HM Prison Brinsford
Location | Featherstone, Staffordshire |
---|---|
Security class | Juveniles/Young offenders |
Population | 569 (as of August 2008) |
Opened | 1991 |
Managed by | HM Prison Services |
Governor | Carl Hardwick [no longer in post following 2013 HMIP report] |
Website | Brinsford at justice.gov.uk |
HM Prison Brinsford is a male juveniles' prison and Young Offenders Institution, located in the village of Featherstone (near Wolverhampton), in Staffordshire, England. The prison is operated by Her Majesty's Prison Service.
History
Brinsford was opened in 1991 as a YOI and Remand Centre. The site had been previously acquired from the Ministry of Defence, and already housed Featherstone Prison.
In 2001 Brinsford was branded a disgrace after an inspection found the prison's regime to be negligent and lacking in understanding towards prisoners, with large indicators of self harm, fear of safety and bullying at the prison.[1] A year later two additional education blocks were built at Brinsford, with the regime promising a renewed focus on education and training at the site.
In 2003 four prisoners escaped from Brinsford after assaulting a prison officer and stealing his keys to an administration block. The four inmates then smashed a window and escaped over the prison's perimeter wall.[2]
In 2008 an additional residential unit and activity centre were built at Brinsford. This resulted in a reduction of places for Juveniles, and an increase in places for Young Offenders at the prison.
The prison today
Brinsford holds Young Offenders (those aged over 18). Accommodation at the prison comprises five Residential Units: Unit 1 for Sentenced and Remand Juveniles; Unit 2 for Sentenced Young Offenders; Unit 3 for Young Offender Trials and Sections; Unit 4 for Young Offender Inductions and Remands; and Unit 5 for more Sentenced Young Offenders. All cells have integral sanitation, television and electricity, while cells in Unit 5 also have showers.
Education at the prison is provided by Derby College and courses offered include: Literacy and Numeracy; Social & Life Skills; Communication & Application of Number; ESOL; Practical Crafts; Visual Art; Cookery; Information Technology; Painting and Decorating; Woodwork; Horticulture; Cleaning Science; Physical Education; and Music.
Other facilities at the prison include a gym and sports pitches, Chaplaincy service, Job Centre, PIN telephones, Legal Services, Incentives and Earned Privileges schemes, Connexions and the Samaritans.
Inspections
The last inspection of HMYOI Brinsford was from 4–15 November 2013. The inspection found that the situation at the institution had not improved since the previous inspection in 2012. The Chief Inspector of Prisons stated that Brinsford had "the worst overall findings my inspectorate has identified in a single prison during my tenure as Chief Inspector". The report found that the prison failed at inducting new inmates to the regime, that the level of violence was "too high", that a quarter of inmates surveyed said that it was easy to get drugs into prison. The report also found that many cells were "squalid" in condition and that communal areas were "dirty and in need of refurbishment".
The inspectorate found that just under a third of the inmates were not engaged with either work or education programmes. Overall, they found that the institution required "significant improvement" and that while staff were aware of the problems raised, they were "overwhelmed" and unable to improve the situation.[3]
References
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- ↑ Report on an unannounced inspection of HMYOI Brinsford by HM Chief Inspector of Prisons, 4–15 November 2013
External links
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