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The minute the defence force said it didn鈥檛 want a bar of the new youth boot camps, the Government should have put the brakes on then and there.
It didn鈥檛, though, because it had talked a tough game before the election and like hell it was going to back away from that promise now.
But it should have.
So, let鈥檚 give the Government another chance and let鈥檚 see if it鈥檚 prepared to stop being so gung-ho now that we know that two of the kids who did a runner from the programme were involved in what appears to be some sort of car-jacking attempt at the weekend.
I don鈥檛 hold out much hope. But, at the very least, the Government should be pressing pause.
It should be pressing pause until it鈥檚 worked out whether this is a full-on residential programme or whether it鈥檚 still happy to have the kids go in-house for a bit and then send them back to the lives they came from in the first place. Because why would you do that?
It should be pressing pause to see if it can get the military involved on a much greater scale. The scale that it talked about before getting into government - without actually talking to the military.
It should be pressing pause until it gets Oranga Tamariki properly on-board. Because, let鈥檚 face it, boot camps are the last thing OT wants to be involved with.
I know that because I have some familiarity with OrangaTamariki and I know that sending kids to boot camps goes completely against its DNA.
It should also be pressing pause so that it can get advice from actual experts in this field. Instead of pressing on blindly with something that it knew it could get votes for - but, at this point anyway, looks like something doomed to fail.
Not that Phil O鈥橰eilly feels that way. You鈥檒l know him from his time with Business New Zealand. But he was also a member of the welfare advisory group that was in place during the last version of the boot camps under John Key鈥檚 government.
He said on 九一星空无限talk ZB this morning that boot camps work and he hopes the Government doesn't lose its nerve.
If you鈥檙e thinking 鈥榟old on a minute, these two kids weren鈥檛actually under lock and key because they鈥檇 finished what鈥檚 called the 鈥渇acility-based鈥 part of the programe and were in family or community placements, and so why do you want to write-off the boot camps because of that?鈥
If you鈥檙e thinking that, then doesn鈥檛 the fact that they did this when they were away from the boot camp show you that this idea doesn鈥檛 work?
Since these two did a runner, and since a third young person who was involved in the programme died in a car crash, the Government has been at great pains to point out that other kids involved have got back into education or found work.
Which is great. Don鈥檛 get me wrong.
But it鈥檚 not enough to convince me that the Government should just keep on keeping on without, at the very least, talking to a few experts, trying to get the military more involved, and deciding whether this 鈥渃ommunity placement鈥 part of the programme is actually a good idea.
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