Changes to the Youth reoffending Measure

25
Changes to the Youth reoffending Measure Presentation for YOTs to stakeholders and management boards – 17 th March 2011

description

Changes to the Youth reoffending Measure. Presentation for YOTs to stakeholders and management boards – 17 th March 2011. YJB position statement. The YJB supports the concept of the new measure and the advantages it presents for aligning the measurement in various parts of the Criminal - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Changes to the Youth reoffending Measure

Page 1: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Changes to the Youth reoffending Measure

Presentation for YOTs to stakeholders and management boards –

17th March 2011

Page 2: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

YJB position statement

The YJB supports the concept of the new measure and the advantagesit presents for aligning the measurement in various parts of the CriminalJustice System and the streamlining of the work of YOTs. The YJB willcontinue to work with YOTs and the MoJ to handle the transition to thenew measure and to address the needs of practitioners from the newmeasure.

In order to support the transition to the new measure the YJB and MoJhave set up a small working group to work out some of themethodological and technical details of the new measure. This groupwill consist of YOTs and representatives from the YJB and MoJ.

Data on the old measure will continue to be collected via the YJMISweb forms until a full dataset for the 2010 cohort is available.

Page 3: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Contents

1. The case for change

2. Details of the new measure

3. Implications for YOT

4. Timetable for publications

Page 4: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Part 1

The case for change

Page 5: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

The case for change

At present, there are 6 measures of reoffending, these include: 1. national adult reoffending,

2. local adult reoffending,

3. national youth reoffending,

4. local youth reoffending,

5. Prolific and other Priority offending (PPO) and

6. drug-misusing offending.

Page 6: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

The case for change

These 6 measures are currently presented in five different publicationsacross a range of Government departments.

These measures use different methodologies which makes it hard tounderstand reoffending behaviour and can lead to confusion over theheadline trends in reoffending.

The MoJ recently completed a consultation ona proposed new measure of reoffending which reduces the 6measures into one. The response to the consultationwas mostly positive and supportive of the proposed changes, for

detailsplease see:http://www.justice.gov.uk/consultations/statistics-cp171110.htm

Page 7: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

The case for change

Having one measure of reoffending will:

Help form a clearer picture of proven reoffending at national and local levels;

Allow comparisons between adult and youth data and enable other work on transition between the youth and adult system;

Help us understand how the different offender groups fit into the overall picture of reoffending;

Page 8: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

The case for change

The measure will also provide advantages to YOTs, namely:

The new measure will take the data from the Police National Computer (PNC) so YOTs will not be required to send reoffending data to the YJB or to perform checks on PNC. However, YOTs will still need capacity to monitor reoffending performance.

Provide a ‘blank canvas’ giving all YOTs a fresh start with the switch over to using PNC data.

Provide a level playing field, as it no longer depends on how well a YOT records its data or if it has good PNC links.

Page 9: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

The case for change

Other advantages to YOTs:

Provide more accurate data on young people who turn 18 while they are in the cohort.

The new measure uses a 12 month cohort rather than a 3 month cohort, which will be more representative.

The measure should help YOTS be able to scrutinise the PNC data at a local level.

Page 10: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Part 2

Details of the new measure

Page 11: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Overview of new measure

The new measure is similar to the one used for the youth population in National Indicator 19 so will seem familiar to YOTs.

A cohort of young people are tracked for a year.

The main difference between the new measure and the old is that the cohort will be a 12 months cohort and not a 3 month.

Page 12: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Overview of new measure

‘Rolling cohorts’ will be used i.e. for any given quarter we will be looking at 12 months of data. An example of how the rolling cohort will work is available from the [email protected]

Another difference between this measure and the old is that the data will come from the PNC and not from YOTs.

Page 13: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Overview of new measure

Also, the new measure is a binary measure of reoffending (i.e. a count of the number of young people who re-offend) rather than the current frequency measure.

Details of the frequency of offending will be provided (i.e. the average number of re-offences per 100 young people).

Page 14: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Who will be in the cohort?

The new measure would include all young people who:

received a reprimand or final warning;

received a court conviction (other than immediate custody);

were released from custody, or

tested positive on a Class A drugs test on arrest;

at any time in a twelve month period.

Page 15: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

How long will they be followed up for?

It is proposed that the new measure will count any re-offences committed in a 12 month follow up period, where those offences are proved by:

a court conviction;

reprimand/final warning

either in that 12 month period or in a further six months.

Page 16: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Geographic breakdown

It is proposed that the results would be broken down by: The 9 English Regions and Wales Police Force area (Local Criminal Justice Board) Probation Trust level (for young people under

probation supervision only) Youth Offending Team area (for young people) Local Authority level Community Safety Partnership level

This would be the first time reoffending rates are available for all Community Safety Partnerships.

Page 17: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Estimated impact of the proposed changes

reoffending rates (binary) would generally be lower under the new measure than the old measures. This is because;

for adult offenders, the new measure includes more people who have a low likelihood of reoffending (i.e. those adults who were cautioned, fined and discharged are being included for the first time).

For the adult and youth measures, using a full year’s cohort removes the issue of the over-sampling of prolific offenders which occurs when a January to March cohort is used.

Page 18: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Why use a binary rate?

It is proposed that the published data will focus on the binary (yes/no) rate of reoffending. This is because; It is easier to explain to the public

Ministers are interested in stopping people offending, not just reducing the rate of offending

There are concerns that whilst the frequency rate has fallen the binary rate has remained stable

The frequency data will still be available, both in the publication and

to local areas.

Page 19: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Part 3

Implications for YOTs

Page 20: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Management information for YOTs

reoffending rates on the new measure will be provided at thenational level back to 2000.

Local level breakdowns of this data will be provided back to 2005.

The local data will be broken down by age, gender, ethnicity, sentence type, offence committed, number of previous offences, by the same geographic breakdowns as listed above.

This data would be provided directly to YOTs. The YJB are working with MoJ and YOTs to look at putting this information straight into the YJMIS.

Please note that it is proposed that the new methodology will be usedfor payment by results.

Page 21: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

YOT concerns about the new measure

YOTs have reported the following concerns about the new measure: The quality of PNC data The difference between PNC and YOT data Being measured on data that they do not own and do not have

access to, especially if this is used for Payments by results Confusion over some of the detail of the new measure (e.g. what

is included and rolling cohorts). The impact of the movement of Looked After Children and other

young people who frequently move between Local Authority areas.

The time and effort that will be required to monitor their performance on this new measure.

Page 22: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Further work planned for summer 2011

The YJB, MoJ and a group of YOTs will be working together to addressthe concerns of YOTs. There are plans to further analyse thedifferences between the YOT and PNC data and to ensure that YOTsreceive the data they need to enable them to monitor theirperformance. The analysis will include looking at:

17 year olds who transfer to probation and who’s reoffending is on the PNC but not known to YOTs.

An estimate of how much variation is due to young people who frequently move between local authority areas.

Analysis of why the PNC shows more offenders and re-offences

Analysis of how much of the discrepancies between PNC and YOT are due to timing or false names and addresses

Information sharing

Page 23: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Part 4

Timetable for publications and other information

Page 24: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Timescales for publications

17th March 2011 – Youth reoffending statistics (under the old measure) for the 2009 cohort.

17th March 2011 – MoJ consultation response published. 10th May 2011 – publication of the Compendium of reoffending

Statistics and Analysis. This will compare the effectiveness of different sentences at reducing reoffending.

26th May 2011 - The first of the new Criminal Justice System Statistics Quarterly which will give results for FTEs and sentencing statistics for the 12 months ending December 2010.

27th October 2011 - the first of the new reoffending measure statistics quarterly publications which will contain: reoffending for adults and juveniles for the cohort ending 31st

December 2009 back series for historic data prison level reoffending rates for 2008 and 2009* Local authority and probation level rates for adults and youth from

2005 to 2009

Page 25: Changes to the Youth  reoffending Measure

Further information

The official MoJ response to the consultation on the re-offending measure and improvements to Ministry of Justice statistics can be found at:

http://www.justice.gov.uk/consultations/statistics-cp171110.htm

A list of Frequently Asked Questions has been prepared to accompany this presentation. This is available upon request from [email protected]

An illustration of how a rolling cohort would work has been prepared and is available upon request from [email protected]

For further information on the MoJ consultation please [email protected]