11th October 2010
MEDIA ADVISORY
Current prison-building plans for 70 additional spaces at the Dóchas Centre, with 14 new spaces shortly coming on stream in Limerick female prison, will mean the national capacity for women prisoners has doubled in less than 2 years. Such expansion is ill-conceived and will only compound the lasting damage to families and communities of sending increasing numbers of women to prison, according to the Irish Penal Reform Trust.
Rather than seeking to address the causes of the increase in the women’s prison population, Government response is to add more accommodation. Current plans for the Dóchas Centre will see the capacity of the women’s prison more than double from a design capacity of 85 to a bed capacity of 175 by the end of 2010. Limerick women’s prison is also set to increase its bed capacity from 20 to 34 through the opening of 14 re-commissioned cells. While IPRT welcomes plans to create four new workshop places at Dóchas Centre, proposals to accommodate women in larger cells of up to 4 prisoners is regressive, and a short-term solution to a long-term problem.
Rather than taking the same reactive approach to the current pressure of numbers, IPRT is calling on Government to tackle chronic overcrowding at Ireland’s two female prisons through:
Speaking today, Executive Director Liam Herrick said:
“Women offenders generally present a lower risk to society, and yet higher numbers are sent to prison for non-violent offences. Ireland simply cannot afford the social and economic costs of sending increasing numbers of women to prison, when even a short period of imprisonment can have a profound negative impact on families and communities, particularly in breaking the relationship between mothers and their children.
“IPRT and our colleagues in the Women in Prison Reform Alliance believe that alternatives to the imprisonment of low-risk female offenders can be identified. To this end, we submitted a proposal to Minister Ahern in Dec 2009 calling for an urgent review of the use of imprisonment for women offenders. We believe that focussing on sentencing law and the practices of courts, in particular at District Court level, would address the current overcrowding problem, as well as paving the way for cheaper and more effective community solutions to low-level crime.
“Instead of exacerbating the problem through increasing the numbers of women being sent to prison, the current overcrowding crisis should create the political impetus to seek out better options for low-risk women offenders.”
For all media enquiries, or to arrange an interview, please contact:
Fíona Ní Chinnéide, Campaigns & Communications Officer, Irish Penal Reform Trust
T: + 353 1 874 1400 E: communications@iprt.ie
NOTES FOR EDITORS:
Respect for rights in the penal system with prison as a last resort.