New Zealand's prison muster is closing in on 10,000 inmates, about the population of Greymouth. The number of inmates includes prisoners on remand, but the trend over the last decade has been upwards, despite more convicted offenders sentenced to home detention and monitored with electronic bracelets. The cost of running
Editorial: Tribunal case holds hope on critical issue
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Auckland Prison. Photo / Jason Dorday
It submitted Maori reoffending was a highly complex issue and nothing the tribunal could do would assist the Crown to reduce either the proportion of Maori in prison or reoffending rates.
Judge Patrick Savage, deputy chair of the tribunal, accepted that Maori reoffending numbers, while "stark and cause for considerable concern", were not new. The issue was whether the Crown was doing enough.
But he also addressed the Crown view that there was no "imminent event" to warrant an urgent hearing. If the applicant was right, the judge noted, "then many young Maori men and women are in the Correction system or will enter it tomorrow, next month or next year". For them and their families, there was "imminent and perhaps irreversible prejudice".
The tribunal made the right call in agreeing to an urgent hearing. Its decisions from this important forum could be critical to reversing a trend which, left unchecked, carries clear warning signs for New Zealand.