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Thread: Benefits of being a Crim

  1. #1
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    Benefits of being a Crim

    New Drug And Alcohol Treatment Unit

    Press Release by New Zealand Government 9:59am, 10th October 2006

    Speech by Corrections Minister Damien O'Connor

    It gives me great pleasure to join you here today to open this very practical expression of the Government's commitment to prisoner rehabilitation.

    The Labour-led Government has already spent close to $1 billion to add 2,100 new beds to our prison system.

    Providing a secure environment for serious offenders is only part of the Department's role, however. Nearly all prisoners will return to their communities at some point, giving prisons a broader duty â€" to reduce re-offending by addressing the rehabilitation and re-integration needs of prisoners.

    While rehabilitation programmes focus on addressing the underlying causes of offenders' criminal behaviour, re-integration helps prisoners settle back positively into the community after their release.

    These two aspects of the work undertaken in prison work together to make our communities safer.

    As we know, the treatment of addictions is an important part of rehabilitation.

    The statistics make disturbing reading.

    Up to 60 per cent of offenders are affected by alcohol or other drugs at the time of their offending.

    The figure is even higher â€" at a staggering 83 per cent â€" for those who have abused alcohol or drugs at some point in their lives. For this reason the Government is placing a strong emphasis on the development of alcohol and other drug treatment services for offenders, both in prison and in the community.

    This commitment was made clear in the Effective Interventions Strategy which I helped to launch just a few months ago.

    Effective Interventions encapsulates significant Government measures to make the justice system more effective, through reducing crime, reducing re-offending and reducing re-imprisonment rates.

    As well as new drug and treatment units, the package includes an extensive prisoner employment strategy, new high-intensity special treatment prison units, a sentencing council, a stand-alone Home Detention sentence as part of a tiered system of community-based sentences, and increased use of restorative justice.

    The thinking behind the strategy is that an effective criminal justice system must do more than protect our communities by punishing offenders. It must also use offenders' time in prison to help them become more valuable members of their community on release and to live crime free lives.

    This means providing offenders with effective training and education as well as meeting their more basic needs â€" such as ensuring they are healthy, addiction free and sound of mind. (I want to study next year but I can;t afford the course fees - if I do some time in jail - could get it free!! - BMW)

    Some people might say we already have sufficient drug units given the number of pharmaceuticals prescribed in our prisons!

    But as we all know, the health status of people who enter prison is generally poor. Many have neglected their health. If we are serious about rehabilitation, improving prisoners' health outcomes is a no-brainer. (I need $1500 dentistry work done, and prescriptions which I cannot afford to pick up - be all free in jail!! - BMW).

    This does not detract from the need for Corrections to get prisoners to tackle their addictions.

    As part of this Government's commitment, three further new drug and alcohol treatment units will be built over the next 18 months.

    This represents a doubling in the number of units presently available â€" in Arohata, Waikeria and now Christchurch prisons.

    So, we will then see up to 550 prisoners a year receiving the kinds of specialist, intensive treatment that can and does help them turn their lives around.

    Providing these much-needed extra treatment places represents a major financial investment from the Labour-led Government.

    In the late 1990s there was only one unit â€" in Arohata Women's Prison in Wellington â€" with a throughput of 40 prisoners a year.

    We have come a long way since then.


    This investment will pay off. Research shows that offenders who have been through a treatment unit are 13 per cent less likely to be re-imprisoned after 24 months than if they had not attended treatment.

    This is both value for money and a proven way to help make our communities safer.

    There are two elements that are essential for a programme like this to succeed.

    Firstly, prisoners' addictions need to be identified, and they have to genuinely want to overcome them.

    Corrections is testing a comprehensive new health screening tool to ensure we identify mental health and addiction needs, including gambling.

    The department is also close to rolling out new motivational programmes to help give offenders the drive to turn their lives around.

    Secondly, the ultimate success of the programmes run in these units lies in the hands of the people who deliver the programmes. For this I must thank Care NZ, which has been the provider of Addiction Treatment Services within Arohata and Waikeria for the past seven years.
    Care NZ has a lot to be proud of. (Never heard of the organisation and I do volunteer work in drug and alcohol rehabilitation - BMW)

    During the time it has been running addiction treatment services, Care NZ has continually developed the services offered and its people have become experts at treatment within a custodial environment.

    They have proven to be effective at working within the confines of the prison environment, delivering efficient and effective programmes. (AA and NA have been working in prisons for years - free - wonder how much this crowd is creaming off the govt - BMW)

    As I have already said, treatment programmes only succeed when prisoners genuinely want to overcome their addictions. If a prisoner shows this motivation, I believe that the facilities should be available to support them in making those positive changes. (Alcoholic Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous work and they are free).

    I know that the quality service provided at other prisons will continue here in Christchurch and I look forward to seeing the first graduates successfully completing the programme.

    I wish Corrections' staff and those of Care NZ every success in your work here at the Drug Treatment Unit. Your work is of great value, and I am pleased to have the opportunity to acknowledge that here today.

    It gives me great pleasure to now declare this unit officially open.

    ENDS

    To sum up: 3 free meals per day, free medical care and prescriptions, free counselling, I don't even think they have to pay for their cigarettes, tv in their rooms, no worries about paying the bills. Free study. Don't work. No wonder there is overcrowding and not enough prisons!
    Actions speak louder than words or good intentions

    He is simply a shiver looking for a spine to run up. - Paul Keating

  2. #2
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    3rd September 2005 - 08:19
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    where do I sign up?

  3. #3
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    bullshit really. good to see our tax dollars going somewhere worthwhile. sickening.

  4. #4
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    Do they let you out on your bike for a ride on nice days. If they do please sign me up - underfloor heating would be nice in winter
    I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe.

  5. #5
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    fuck's sake.

    They have spent $250/head of every man woman and child in the whole country to do WHAT??

    I want to try an experiment. Swap all the prison guards for drill sargeants for a month in just one prison. Give them full authority to run things as they would in the army.

    I want to see what effect it has.
    $2,000 cash if you find a buyer for my house, kumeuhouseforsale@straightshooters.co.nz for details

  6. #6
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    well, I guess it keeps the maoris off the streets....

  7. #7
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    26th September 2006 - 13:46
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    yeah but at what cost? I work long hours so I can simply pay my bills & try and make a decent and good life for myself(like most of you in here), but then I see that the ones raping our daughters & sisters and killing our family members get the easy road. getting pretty annoyed with this shit aye. political correctness

  8. #8
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    err $500,000 per bed ?? wtf ??

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pathos View Post
    err $500,000 per bed ?? wtf ??
    come on, do the math

    underfloor heating
    sky tv
    free drugs and smokes
    nice soft bed
    landscaped exercise yard
    bowflex equipped gyms

    I feel violated by unkle heilen, or maybe DMNTD's party pills were really roofies....

  10. #10
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    Bring back conscription!!!
    To every man upon this earth
    Death cometh sooner or late
    And how can a man die better
    Than facing fearful odds
    For the ashes of his fathers
    And the temples of his Gods

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by The_Dover View Post
    well, I guess it keeps the maoris off the streets....

    play fair, we taught by thee white shelia's in school
    and we can watch r18 movies too while we in there
    makes you wonder who the clever one's are

  12. #12
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    21st April 2006 - 13:06
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    NO Bikes, that is not good, I'd rather pay for my smokes so I can have '"almost"' total freedom of riding.
    SHIT whats that noise.

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