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Spending review: Nine new prisons to replace 'Victorian' jails | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Nine new prisons will open in England and Wales - five by 2020 - under plans to close "Victorian" jails and sell them for housing, the government says. | |
The new sites have not been announced but about 10,000 inmates will be moved in a bid to save about £80m a year. | The new sites have not been announced but about 10,000 inmates will be moved in a bid to save about £80m a year. |
The plans form part of the chancellor's spending review, due on 25 November. | |
Reading prison will be sold first, with Wellingborough; Bullwood Hall, Essex; Camp Hill on the Isle of Wight, and Blundeston, Suffolk, likely to follow. | |
The five sites have already closed and are awaiting "disposal", the Ministry of Justice said. | |
Government sources say the prison-building programme will cost more than £1bn. | |
Chancellor George Osborne said many prisons are outdated "relics from Victorian times" that stand on "prime real estate". He said modern prisons that were better suited to the rehabilitation of inmates would be built instead. | |
New prisons are cheaper to run and easier to equip with the training and work facilities needed to help the rehabilitation of offenders. | |
Danny Shaw: Ambitious plans rely on inmate numbers | Danny Shaw: Ambitious plans rely on inmate numbers |
Spending review: Osborne 'secures deals' on 30% cuts | Spending review: Osborne 'secures deals' on 30% cuts |
In addition to the nine new jails, a prison is currently being built in Wrexham and expansions are taking place at HMP Stocken, in Rutland, and HMP Rye Hill, in Warwickshire. | |
More than 3,000 new homes could be built on the city centre sites of the old prisons, the government said. | |
Grade II-listed HMP Reading, which was built in 1844, closed in 2013. | Grade II-listed HMP Reading, which was built in 1844, closed in 2013. |
The Treasury announcement of its sale comes just a month after Reading Borough Council was told by the Ministry of Justice that the prison would be retained "in case of contingencies". | The Treasury announcement of its sale comes just a month after Reading Borough Council was told by the Ministry of Justice that the prison would be retained "in case of contingencies". |
The MoJ said no decision has been made about future development on four other sites already closed - Blantyre House, Kent; Downview in Surrey, and the former immigration removal centres in Dover and at Haslar in Hampshire. | |
It also confirmed that the lease on Dartmoor prison, in Devon, would not be renewed. | |
There is also a large number of old prisons in city centres that could be closed and sold off, including Pentonville and Brixton prisons, both in London. | |
Analysis | |
By Danny Shaw, BBC home affairs correspondent | |
The feasibility of the government's plans depends largely on the size of the prison population, which is notoriously hard to predict. | The feasibility of the government's plans depends largely on the size of the prison population, which is notoriously hard to predict. |
There's no sign that the population is falling - it's currently 85,884 although it's not rising as fast as predicted a year ago. | There's no sign that the population is falling - it's currently 85,884 although it's not rising as fast as predicted a year ago. |
As for the closures, it's been long speculated that Pentonville in north London, which was heavily criticised by inspectors, might be closed. Other possible London candidates include Wormwood Scrubs, Brixton and Wandsworth. | |
Leeds, Manchester and Liverpool are old jails which are known to be very expensive to run. Dartmoor Prison has already been earmarked for closure. | |
As well as Reading, several jails are currently unused and could be sold off, including Dover, which was until recently an immigration removal centre, and Downview Prison, in Surrey, which was a women's prison. | |
Ambitious plans rely on inmate numbers | Ambitious plans rely on inmate numbers |
Increasing violence | Increasing violence |
The chancellor and Justice Secretary Michael Gove made the announcement ahead of a visit to Brixton prison in south London. | |
Mr Gove said: "We will be able to design out the dark corners which too often facilitate violence and drug-taking. | Mr Gove said: "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." | "And we will be able to build a prison estate which allows prisoners to be rehabilitated, so they turn away from crime." |
In July, chief inspector of prisons Nick Hardwick said in his annual report that jails in England and Wales were in their worst state for 10 years, with increasing violence. | In July, chief inspector of prisons Nick Hardwick said in his annual report that jails in England and Wales were in their worst state for 10 years, with increasing violence. |
Responding to the Treasury announcement, shadow justice secretary Lord Falconer said "too many of our prisons are not fit for purpose". | |
He added: "We have heard similar promises before and the coalition government ended up selling high-performing prisons and increasing pressure on an already over-crowded system." | |
Prison Reform Trust director Juliet Lyon said "prison reform isn't just about building new prisons". | |
She called on the government to look at increases in sentence lengths, mental health care in prisons, the treatment for drug addiction, and dealing with binge drinking. | |
Mark Icke, from the Prison Governors' Association, welcomed the plans but said it was important to have a "whole look and whole fresh approach about how we treat people in custody". | |