Pubdate: Wed, 18 Jun 2003 Source: Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) Copyright: Allied Press Limited, 2003 Contact: http://www2.odt.co.nz Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/925 Author: NZPA PRISON SEARCHES UPSET UNIONISTS Wellington: A new Corrections Department policy which can see all staff and visitors to prisons searched will compromise trust between staff, the prison officers' union says. All entrants to prison sites, including managers, judges, police and service providers could now be searched, Public Prisons Service (PPS) general manager Phil McCarthy announced yesterday. To date, search efforts have concentrated on inmates' visitors. The new move to treat all groups the same is aimed at stopping drugs from entering jails. However, Corrections Association national president Lyn O'Connor said the policy could create tension between prison officers. "The worker that you are doing a rub-down search of, is then someone you are expected to work with in the jail," she said. "There's a gender impact, and an impact on bringing in personal medication, which then becomes known to others and could be information a co-worker would not normally have. "We currently have insufficient staff to do normal business, let alone to find other staff to be made available to do these searches." It would slow down the day to day running of prisons, Ms O'Connor said. "Our members are not happy with what the department is doing and how far they wish to extend that." Mr McCarthy said searching would not operate continuously at prisons, but applied on a random basis. During 2002, about 5000 visitors' vehicles were searched at prisons. This resulted in 80 arrests and the seizure of drugs, drug paraphernalia and weapons, Mr McCarthy said. Last week, staff foiled an attempt to smuggle bullets hidden in shoes into Christchurch Men's Prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens