GovWire

Prison building revolution announced by Chancellor and Justice Secretary

HM Treasury

November 9
10:09 2015

Chancellor George Osborne and Justice Secretary Michael Gove have today (9 November 2015) unveiled a major new prison reform programme including plans to build 9 new prisons.

The radical reforms will ensure Britains prison system is fit for purpose in the twenty-first century, and the new prisons will allow the government to close old Victorian prisons in city centres and sell the sites for housing.

This will allow over 3000 new homes to be built, boosting house building in urban areas and helping thousands of working people achieve their dream of owning a home. The Victorian prison site at Reading will be the first to be sold.

Around 10,000 prison places will move from outdated sites to the new prisons, significantly improving rehabilitation, and saving around 80 million per year due to the reduced costs of modern facilities.

Chancellor George Osborne said:

This spending review is about reform as much as it is about making savings.

One important step will be to modernise the prison estate. So many of our jails are relics from Victorian times on prime real estate in our inner cities.

So we are going to reform the infrastructure of our prison system, building new institutions which are modern, suitable and rehabilitative. And we will close old, outdated prisons in city centres, and sell the sites to build thousands of much-needed new homes.

This will save money, reform an outdated public service and create opportunity by boosting construction jobs and offering more people homes to buy.

Five of the new prisons will be open before the end of this parliament. The government will also complete the new prison being built at Wrexham, and expand existing prisons in Stocken and Rye Hill.

Currently half of criminals re-offend within one year of being released, and nearly half of all prisoners go into prison without any qualifications.

The Chancellor and Justice Secretary made the announcement ahead of a visit to Brixton prison, a Victorian prison in South London.

Justice Secretary Michael Gove said:

This investment will mean we can replace ageing and ineffective Victorian prisons with new facilities fit for the modern world.

We will be able to design out the dark corners which too often facilitate violence and drug-taking.

And we will be able to build a prison estate which allows prisoners to be rehabilitated, so they turn away from crime.

It is only through better rehabilitation that we will reduce reoffending, cut crime and make our streets safer.

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