Friday, 13 December 2013

My Life – by ‘Terry’

This month we were thrilled to receive a ‘life story’ from Terry; a prisoner in the North East of England. Thanks for sharing Terry; you’re a natural story teller!

My name is Terry and I’m a Traveller. I was born in Ireland in 1957 and only a month or so after I was born my mother left me with my sister in a big house. I was there until I was 5 years old, then one day out of the blue my sister took me to the front door and handed me to a big man in a big wagon. God I was so frightened! I yelped and shouted like a banshee! It turned out this was my uncle – my Daddy’s brother. He’d come over to Ireland to renew his driver’s license and my mother had asked him to collect me and bring me back to her in Manchester. The shouting paid off and I got sweets, chocolate and pop all the way back ha, ha, ha.  

My mother and family was parked on the side of a field near a big mill. In all there were about 10 – 15 trailers. I did not know my mother and it took a little time to get used to her and being in a trailer. Everywhere we went we got called gypos, tramps, pikies; but my father would run the country people away. 

I went to school once and got into a fight with two boys who I caught spitting at my brothers. I never went to school after that and I was quite happy running around with my daddy all day collecting scrap or my uncle doing tarmacking and grinding the butchers’ knives. 

The time soon came around and my mum got tired of being on the road, so back to Manchester we went and settled into a house. We kept the trailer and mammy said we can still go travelling in the summer and be back in the house in the winter. We went fruit and veg picking every gear in the summer around Peterborough. 

I had to go to school again and I did not like the name calling but I was glad I stuck it out for 2 years. I still can’t spell properly but I’m learning! 

I still have the old country roads in my blood and what I would give to be on the side of the road now with a trailer, a fire outside and a coddle cooking slowly while listening to a bit of music!

Would you like to hear more about my life? Then watch this space and tell your friends about the Traveller Equality Project. They don’t have to be strangers just “friends we haven’t met yet”.

Good luck and God Bless.


Terry.  

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

A real solution to the ‘blight’ of unauthorised Traveller sites

Originally published in The Guardian and LSE Politics and Policy Blog
Eric Pickles call for councils to tackle the ‘blight’ of unauthorised Traveller sites was met with outcry recently, with community leaders claiming the Communities Secretary’s words fanned the flames of anti-Traveller prejudice. But in a way, Pickles has a point. The dire shortage of legal Traveller sites in England is a blight on our society, fuelling social-exclusion and contributing to appalling health and educational outcomes for Gypsy and Traveller communities. Sky high rates of infant mortality, low life expectancy and high illiteracy are direct results of the cycles of eviction and homelessness which leave many Travellers unable to access basic services.
The overwhelming majority of Travellers in the UK want to live on authorised sites that are subject to the same council tax as house dwellers and provided with the same services. They are prevented from realising this basic aspiration by a planning system which relentlessly mitigates against the community.
In a marvellous piece of double speak, Pickles recently announced he was revoking the 2005 ‘Equality and Diversity in Planning’ guidance in order to ensure ‘fair play’ and stop ‘special treatment’ for Travellers. This is a staggering statement in a context where 90% of planning applications submitted by Gypsies and Travellers are rejected, compared to only 20% of applications from the general population.
The majority of these applications fail due to local opposition at the consultation stage, which often boils down to media-fuelled cultural misunderstanding and prejudice. Most private and council run sites in the UK are well managed and pose no problems to the wider community; indeed, local residents are often completely unaware of authorised Traveller sites in their area. Examples of Travellers living in harmony with the settled community are abundant but rarely make headlines. Meanwhile, at the first hint of a planning application for a new Traveller site local newspapers stoke up fears of anti-social behaviour and falling house prices.
A 2012 Ministerial Working Group report, tackling inequalities experienced by Gypsies and Travellers - chaired by none other than Pickles himself – acknowledged the problem of local opposition to legal sites and made a commitment to showcase existing, well run Traveller sites, to counteract the fears and misconceptions of the settled community. The government also promised to produce ‘a case study document which local authorities and councillors, potential site residents and the general public could use’ to support the case for local site provision.
Eighteen months on and the government has failed to deliver on even these very modest pledges. Instead, we got ‘Dealing with illegal and unauthorised encampments’; the Department for Communities and Local Government guidance document which warranted the recent press release and TV spots. Why this document needed any press at all is puzzling, given the fact that it turned out to be a ten page copy-and-paste job, rehashing the existing legislation on unauthorised Traveller sites. This seems to have little to do with policy and everything to do with dog-whistle, minority-bashing politics.
Cheering on evictions might be a cheap Tory vote winner, but in the real world they are not a solution. When homeless Traveller families are moved on from one place they don’t just vanish into thin air; rather the problem is shifted to another county or borough. This is costly to us all; both in terms of the expense of repeat evictions and in the huge social costs attached to banishing a community to the margins of our society.
If we want to solve the ‘blight’ of unauthorised Traveller sites there is only one solution; adequate authorised sites. The scale of this solution is achievable even within the current economic context. Four thousand additional pitches are required; less than one square mile across the whole country. But to achieve this proactive policy strong leadership is needed in the face of lowest common denominator anti-Traveller NIMBYism.

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

A Quiet Revolution


Twenty five percent of Gypsy and Traveller children in England and Wales are not enrolled in education and for those that do attend school, educational attainment is lower than for any other ethnic group. In 2012, only 25% of Gypsy and Traveller primary school leavers reached minimum expectations in English and Maths, compared to 74% of the general school population. At secondary level only 12% of Gypsy and Traveller pupils achieved 5 good GCSEs compared to 58.2% for all pupils.

This grim array of statistics will come as little surprise to teachers up and down the countries, who have encountered the challenges of working with Gypsy and Irish Traveller children. Many teachers have also encountered the added difficulty of communicating with parents of Traveller children who have low levels of literacy themselves.

Recent developments offer little hope in the battle to tackle illiteracy within the Travelling community. Since local authority spending cuts got underway in 2010, there has been a 27% reduction in Traveller education staff in England, with many Traveller education teams being ‘deleted’ all together by councils.

With poor educational attainment comes a reduction in life opportunities and an increase in the chances of imprisonment. According to the HM Inspectorate of Prisons, Gypsies and Irish Travellers make up a staggering 5% of the Category B prison population nationally.

It is in this depressing context that a reading initiative by the Traveller Project at the Irish Chaplaincy in Britain has recently been
launched.

‘Across the 130 plus prisons we’ve seen a huge interest in learning to read amongst Traveller prisoners’, says Conn Mac Gabhann, Manager of the Traveller Project. ‘In the bureaucracy of a prison, where every aspect of your life is regulated by rules and form-filling, Travellers see the enormous value of being able to read – many realising this for the first time.’

‘Working with the Shannon Trust whose aim is to ‘make every prisoner a reader,’ we’ve launched a campaign throughout the prison estate, to ensure that this aim includes every Traveller in custody. The upsurge in participation has been marked. In a prison we visited last week 40% of the Traveller population were either Toe by Toe learners or mentors.’

‘Reading schemes such as the The Shannon Trust Reading Plan (AKA Toe by Toe) have a unique appeal because the informal, one-toone approach doesn’t recall the negative experiences many Travellers have had in formal classroom settings. After years of disaffection with education, many Travellers have had quite remarkable success with Toe by Toe’.

As the number of Travellers in prison doing courses such as the Shannon Trust Reading Plan increases, so too does the demand for interesting reading books. The Traveller Project has put together a short series of reading books for Travelling people who are just starting to read books.

The first book, ‘A Traveller’s Home’ written by Mac Gabhann and illustrated by Dublin artist, Niamh Merc., tells the story of John, a Dublin Traveller and wannabe cowboy.

The second book ‘We Are Travellers’ was written by Joe Cottrell-Boyce, and is a factual introduction to the history and culture of English Gypsies and Irish Travellers.

‘It’s important to remember that Traveller men and women want to read interesting stories.’ MacGabhann stresses. ‘No adult really wants to read a children’s book. These books are interesting and they are relevant to Travellers’ lives.’

‘There’s a quiet educational revolution happening in prison. Travellers are learning to read because they want to learn and perhaps for the first time they are learning in a way that suits them. Ironically, the interest in reading in prison is changing attitudes in the wider Traveller community. More and more, we’re seeing Traveller men in prison who’ve learnt to read and are now passionate about their kids going to school, telling us ‘education is the only way forward.’’

For free copies of Traveller reading series’ books contact the Traveller Project, The Irish Chaplaincy in Britain, 50-52 Camden Square, London, NW1 9XB or travellers@irishchaplaincy. org.uk

Sunday, 24 February 2013

The Case Against Private Prisons

Originally published on Left Foot Forward
The right-wing think tank Reform has published a report claiming that private firms are better at running prisons. 'The case for private prisons' criticises the government for moving away from the wholesale privatisation of the prison estate, claiming that private prisons, introduced in England and Wales in the 1990's, are more cost-effective and better managing offenders than public prisons.
Reform's headline claim is that private prisons have lower rates of re-offending than their public sector counterparts. A cursory glance at their statistics does indeed show that seven out of ten comparable private prisons in England and Wales have lower than average rates of re-offending.
But a fundamental problem with Reform's analysis is that prisons are not the only factor influencing recidivism. Home Office research has shown that the quality of post-release support has just as significant an impact on re-offending and therefore the performance of local - public sector - Probation Trusts must also be taken into account.
Five of the seven private prisons held up for lower than average re-offending rates turn out to be in probation areas with lower than average re-offending; so attributing this success to an individual prison is problematic.
Indeed within some probation areas private sector prisons are performing significantly worse than comparable public sector institutions. The private male local prison HMP Forest Bank has a re-offending rate of 60.48% amongst short-term prisoners. This is below the national average of 62.33% but significantly higher than HMP Manchester; a public sector male local prison within the same probation area. HMP Altcourse has a re-offending rate of 60.43% amongst short-term prisoners; again better than the national average but significantly worse than HMP Liverpool, a comparable local prison.
Beyond its dodgy re-offending claims, 'The case for private prisons' utilises very selective statistics to support its other key arguments.
The report claims that 'in 1997-8, one study found that contracted prisons provided between 0.6 and 1.6 hours more out of cells per weekday than public sector'. This is true, but more recent 2010 research by the Prison Reform Trust has found that inmates in private prisons spend significantly more time locked in cells than those in public sector prisons. This evidence was completely ignored in the report.
The report claims that per-place costs are lower in private sector prisons, again relying on research from 1998. This ignores statistics provided by the National Offender Management Service in 2007 which showed that the per-place costs of private prisons were significantly higher than public sector prisons.
Chris Poyner, president of the Public and Commercial Services union's National Offender Management Service group has called prison privatisation 'a national scandal', pointing out that;
"multimillion-pound global companies are being handed huge amounts of taxpayers' money to profit from locking people up by cutting staff and working conditions."
There is in fact no solid evidence that private prisons are better than their public sector counterparts. Audits have however found that inexperienced staff and cost cutting measures have left many private prisons struggling to create a safe environment for prisoners.
Reform's clumsy, agenda driven research and bad statistics only go to show the inherent weakness of their position.

Joe Cottrell-Boyce

Friday, 4 January 2013

Statutory services can support Travellers through more effective monitoring

Article originally published on the Guardian website

In 2011 Gypsies and Irish Travellers were for the first time recognised as an ethnic group on the UK census, under the code "W3". In the wake of the census, many statutory services are following suit and including a "Gypsy or Irish Traveller" category in their own ethnic monitoring procedures.

This recognition is undoubtedly a step in the right direction for a marginalised community with acute needs in terms of housing, healthcare, education and social care.

Gypsies and Irish Travellers are "the most excluded ethnic minority groups in British society today". Life expectancy is 10-12 years below the national average and 18% of Gypsy and Traveller mothers have experienced the death of a child, compared to less than 1% of the general population. In addition, 25% of Gypsy and Traveller children are not enrolled in education and, for those that do attend, educational attainment is lower than for any other ethnic group.

Research into the social care needs of Gypsies and Travellers has found that a culture of self-reliance means that people often tend to "make do" and not complain rather than seeking support from social services.

Service providers will not necessarily realise that a client comes from a Travelling background and may consequently neglect to consider issues such as low literacy or accommodation difficulties.
In this context it is of great concern that innovative community social work projects such as theHaringey travelling people's team, which engages Gypsy and Traveller families before crises occur, are falling victim to local government cuts.

In April 2012 the Department for Communities and Local Government published 28 cross-departmental commitments to improve outcomes for Gypsies and Travellers. Key points included tasking the NHS and local governments with identifying ways to include the needs of Gypsies and Travellers in the commissioning of health services and ensuring that the needs of Gypsies and Travellers are reflected in joint strategic needs assessments.

Gypsies and Travellers are also to be specifically highlighted as a vulnerable group in the revisedOfsted framework and will be included in the Department of Work and Pensions' monitoring system when universal credit is introduced later this year.

But tickboxes on forms can achieve little unless staff are pro-active in their approach to monitoring. This has been demonstrated in the case of the prison service, where a huge disparity exists between two distinct monitoring regimes: prisons themselves have a W3 category on their "P-Nomis" system but it is up to Traveller prisoners to volunteer this information at reception.

Currently only 219 prisoners in England and Wales are registered as W3; 0.2% of the prison population. In contrast, the prison inspectorate makes a point of asking every prisoner surveyed: "Do you consider yourself to be Gypsy/Romany/Traveller?; 5% of prisoners in local prisons responded "yes" to this question.

Effective monitoring can give services more of an insight into their Gypsy and Traveller user group and allow them to reflect on how organisational practices meet the needs of this community.

Being counted is a vital first step to making a community feel like it counts. The kind of pro-active monitoring exemplified by the prison inspectorate is a vital tool for addressing the extreme marginalisation of Gypsy and Traveller communities in the UK.

It is the start of a dialogue with a user group who often feel ignored and unwanted.