Meeting of the Parliament 19 November 2015
I am not quite sure what point the member is trying to make, but if he was referring to short-term sentences, a good bit of analysis requires to be done and will be part of the current consultation. It will look at what is being done in prisons just now on short-term sentences. We know—there is concrete evidence—that those prisoners are given no access to rehabilitation programmes. That will certainly be a factor in penal reform.
In addition, those significant changes were made unilaterally, without consultation with the very stakeholders who will in time have to implement the bill’s provisions. Such an approach flies in the face of the collaborative tone adopted by the First Minister when she took office exactly one year ago today.
The bill is not merely enabling legislation, as the minister asserts. Instead, it contains wide-ranging reforms that need to be the subject of robust scrutiny, particularly following their implementation. I therefore urge the minister to revisit the proposals at stage 2. While the Conservatives will support the motion today, that support and continued support will be conditional and dependent on the amendments that are brought forward at stage 2, particularly on the definition.
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