Pubdate: Mon, 21 Aug 2006 Source: Royal Gazette, The (Bermuda) Copyright: 2006 The Royal Gazette Ltd. Contact: http://www.theroyalgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2103 Author: Matthew Taylor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) PRISONERS TO GET CARROT AND STICK TREATMENT New prisons boss Bryan Payling is to crack down on inmates who refuse to take rehabilitation programmes by withholding privileges. The 'get tough' programme will be phased in with visits and access to cash and recreation likely to be restricted for prisoners who refuse to toe the line. The Acting Commissioner of Corrections, who took over at the beginning of this month, said the majority of privileges are now available to all prisoners from day one -- regardless of whether they show willingness to reform. They include gym and sports, time out of cells, payment of 50 cents a day ($1 a day for those who work), receiving cash from the outside to use in the canteen, and visiting rights. There is also the right to buy a TV after two years. Mr. Payling said: "We are looking to put together a package which provides a minimum but humane level for prisoners who don't participate in the regime at all -- who don't behave properly. "There will be an intermediate level for the majority who behave properly and an enhanced level for prisoners whose conduct and effort to address their offending behaviour is of particularly merit." Privileges should be earned rather than doled out automatically, said Mr. Payling. "We are close to a final draft which will be put forward for ministerial approval." He said six managers and two members of the Prison Officers Association had visited England where the carrot and stick approach was successfully being used. "My experience of prisons which operate this way is you create an environment in which there's positive encouragement to address offending behaviour and work and it strengthens the positive relationships between prison officers and inmates. "It's not about making prisoners' lives easy. "It's about where they do make the effort they can see, just like the rest of us, there's some recognition -- and they don't see people getting something for nothing." However he rejected the perception that Westgate was a holiday camp. "I don't consider Westgate soft -- it certainly is not soft by UK standards." Mr. Payling hopes to expand the prisons drug testing policy although he said fears that Westgate was chock full of addicted prisoners were vastly over-stated. He said random mandatory drug testing, which has been running for seven months, showed about ten percent were positive at Westgate while at the Prison Farm and Co-ed Facility tests often found none of those tested were on drugs. The figure is a far cry from the entry levels showing more than three quarters of convicts were on drugs when they first arrive in prison. Mr. Payling now wants regular testing of hard-core users as well as random testing. "It might be every week and every month." And he wants to expand privileges for inmates who undergo voluntary testing to demonstrate they are drug-free. Those who slip up under voluntary testing would be given further help. "The prisoner is saying I am trying to give up drugs and I need assistance. Sometimes the prisoner needs assistance to tell other people they are giving up drugs." He said the approach had worked in the UK where prisoners weaning themselves off narcotics were sometimes held in separate units. "In one of my prisons we set aside a unit which held 120 prisoners. We very quickly filled that up with prisoners who were subscribing to voluntary testing. "By the time I left England we were having to look at opening up another unit for prisoners who didn't want to be involved in the drugs culture. Having a separate unit gets them out of that temptation." He plans to look into having a separate drug-free unit within Bermuda's prison system. The Corrections Department is now in dialogue with Court Services about getting trainers from the UK to instruct staff to deliver drug programmes for short-term inmates who weren't getting the treatment they needed. The prison has just one psychologist but is now trying to recruit two more -- a process re-started after two potential hires backed out at the last minute. A new approach will be taken with drug-sniffer dogs with some deployed to alert officers if drugs are on a person and others to help root out drugs hidden in cells. He said having dogs do both 'passive' and 'active' functions was less efficient than having specialist dogs. The service has just acquired another 'passive' dog, making up a team of three. Asked about allegations made by former Corrections Commissioner Hubert Dean that around a dozen officers were bringing in drugs Mr. Payling said it was inappropriate to malign officers, most of whom were doing a good job under difficult circumstances. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom