Minister defends boot camp plan
BY KATE CHAPMAN
Relevant offers
Politics
Social Development and Employment Minister Paula Bennett has defended the military-style camps planned by the Government after the Families Commission said this morning they would do little to reduce youth offending and in some cases may increase it.
The Youth Courts Jurisdiction and Orders Amendment Bill will give the Youth Court new sentencing orders ranging from tight supervision to three-month stays in camps.
If passed, it would enable the court to issue parenting orders and its jurisdiction would be extended to include 12- to 13-year-olds who committed serious crimes.
Military style camps, or boot camps, have been evaluated and have regularly been shown to "be ineffective at reducing crime", the commission's submission to a parliamentary committee said.
"This is because they emphatically do not address the underlying causes of offending, which are rooted in the offenders' home, school and community.
"The offending of young people who have attended some of these camps has increased."
Putting young offenders together and not addressing underlying causes of the offending creates a culture that reinforces criminal values, the commission said.
National's Chester Borrows said the military-style camps were getting a bad rap from the opposition and the media.
He said people's concept of what the programmes would be was not what was envisioned.
Ms Bennett said the critics of the camps had "missed the point".
"We are not lurching back to the days of packing all bad kids off to boot camps en masse for corrective training.
"That has been tried and failed here and elsewhere."
She said the camps were likely to be small, deal with the most troubled offenders and involve extensive follow-up.
"Many similar schemes are showing good results."
Labour youth justice spokeswoman Jacinda Ardern said the camps were a "charade" and a waste of $35 million of taxpayers' money.
"The Families Commission, Unicef and Barnardos were among those voicing opposition (to the camps).
"The reality is that it is Paula Bennett who has missed the point."
There were plenty of early intervention programmes that actually work, Ms Ardern said.
-NZPA
Sponsored links
213 Christchurch properties red zoned
Pike River body showed no sign of explosive force
CTV building collapse report 'very thorough piece of work'
Radio station's divorce promo 'cowardly'
Still seeking answers on school bus crash
ACC beneficiary admits he cheated
10,000 aftershocks and still no end in sight
Wrong boot costs adventurer his life
Remedial work for navy's problem ship
213 Christchurch properties red zoned
Pike River body showed no sign of explosive force
Infratil founder Lloyd Morrison dies of cancer
Cameras capture girl's abduction ordeal
Friends playing near log pile before fatal accident
Shoppers spend more on credit, debit cards
Flushed necklace returned months later
Fonterra taps NZX to run farmer share trading
Briton wanted in 1993 heist nabbed in US
Another horror show for Michael Campbell
Bungled conservation effort kills Sth African rhino
Brownlee turns up heat on council over rebuild
Wrong boot costs adventurer his life
Radio station's divorce promo 'cowardly'
NZ woman's death in Paris explained
Infratil founder Lloyd Morrison dies of cancer
All Blacks stars of the show at Halberg Awards
Daily trivia quiz: February 10
ACC beneficiary admits he cheated
Radio station's divorce promo 'cowardly'
All Blacks stars of the show at Halberg Awards
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
50c an hour increase triggers outrage
Buses: You win some, lose some
Invest in You, Part 12: Swimming
All Wellington bus routes to change
Do you think politicians spend too much on travel?


