The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 60 tabled · 55 answered

Written questions by Williams.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by David Williams this session, with the full answer and department. Back to the MP page.

Department:All (60)Department for Education (19)Department for Culture, Media and Sport (9)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (8)Department of Health and Social Care (5)Home Office (4)Department for Business and Trade (3)Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (3)Department for Transport (3)Department for Work and Pensions (3)Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (1)Ministry of Justice (1)Treasury (1)

Showing 11 of 1 · Ministry of Justice

23 Oct 2024·Ministry of Justice·Answered
Asked

What steps her Department is taking to help tackle youth (a) offending and (b) re-offending.

Reply

The Government is committed to intervening early to stop young people being drawn into crime with an ambition to halve knife crime in a decade, accompanied by a new, increased focus on crime prevention. The ‘Safer Streets’ mission proposes a prevention-first approach to crime reduction and fundamental to this will be the delivery of the Youth Futures Programme. This will consist of the creation of prevention partnerships in each local authority to map existing youth provisions and at-risk individuals, as well as the implementation of early intervention strategies to stop young people being pulled into a life of crime, supported by a network of Young Futures Hubs.This will build on the Ministry of Justice’s Turnaround programme, which is providing Youth Offending Teams across England and Wales with funding to intervene earlier with children on the cusp of entering the youth justice system, with the aim of preventing them from offending or reoffending.We know that community options can be more effective at reducing reoffending and so we believe that, wherever appropriate, children should be diverted from custody. To this end, we are currently piloting changes to intensive youth community sentences that aim to give courts confidence in using them as robust alternatives to custody. We have also recently opened the first secure school which aims to reduce the reoffending rates of those children who have been sent to custody by placing education at the heart of the establishment.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.