Pubdate: Thu, 14 May 1998 Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: Website: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: Jenny Booth MINISTER SUPPORTS CALL FOR FEMALE OFFENDERS TO BE TREATED DIFFERENTLY TO MEN ITS authors admit there is not a single new idea in the report Women Offenders - A Safer Way, which was adopted by the Scottish Office yesterday as the blueprint for punishing women in future. Yet it was hailed by criminal justice professionals as the most radical document in recent penal history. Its radicalism is to start from the premise that women are different. They offend less often and less violently than men. They react with more distress to being fined and locked up in prison, because they have less money and bigger family responsibilities. They take drugs for more emotional reasons, to blot out the heartache of abuse and mental illness. And so it only makes sense for them to be punished in different ways. Women's groups and criminal justice reformers have been claiming this for years. But until the suicides began at Cornton Vale women's prison they remained voices in the wilderness. Clive Fairweather and Angus Skinner, the chief inspectors of prisons and social work, have now drawn together the relevant information and arguments in their assessment of female offending. Henry McLeish, the Scottish Office minister whose duties include women as well as home affairs promised yesterday to provide the willpower to drive change. "It seemed to me the tragic deaths at Cornton Vale weren't just an issue of great heartache to the families involved and despair to prison staff, but it touched the public in Scotland and forced us to ask, is there a better way to avoid this?" said Mr McLeish. "This report is exactly that - in 1998, a way of doing better. This is an issue that extends beyond the prison walls. There was a feeling for years that the needs of women offenders were different from men. That is the central conclusion of this report." Mr McLeish accepted that the population of Cornton Vale women's prison should be halved, and said he would try to ensure no more women under 18 were jailed by 2000. He appointed Professor Sheila McLean of Glasgow University to convene a task force that will tackle the acute problems of women offenders from Glasgow and the west of Scotland, who represent 80 per cent of the inmates of Cornton Vale. It is likely to concentrate on improved ways of housing, treating and punishing the very high number of women who become tangled in the criminal justice system because of their drug problems, in particular Glasgow's 900 heroin-injecting prostitutes. Prof Maclean said of the Cornton Vale report yesterday: "It's an extremely impressive report, which shows something we have been aware of for years - that because the majority of people involved in the criminal justice system are men, it has been a very male culture. It makes perfect sense to see if there is a way the system can be adapted to the needs of minority groups, like women." Every social work department in Scotland will now be required to draw up a separate criminal justice policy for women, devising new community programmes and collecting data on women offenders. George Irving, the vice-president of the Association of Directors of Social Work, said: "Social workers have been to blame for failing to consider the needs of women in the past. We thoroughly welcome this report. I feel optimistic at being able to subscribe wholeheartedly to a new approach that both local and central government can agree on, instead of submitting to a bombardment of legislation." Enthusiasm like Mr Irving's is expected to help the new policies trickle down to the grassroots where they will be put into practice. Mr McLeish promised to ensure that money is also not a stumbling block. Rebuilding work ordered for Cornton Vale - including knocking groups of three cells into double bedsits for two prisoners to share, providing one another with mutual support - is scheduled to cost 2.25 million, Scottish Prison Service area director Pete Withers revealed. Kate Donegan, the governor of Cornton Vale, said she was very happy at the sweeping perspective the report had taken of the whole criminal justice system. But even if does not cost a penny to implement, yesterday's report will always be the most expensive document in Scottish criminal justice history. Seven women hanged themselves in prison before the Government decided that it was time for a complete rethink on the way society punishes female offenders. "My first reaction is that this report is a year too late," said Jim Bollan. He and his wife Anne have been left to bring up their infant granddaughter after their 19-year-old daughter Angela committed suicide in Cornton Vale in 1996. "The Government should have commissioned this 12 months ago when they came into office. I welcome the main thrust of the document, that a lot less women should be sent to prison. "That's what the families of the victims have been asking for for a long time, and if people had listened a couple of years ago when Angela died we might not have had any more deaths." - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett