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First category C prison issued with urgent notification to improve after ‘decade of decline’ led to ‘shocking level of neglect’ | UK News

The first category C prison has been issued with an urgent notification to improve after a “decade of decline”, the prisons watchdog has said.

Rising violence and self-harm, decrepit conditions, and widespread illicit drug use were all found at HMP Rochester, during an inspection.

In light of the many issues, HM Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP) has written to Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood to invoke an urgent notification for the improvement of the prison.

This requires a response and action plan from the government within 28 days.

The training prison was inspected from 12-22 August and is the seventh prison to be issued with an urgent notification since November 2022.

It comes as there was only 100 male prison spaces left last week, amid the ongoing crisis.

HMP Rochester was found to have suffered a decade of successively poor and declining inspections, HMIP said, adding that the prison has been previously warned about inspector’s concerns.

Conditions inside the prison were described as “squalid” and “decrepit” with infestations of rats and mice plaguing older buildings, the inspectorate said.

Prisoners resorted to creating barriers from cardboard to try and block gaps under cell doors to keep vermin out.

It was some of the worst conditions inspectors had seen in recent years, the report added.

As safety was said to be deteriorating, wings were described as “chaotic” and the rate of prisoner assaults rocketed, up 67% in the last year, as self-harm rose too.

Since the last inspection, there have been two cases of prisoners taking their own lives.

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Drugs were endemic within HMP Rochester, with 42% of prisoners testing positive when randomly tested.

More than half of men told inspectors it was easy to get drugs – including those prescribed to other prisoners.

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HMP Rochester was “fundamentally failing” at its focus of getting inmates into education, work, and training to improve their lives on release, HMIP added.

Reflecting on these and the plethora of other failings, Charlie Taylor, HM chief inspector of prisons, described HMP Rochester as “a prison of concern for many years”.

He continued: “This decade of decline, which has accelerated in the past 18 months, shows a shocking level of neglect.

“It is particularly concerning that a category C prison, the workhorse of the prison service, should require an urgent notification for our concerns to be taken seriously.”

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Prisons and probation minister Lord Timpson said: “This is a deeply concerning report and yet another example of the dire state the last government left the prison system in.

“We owe it to our staff, doing their best in squalid conditions and under the threat of violence, to drag the system out of this chaos.

“This started with the immediate action the new Lord Chancellor took to end the overcrowding crisis in our prisons in July.

“In the 20 years I’ve worked with the prison service, I’ve never seen things so bad.

“This new government will grip this crisis and ensure that prisons like Rochester, that have been left to decay, stop breeding crime and start cutting it.”

Watch Sky News’ the Politics Hub with Sophy Ridge from Monday night at 7pm.

Lack of cover for category two ambulance calls in some areas put public safety at risk, Steve Barclay says | Politics News

The health secretary claims the disparate level of emergency cover during recent ambulance strikes could not be “relied upon to ensure patient and public safety”.

In a letter to the GMB union sent ahead of further strikes this month, and seen by Sky News, Steve Barclay accepted all areas that staged walkouts ensured the most serious 999 calls were still answered.

But he said the lack of cover for category two calls – which includes strokes and chest pain – in some areas were “material to the risk to life of the strike action”.

Mr Barclay said the government “greatly values the vital work ambulance workers do”, but he criticised the “volatile” assurances given to him about cover by trade unions during December’s industrial action, claiming the “scope and extent of arrangements [was] being disputed right up to wire”.

While he believed in the right to strike and that “a certain amount of disruption is inherent” during walkouts, he said that “during recent action I have not been reassured that the current system of voluntary arrangements can be relied upon to ensure patient and public safety”.

His letter comes in response to an open letter from the GMB to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Saturday, where the union claimed ambulance staff felt “demonised” and appealed to the government to “stop attacking us”.

It also comes ahead of the government’s anti-strike legislation returning to the Commons on Monday, which will set minimum service levels for fire, ambulance and rail services for when the sectors decide to take action – and leave unions at risk of being sued if they fail to comply.

Read more:
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Mr Barclay strongly defended the new law in the letter, saying it would “introduce greater clarity and certainty around which services must continue and to what extent, to give the public much needed assurance that a certain level of urgent and time critical care will always continue throughout strike action”

The health secretary said the particular services that would be impacted by the legislation where chosen “chiefly because we recognise disruption to blue light services puts lives at immediate risk”, but he insisted it was “not ending anyone’s right to strike”.

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But Labour has vowed to vote against the bill, with party leader Sir Keir Starmer urging the government to “do the grown-up thing, get in the room and negotiate” with the unions.

A spokesperson for the GMB said the union’s ambulance committee would discuss the letter from Mr Barclay at a meeting on Monday and consider their response.

If you are an NHS worker and would like to share your experiences with us anonymously, please email NHSstories@sky.uk