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PM clarifies bootcamp youths could be in facility for longer under legislation

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 1:38pm

PM clarifies bootcamp youths could be in facility for longer under legislation

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Tue, 10 Dec 2024, 1:38pm

The Prime Minister has acknowledged the Government鈥檚 bootcamp legislation could allow for serious young offenders to be placed in youth justice facilities for longer than the current three months. 

At his post-Cabinet press conference on Monday afternoon, Christopher Luxon said the current pilot allowed for participants to stay in youth justice residences for three months, but the Government could look at extending that further as the regime is made permanent. 

鈥淚t is just an option,鈥 Luxon said. 鈥淲e need to go through the full pilot evaluation. 

鈥淭hat is one of the questions we could legitimately ask for as we think about the legislation that will start going through the House. 

鈥淚 am not saying we will do that. I am just saying there will be more optionality as we think about the balance between residential versus community care.鈥 

Asked if that could see young people stay in the facilities for possibly six months, Luxon said: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know. We haven鈥檛 had those conversations because we want to go through this pilot.鈥 

However, the legislation, which passed its first reading last month, already would allow for the Youth Court to send serious youth offenders to facilities for longer than three months and potentially up to a year. 

Asked by the Herald on Tuesday morning whether he was aware of that, given his comments yesterday about a lack of conversations, Luxon said he was. 

鈥淚n the initial pilot, we had a three-month residential and nine-month in the community, under the new legislation going through the House ... we would have the flexibility to extend the residential period if we felt the individual was not ready to go back into the community.鈥 

He said, 鈥渨e haven鈥檛 locked and loaded on a discussion around that鈥. 

Luxon later acknowledged it would be the Youth Court with the flexibility to make someone鈥檚 stay in the residential component longer. 

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon spoke to media on Tuesday morning. Photo / Mark MitchellPrime Minister Christopher Luxon spoke to media on Tuesday morning. Photo / Mark Mitchell 

The legislation says the Youth Court can make an order for eligible young serious offenders to participate in a military-style academy programme for no less than three months, but no more than 12 months. 

During this period, the offender would be in the custody of the Oranga Tamariki chief executive and be placed in a residence to undertake military-style activities in accordance with a plan approved by the court. That could be varied on application by the Oranga Tamariki chief executive to the Youth Court. 

The Government has been on the defence about its military-style academy proposal after it emerged last week that two participants in the pilot had absconded while in the community stage of the programme. They left the youth justice facilities in October. 

It鈥檚 understood they were found and arrested on Saturday with allegations they were involved in a Hamilton crime spree that included carjacking. 

Luxon on Tuesday wouldn鈥檛 say exactly what 鈥渟uccess鈥 would look like for the pilot, but believed 鈥渟aving one person鈥 from being the victim of serious violent crime would be a 鈥渇antastic thing鈥. 

He said those involved were 鈥渙ur toughest, most persistent serious young offenders鈥 and doing nothing would mean the 鈥渃ommunity is not safe鈥. 

But Labour leader Chris Hipkins said it was a 鈥渇ailed experiment鈥. 

鈥淭he very definition of stupidity is doing the same thing over and again and expecting to get a different result,鈥 Hipkins said. 

鈥淏ootcamps don鈥檛 work and they鈥檝e been proven not to work. This failed experiment has once again proven that bootcamps don鈥檛 work. 

鈥淪aying we鈥檙e going to do more of them and we鈥檙e going to do them for longer is just going to prove the same thing.鈥 

Labour children鈥檚 spokeswoman Willow-Jean Prime was critical of the Prime Minister saying the Government would evaluate the findings of the pilot, when it had already introduced legislation to entrench the bootcamps. 

鈥淲hat that tells me is that they were never genuine about the bootcamp pilot in the first place ... what is the point of a pilot and telling us it is just a pilot, you will take the learnings, when they have already introduced the legislation.鈥 

Labour MP Willow-Jean Prime. Photo / Mike ScottLabour MP Willow-Jean Prime. Photo / Mike Scott 

She also said the Government was trying to look 鈥渢ough on crime鈥, but 鈥渢hey are letting these young people down by going down a pathway of insisting on doing what has no evidence to support it works鈥. 

Both Prime and Hipkins said the previous Labour Government had set up a circuit-breaker programme to get young people in front of the right agencies within two days of offending. Prime said this had a 76% success rate. 

Last week at a select committee, Oranga Tamariki deputy chief executive Tusha Penny said there 鈥渁bsolutely鈥 would be future offending, but also pointed to some bright spots from the pilot, such as one of the participants being in fulltime employment, another in work experience, and others in education courses. 

Jamie Ensor is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team based at Parliament. He was previously a TV reporter and digital producer in the 九一星空无限hub Press Gallery office. 

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