British
National
Party
Public Services News Bulletin w/c January 22, 2007
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1. MINISTERS BEG JUDGES: DON'T
JAIL ANY MORE CRIMINALS!
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=430962
Desperate ministers will beg judges to stop sending criminals
to prisons - because they are full. A letter will be sent
to courts across the country admitting that jails are
officially in crisis. It pleads for only the most violent
or dangerous criminals to be given a custodial sentence.
Magistrates are also being asked to allow bail to all
but the most serious crime suspects. The letter, signed
by Home Secretary John Reid, Lord Chancellor Lord Falconer
and Attorney General Lord Goldsmith, is the first in a
series of drastic steps likely over the next few weeks.
The most dramatic option is to order the early release
of thousands of inmates sentenced to 12 months or less.
The Home Secretary has been struggling since last summer
to contain the overcrowding crisis - caused by the Government
ignoring repeated advice to build more prisons - but it
is now escalating rapidly. Politicians don't take advice
because the big headed buggers think they know it all.
In fact they really know very little about most things,
a conclusion come to by years of watching their abysmal
performances. On Monday alone, nearly 300 more prisoners
were sent down by the courts than were released, pushing
the jail population to almost 80,000. Mr Reid, Lord Falconer
and Lord Goldsmith have met senior judges to explain that
the system is now in meltdown. It was agreed that the
three Ministers would circulate a 'communique' to the
entire criminal justice system. It calls on the courts
to jail only the worst criminals effectively freeing
thousands who would normally have been put behind bars.
In cases where judges and magistrates are considering
a term of 12 months or less, they are 'reminded' they
could use a community sentence instead. Magistrates are
also urged to consider bail instead of remanding suspects
such as burglars. Around 13,000 suspects are in custody
awaiting trial. Mr Reid paved the way for his move when
he said recently that taxpayers' money should not be 'squandered'
on locking up or monitoring offenders who would be better
punished in the community. But having to plead with the
courts is still a humiliation for the Home Secretary and
leaves Labour's pledge to be tough on crime in tatters.
Home Office ministers have been warned repeatedly by their
officials that the jail population was growing rapidly,
but have failed to provide sufficient extra places. Mr
Reid has belatedly promised 8,000 more - but none will
be available until spring. In the meantime, hundreds of
criminals are locked in police cells at a cost of £365
each a day. Shadow Home Secretary David Davis said last
night: "It is outrageous that sentences are being
dictated by the prison capacity and not by the crime committed.
"Yet again we see the public being put at risk by
the failure of ministers. How much longer must the public
pay the price of Gordon Brown's miserliness and John Reid's
incompetence? "John Reid must say what he intends
to do about this crisis, and not rely on his usual tactic
of dreaming up an unworkable gimmick to try and deflect
the bad headlines." Home Office officials are hoping
today's letter will buy Mr Reid some time to think of
a politically- acceptable solution. But they fear he will
be forced to take more drastic action as early as next
week. The 'nuclear option' is the early release of thousands
of inmates sentenced to a year or less. They would not
even be placed under supervision, simply be told they
were free to go. Mr Reid wants to avoid this at all costs,
fearing it would instantly wreck his reputation for toughness
and demolish any hopes of a challenge for the Labour leadership.
Less dramatic, but still highly damaging, would be an
extension in the use of releasing inmates on tags. Other
plans include letting as many as 30,000 criminals serving
up to four years walk free ten days before their sentences
would normally end. This was suggested by officials last
year, but blocked by the Home Secretary and Downing Street.
Mr Reid is also likely to try to move foreign prisoners
awaiting deportation decisions into immigration holding
centres, and his officials are trying to acquire prison
ships.
2. NO SPEEDING FINES FOR FOREIGN
DRIVERS
http://news.intranetics.co.uk/articles/3225.html
Speeding foreign drivers have little need for a speed
camera detector as thousands are managing to avoid speed
fines. In Leicestershire alone, nearly 1,500 foreign drivers
have escaped an automatic notice of intended prosecution,
despite being snapped by a gatso speed camera. Under current
laws, drivers only have to register foreign number plates
if the vehicle will be driven in the UK for more than
six months. With no central registry of more fleeting
visitors, many foreign drivers simply need to leave the
country to evade prosecution for a traffic fine. Leicestershire
safety camera partnership snapped 1,487 speeding foreign
vehicles in 2006, including one case on the A1 near Oakham
where a vehicle with foreign plates was snapped at 121
mph. Speed camera officials admitted that the loophole
is likely to provoke resentment among British drivers,
who frequently complain of the proliferation of speed
cameras and the need for speed camera maps when driving.
"People will be a little frustrated to see that a
foreign driver is perhaps getting away with speeding because
we can't trace them and they themselves may have drifted
over the speed limit and been caught," said Hema
Lad from the Leicestershire safety camera partnership.
Leicester MP Peter Soulsby claims that better sharing
of vehicle data is necessary. The Labour MP said: "It
just needs our computer system at the DVLA to be linked
with similar systems in other European countries. "It
needs them to talk to each other to exchange information
and make sure these drivers that are breaking our laws
pay our fines." Transport for London (TfL) has previously
admitted that there are similar problems in the capital,
with foreign drivers evading the congestion charge. Between
January 2005 and June 2006, TfL reports that 88,000 foreign
drivers escaped the C-charge, amounting to lost fines
worth £8.8 million. TfL claimed that the lack of
a Europe-wide agreement on fine enforcement made it very
difficult for UK local authorities to tackle foreign drivers.
Police chiefs warned late last year that foreign lorry
drivers pose a danger to British road users, with the
Association of Chief Police Officers claiming that the
expansion of the EU had exacerbated the problem. It was
found that many foreign lorries were unsafe compared to
UK standards. The road safety charity Brake further warns
that foreign lorry drivers do not have to undergo additional
training. Figures show that foreign drivers are at least
as likely to offend as UK drivers.
3. NHS BLUNDERS KILL 200 PEOPLE
PER YEAR
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/19/nhs19.xml
More than 200 patients died last year as a result of mistakes
made by hospital staff while another 1,800 were made worse
during treatment, it has been revealed. Some patients
were given overdoses of radiation or had healthy organs
removed in operations, while others died after being wrongly
attached to medical equipment. Figures obtained under
the Freedom of Information Act show that 2,109 events
which could injure patients, staff or public - known as
serious untoward incidents - were reported to health authorities
in 2006. At least 221 resulted in avoidable deaths, including
a 76-year-old man who had a feeding tube inserted into
his lungs instead of his stomach and a pensioner who was
given air instead of pure oxygen. Hundreds more patients
were made worse while in hospital because of wrong diagnoses
or mistakes in treatment, such as a woman who had chemotherapy
and surgery for ovarian cancer when she never had the
disease. At least 55 people were given the wrong medication
or too much, with seven receiving an overdose of radiation.
More than 100 suffered from serious delays in diagnoses
or treatment. There were 43 reports of serious equipment
malfunction, one of which left a patient's lungs filled
with hot water after a respiratory humidifier broke down.
In one NHS trust, a pregnant woman was exposed to radiation
which led to the termination of her pregnancy, while a
teaching hospital reported a baby suffering fractured
ribs and humerus while being delivered with forceps. Hospitals
also reported 172 outbreaks of communicable diseases,
including 94 confirmed cases of the superbug MRSA. It
is thought that injuries to patients cost the NHS £2
billion a year in compensation and legal fees. Katherine
Murphy, the director of the Patients' Association, condemned
the figures which were compiled from reports made by 141
of England's 170 hospital trusts between December 2005
and December 2006. She said: "These cases will shock
and appall everyone who has to trust the NHS with their
lives. Patient safety should be paramount. "But with
the NHS deficit, staff are not getting adequate training,
which leads to mistakes." The Department of Health
insisted most patients receive safe treatment, and said
that more reporting of mistakes helps make sure they are
not repeated. A spokesman said: "The incidents reported
by the acute trusts account for only a tiny proportion
of the care and treatment carried out by NHS staff across
the country. "But we have to recognise that in our
increasingly complex health service, mistakes can and
will inevitably happen."
4. PATIENTS SENT TO WRONG WARDS
TO MEET NUMERICAL TARGETS
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/17/nae117.xml
Doctors are struggling to meet the Governments accident
and emergency waiting time target because the NHS cash
crisis is resulting in a shortage of beds, doctors
leaders warned today. A survey for the British Medical
Association (BMA) found that a shortage of hospital beds
was delaying the admission of patients from A&E in
England. The Government target is that 98 per cent of
patients should wait no more than four hours from arrival
at A&E to admission, transfer or discharge. While
recent Government figures show that 98.2 per cent of patients
were seen and treated within four hours in the year to
April 2006, a third of the doctors questioned said figures
were being manipulated to the target. Doctors' leaders
also said that while there have been improvements, healthcare
trusts are claiming to hit the target by including figures
from minor injuries units and walk-in centres where patients
are being seen more quickly than in actual A&E departments.
A total of 503 members the British Association for Emergency
Medicine, including staff at all grades working in emergency
departments, took part in the survey. It found nine out
of 10 doctors believed a lack of in-patient beds was the
main reason for not meeting the Government target. Many
also blamed staff shortages and patients attending A&E
with minor problems. The NHS finished the last financial
year with a record deficit of £512 million. Two-thirds
said patients were moved to inappropriate areas or wards
to help meet the target. Almost all, 97 per cent, said
their workload had increased in the last 12 months, with
most blaming the transfer of out-of-hours care from GPs
to primary care trusts. The survey also revealed that
doctors from one third, or 67, of the 200 A&E units
in England believe their unit is at risk of being downgraded
or closed. Don MacKechnie, chairman of the BMAs
Emergency Medicine Committee, said: Many hospitals
have cut bed numbers as part of their financial recovery
plans and attempts to balance their books. This
means that there are fewer available beds for patients
coming through A&E who need to be transferred within
four hours to a hospital ward from the emergency department
to meet the Governments access target. A Department
of Health spokesperson said: The NHS is treating
more patients than ever before and is treating them more
efficiently.
5. MORE STEALTH PRIVATISATION
FEARS FOR NHS
http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/mpapps/pagetools/print/news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/health/6287261.stm
Hospitals could be put under threat and the NHS fragmented
by a plan to set up private centres to take over simple
procedures from hospitals, doctors say. Health chiefs
in the North West have become the first to start consulting
on a new breed of private clinics to carry out diagnostics
and minor treatment. The Clinical Assessment Treatment
and Support centres have been designed to cut waiting
lists, officials said. But doctors warned they could starve
hospitals of money. The specialities covered by the proposed
centres are ear, nose and throat, general surgery, orthopaedics,
rheumatology and minor treatments, which combined contribute
80% of hospital workloads. Similar schemes are expected
to be put forward elsewhere in the country as the contracts
are being negotiated by the Department of Health, with
NHS trusts only expected to pay for the services patients
use. If hospital units become unviable, NHS capacity is
wasted, jobs are lost, and services that patients have
valued for years are cut Dr Jonathan Fielden, of the BMA
They go a step further than the much-criticised independent
sector treatment centres as they have the ability to carry
out diagnostic tests. Primary care trusts in Cumbria and
Lancashire are carrying out an eight-week consultation
over the centres which will be run by private firms, but
paid for out of the NHS purse. The two preferred bidders
which have been chosen are Netcare and Care UK. It comes
as the NHS attempts to meet the government's 18-week treatment
target by the end of 2008. At the moment, all patients
are seen within six months but this does not include the
time it takes from seeing a GP to getting diagnosed, which
it is estimated can be as long as the wait for treatment.
The eight private centres aim to speed up this process
by carrying out the diagnosis and treatment assessments
in one go. If only minor treatment is required, the centres
will have the ability to carry that out as well. If not,
they will refer on to the appropriate community or hospital
services. The theory is that as the local hospital will
be freed from this assessment and diagnostic process -
only a third of patients referred to hospitals as outpatients
end up being given treatment - they will have more time
to carry out treatments. Mike Farrar, chief executive
of NHS North West, said: "The centres are not a replacement
for hospital services, rather they will let the hospitals
concentrate more on what they do best - treating those
who need immediate care. "Neither will they reduce
the volume of work done at local hospitals. Achieving
the 18 week target will mean more work for the hospital
trusts and therefore more income to support more NHS services."
But the British Medical Association has criticised the
plans. Threat Dr Jonathan Fielden, chairman of the BMA's
consultants committee, said: "These proposals could
represent a significant threat to local NHS hospitals.
"When work goes to the private sector, they lose
income. "If hospital units become unviable, NHS capacity
is wasted, jobs are lost, and services that patients have
valued for years are cut. "Unless they are carefully
integrated, and local clinicians engaged, the number of
specialties and cases involved means that core NHS work
is likely to be hit, rather than surplus capacity being
created. And he added the public consultation in Lancashire
and Cumbria was clearly "on the location of CATS
- not on the real issue, which is why the NHS, rather
than profit-making companies, can't be given the chance
to further cut waiting times". It is envisaged the
centres will be up and running by the end of the summer.
6. SCHOOLS HAVE NO WAY TO CHECK
CRIMINAL RECORDS OF FOREIGN TEACHERS
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=429094&in_page_id=1770
The Home Office faced a fresh row today when it emerged
that Londons schools have no means of checking criminal
records of some foreign teachers. The Daily Mail's sister
paper, the Evening Standard, has learned that Britain
has formal arrangements to check the backgrounds of prospective
teachers from only 17 countries worldwide. For the other
176 nationalities from across the globe, the Department
for Education and Skills advice to schools is to
simply take extra care in checking the references
of foreign applicants for teaching posts. Shadow Home
Secretary David Davis today seized on the revelation as
the latest proof that the Government was failing to protect
the public. Londons schools are a particular cause
for concern because they rely heavily on overseas teachers
and in some areas supply staff are almost exclusively
from abroad. One head teacher in the capital has warned
in the past that if foreign teachers were banned from
working, half of the capitals schools would have
to close. The lack of checks has emerged as part of the
wider controversy over a Home Office failure to put British
criminals overseas convictions on the national police
database. The departments most senior civil servant
admitted last night that it had fallen short
in telling ministers of a backlog of 27,000 cases that
were missing from the computer files, with 540 for serious
or violent offences. But the problem has also now exposed
what the Tories called a big hole in the system
of checking foreign nationals who had committed crimes
abroad but still wanted to work in the UK. Despite tightening
rules for British teachers last year, the DfES points
out that if an applicant has never worked in the UK, checks
by the Criminal Records Bureau are pointless. Similarly,
the applicant will not show up on List 99, a database
of those who should be barred from working with children.
The CRB operates an Overseas Information Service but updated
guidance issued in 2004 states that at present the
service is limited to 17 countries. Mr Davis said:
The point about databases is that they should be
complete. It takes one mistake to result in a tragedy.
The DfES said that schools should try to obtain certificates
of good conduct from relevant embassies or police forces.