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TREVOR AGREES TO
PUT P201 - ‘STRATEGY FOR DEALING WITH YOUNG OFFENDERS’ WORKING GROUP
PROPOSITION ON HOLD
Trevor has just informed us that following discussions with Home Affairs
Minister, Senator Ian Le Marquand he has agreed to put his proposition
to establish a working group to develop a strategy for dealing with
young offenders ‘on hold’ until April.
Trevor explains:
‘Having been one of the politicians who called for the urgent
construction of an all-encompassing ‘Children’s Plan for Jersey’ (whilst
Vice-Chairman of the Vulnerable Children’s Services Scrutiny Review),
I’ve taken this decision to allow us to see if all that is needed can
come out of the work recently commissioned with Andrew Williamson.
Similarly, to establish if the claimed ‘reactivation’ of the Corporate
Parent which failed so dismally in the past can now live up to its
responsibilities. It’s no good just having a new name – it has to
deliver.’
Nevertheless, Trevor is keen to stress that at this stage he is
certainly not pulling or abandoning the proposition.
‘Like the Minister I obviously do not wish to see any work unnecessarily
duplicated,’ he told us. ‘But one of the pleasing outcomes of my earlier
proposition, P148, was that the debate around it in November 2009 has
really contributed to focussing people’s minds on the urgent need to get
to grips with the issue of young offenders.
Thus, given that things have finally begun to move somewhat I’m happy to
put the proposition on hold for a couple of months to see what develops.
But I will be watching the situation closely. This is not just about
sorting out the Youth Justice system. Far from it!
We need a root and branch look at everything that underlies and
contributes to young people ‘going off the rails’ and offending. If the
work initiated by the Home Affairs Minister and his colleagues fails to
deliver in terms of the necessary depth then come April I will bring the
proposition back to the States for debate. This is just too important to
risk not getting right.
Trevor also told us of his real frustration with the failure of
Ministerial government to utilise the many different skills and work
experiences of Members existent within the States.
‘I obviously have very real concerns about how the Chief Minister has
consistently told us he is committed to ‘inclusive’ government - yet
time-after-time has acted to implement the exact opposite. Setting up
this style of strategy group would have been an example of precisely the
way the States should be making use of individual Members professional
experience and skills to get the best results for the community.
This is an area of work I am passionate about coming from the background
that I do; and where I would like to play a part. Many other
‘backbenchers’ feel exactly the same about other areas. We appear to
have taken a step in the right direction with the recent acceptance by
the States of the Fort Regent working group advocated by Scrutiny. And
if we are not to forever be a ‘them’ and ‘us’ government then this is
surely the way forward that we must be willing to follow. Unfortunately,
I admit I can’t help feeling that for many within the COM ‘inclusion’ is
just a convenient sound-byte for the spin-doctors’
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