore not in the scheme. However, I do agree with my hon. Friend that if there is evidence that compensation has been sought fraudulently, the authority ought to seek the necessary legal action to recover those funds.

Rebecca Pow Portrait Rebecca Pow (Taunton Deane) (Con)
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5. What steps the Government are taking to improve offenders’ access to education and employment.

Matt Warman Portrait Matt Warman (Boston and Skegness) (Con)
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16. What steps the Government are taking to improve offenders’ access to education and employment.

Sam Gyimah Portrait The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice (Mr Sam Gyimah)
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Education and employment opportunities are crucial to help offenders to turn around their lives. In line with our reforms, every prisoner will have a personal learning plan linked to their sentence plan. To make this reform effective, we are giving governors control over their education budgets to organise courses that fit prisoners’ needs.

Rebecca Pow Portrait Rebecca Pow
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Gardening and horticultural schemes for growing edible crops are increasingly being incorporated into prison programmes and programmes for those on remand up and down the country, giving offenders transferrable skills and offering them future employment opportunities, as well as encouraging self-confidence and, quite often, transforming unattractive concrete yards into much more pleasant green spaces. Has a formal assessment been made of some of those programmes, with a view to rolling out the best of the models even more widely?

Sam Gyimah Portrait Mr Gyimah
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My hon. Friend is right. I remember visiting Rye Hill prison near Daventry and seeing the pride with which prisoners tended their gardens; they spent hours doing so. She may be aware of the Royal Horticultural Society Windlesham trophy award, which is judged by an independent panel that looks at the best gardening schemes across the prison estate. If she does not mind, I should be delighted to put her name forward to be a judge.