Source: Herald, The (UK) Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk Pubdate: Wed, 9 Sep 1998 Author: James Freeman, Home Affairs Correspondent PRISONS URGED TO REDUCE DRUG MISUSE THE Scottish Prison Service could help reduce overcrowding by placing greater emphasis on time in prison as an opportunity to reduce drugs misuse, Mr Clive Fairweather, Scotland's chief inspector of prisons, yesterday told an Oxford audience. Mr Fairweather was addressing the Howard League in a lecture at New College where he contrasted the current stability and progress in the Scottish penal system with the crisis facing the much-larger English system. Much of what he said is likely to be reflected in his annual report which he will present in Edinburgh tomorrow. He stated yesterday: "If more individuals leave prison with their drug habit reduced, there could be a delay or even a cessation of some repeat crimes. To achieve this, there will have to be a much more thorough assessment of the size of each and every prisoner's drug problem at the reception so that resources can be prioritised. "This is, I believe, fundamental to all future drug strategies - a much greater emphasis on reception or induction which should be a process and not just an event. It is where I would concentrate most mandatory drug testing resources." Mr Fairweather also called for greater community involvement, particularly through greater participation by Drugs Action Teams and prisoners' families, in the immediate pre-release period. If prisoners could see that through-care arrangements were really beginning to work, more of them might become involved in drug reduction programmes and move towards drug free lifestyles. He went on to repeat a call made many times before by the prison inspectorate in Scotland - a better deal for remandees. For the first time, the remand population had started to fall, proportionally now representing a sixth of the daily prison population in Scotland against a fifth last year. "They figure more prominently among suicides," he said, "and often get very little treatment for drug withdrawal problems because of the lack of resources caused by overcrowding. More recently, and at long last, individual governors have began to respond to the plight of these individuals and to provide better conditions for them. So they should. The innocent, not guilty or not proven deserve priority treatment over the convicted, not the other way round." - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan