Offender risk assessment IT system two years late

Prison and probation workers not joined up yet

By Andy McCue, 30 January 2006 16:30

NEWS

A Home Office IT system that is supposed to help the probation and prison services assess the risk offenders pose to the public and the likelihood of them re-offending is running two years late.

The Prison Service and National Probation Service run two separately developed offender assessment IT systems. The new national electronic Offender Assessment System (e-OASys) is supposed to provide a link between the two so that probation and prison staff can exchange risk assessment information.

But the project has been beset by delays and silicon.com reported last February that the project was running behind schedule because of the work needed to enable the IT systems to support the sentencing provisions of the 2003 Criminal Justice Act.

At the time the Home Office said all probation and prison services offender risk assessment systems would be joined up by e-OASys by the end of 2005.

But the Home Office has now revealed that just 13 of the UK's 42 probation service regions are currently able to share and transfer offender risk assessment information with the Prison Service through e-OASys.

A Home Office spokesman told silicon.com: "Our intention is that all 42 probation areas will be connected to the Prison Service [e-]OASys IT system by the end of this financial year."

The Home Office said the latest delay was due to "minor" software problems in the pilot roll out in the North West region, which had to be fixed before extending the system to other regions. The Home Office spokesman said upgrades have now resolved the problem and the rollout schedule to the rest of the country has resumed successfully.

Comments

There is 1 comment. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Stranger on the shore

    Napo the Union for Probation and Family Court Welfare workers has been banging on about this since the Internet arrived.

    All the politico's are bothered about is what the media publishes and so they go on about if only there were more Bobbies on the beat crime would be cut off at source.

    Meanwhile those really in the know are giving up in despair with many of us ending up exhausted on the early retirement scrapheap with all our experience ignored on a daily basis!

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ