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File image of the inside of a prison. Alamy

'Regress': Ireland's two women’s prisons 'consistently the most overcrowded', report finds

In December 2022, occupancy rates in Limerick Female Prison was 154%, and only in January 2022 was occupancy below 100%.

THE IRISH PRISON system has regressed when it comes to dealing with overcrowding, particularly in women’s prisons.  

That’s according to a report entitled Progress in the Penal System 2022 (PIPS), which is carried out by the Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT).

This is the sixth edition of PIPS, which aims to “set out a clear vision for the future of the penal system in Ireland”.

The report “takes as its starting point that as a small wealthy country, Ireland should work towards becoming a leading model of international best penal practice”.

However, Irish prisons are “regressing” when it comes to five of the 28 standards that are examined in PIPS 2022.

“Regress” is defined as “significant movement away from the attainment of the standard”.

Progress has been made in four standards, but there has been no change in nine of the standards examined.

There is “insufficient data” for two of the standards, while the outlook is “mixed” in eight standards.

“Mixed” is defined as making “progress towards the standard in some areas and regress away from it in others”.

While the IRPT said there has “been some welcome improvement during 2022”, it warned that progress has been minimal.

It added: “The pandemic response demonstrated that it is possible to fast-track change and showed that the reasons often given for delays in the implementation of ambitious and progressive policy are unconvincing.”

Overcrowding

PIPS 2022 reports that “progress made in previous years is at risk of reversal as a result of continued overreliance on imprisonment and subsequent prison overcrowding”.

The IPRT said that the “solution to overcrowding lies not in more prison spaces, but in examining who, why, and how we sanction”.

The report noted that Ireland’s two female prisons – the Dóchas Centre in Dublin and Limerick Female Prison – “are consistently the most overcrowded in the state”.

In December 2022, occupancy rates in Limerick Female Prison was 154%, and only in January 2022 (93%) was occupancy below 100%.

Occupancy rates at the Dóchas Centre was above 100% for the last quarter of 2022 and ranging from 89%-98% between April and September.

The report also noted that 85% of women in the Dóchas centre have addiction issues.

It also cited research showing that 60% of sentenced women have a mental illness, compared to a figure of 27% for sentenced men.

The report also expressed concern that there were still no plans to develop an open prison for women, despite two being available for men, and open prison provision was cited as an area of regress.

The IRPT said prison should only be used as a “last resort” and noted that the majority of women in prison in Ireland are committed on a short-term basis of less than a year for non-violent offences.

In its PIPS 2021 report, the IRPT set a short term target for the Department of Justice to take “specific measures to address why short sentences continue to be handed down to women in place of community-based alternatives”.

However, the 2022 report found that this target had not been achieved.

The report also cited Traveller women as “a minority within a minority” who are “significantly overrepresented in prison”.

Though Travellers represent 0.7% of the national population, they account for 22% of female prisoners and 15% of male prisoners.

Women in prison

While keeping women out of prison was a widely shared priority among peer group discussions, access to gender-sensitive healthcare in prison, the trustworthiness of the complaints system, and family contact were also among the biggest issues.

Yesterday, it was reported in The Journal that specialised rape crisis counselling for female prisoners in the Dóchas Centre have not been in place since last summer.

They fell away with the retirement in August 2022 of the sole therapist providing the service at the Dóchas Centre, with efforts to hire a new practitioner failing.

The situation has caused alarm for those working in the sector, with the IRPT noting international research suggesting that between 50-60% of women in prison have experienced physical or sexual abuse.

PIPS 2022 also cites a recent report of the Dóchas Centre Chaplaincy Service and Prison Visiting Committee described the prison as a ‘dumping ground’ for mental illness.

In 2019, women in Irish prisons were found to be 8.2 times more likely to engage in recorded self-harm than male prisoners (there are no published statistics on self-harm during the pandemic).

A 2021 report by the Inspector of Mental Health Services also found that mental health supports for female prisoners were “under-resourced and under-staffed”.

Meanwhile, a recent study among women in prison found that 78% were mothers, and of these, 73% had children under 18.

However, many of these women had been separated from their children prior to being imprisoned and those who received visits from their children said that long journeys and searches made them reluctant to return.

Research also revealed that women in Irish prisons feel that submitting complaints could have negative impacts on family visits and progression within prison.

The research found that prisoners do not know if a complaint has reached its intended person when submitted.

Only one complaint, out of a total of 235 complaints by female prisoners in the Dóchas, were upheld between 2018 and April 2021.

The IRPT recommended that, as a “matter for the whole of Government”, improved provision of health, addiction and education services for women “both before and after they come into contact with the criminal justice system”.

It also called for imprisonment to only be used as a “last resort for women who offend, when all other alternatives are deemed unsuitable”.

Regress

Other areas of regress included the use of solitary confinement.

Solitary confinement increased in 2022, though PIPS 2022 notes that “information on the lengths of time people are held in such conditions is still not available”.

The IRPT said the “absence of this information frustrates proper prison monitoring and raises concerns about the upholding of rights” and called for “urgent action”.

The proportion of people accommodated in single cells also decreased in 2022 and the IRPT said a “best-practice prison system is one where single-cell accommodation is the default option”.

As of October 2022, only 47.6% of people in custody were in single cells.

This figure was 56% in 2021.

Another area of regress was in the usage of pre-trial detentions.

This is intended to be used as an “exceptional measure” but there was a 23% increase in the number of people being held in Irish prisons on remand between 2021 and 2022.

The IRPT said extended bail support schemes should be developed, in particular for women, young adults and repeat offenders who are committed on remand to prison for less serious offences.

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18 Comments
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    Mute Thomas Meaney
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    May 26th 2023, 7:40 AM

    We need MORE prison spaces across the board not just women’s and not holiday inn type spaces either with TV’s, PlayStations and ensuites. If you go to prison you need to know your in prison.

    213
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    Mute ggg
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    May 26th 2023, 8:10 AM

    @Thomas Meaney: so you don’t believe prisoners should have a toilet and washing facilities in their cell Thomas? What do want them to do at 2am when they need to go to the toilet? You do know that prisoners are locked in the cell from 7pm until the next morning. What you are advocating for is prisoners who can’t go to the toilet at night in the cell , and also can’t wash themselves probably. It’s not victorian times Thomas. What’s your position on toilets and shower in the cells of female prisoners? Do you believe female prisoners who are menstrating shouldn’t have access to washing facilities after lockdown?

    34
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    Mute Thomas Meaney
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    May 26th 2023, 9:25 AM

    @ggg: yes all of the above. You know you can make a life choice ggg…….don’t give them a reason to put you in there in the first place. It’s really simple maths really. If your a good person and you play by the rules you don’t need to use prison facilities ;-)

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    Mute Tricia G
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    May 26th 2023, 10:00 AM

    @Thomas Meaney: So that’s a yes. You don’t believe in rehabilitation even though ever decent piece to research into the matter has clearly shown that treating prisoners like their human beings works at bringing down rates of recidivism.

    No, you just want punishment and screw the outcomes for others (including those that are potentially future victims).

    12
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    Mute Thomas Meaney
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    May 26th 2023, 10:06 AM

    @Tricia G: ahhh yes hiding behind the good old research argument. Ask the victims of crime are they interested in research. If you do the crime you do the time and for every action there is an opposite reaction don’t do the crime and hey presto voila you keep your freedom and liberties.

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    Mute Tricia G
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    May 26th 2023, 10:14 AM

    @Thomas Meaney: The only person hiding here is you because you had to deliberately ignore my entire point about future victims to make your response work.

    Retribution and harsh punishment makes more victims. You know that but you only care about revenge.

    Everything is black and white in your world, never any place for nuance.

    12
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    Mute ggg
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    May 26th 2023, 10:39 AM

    @Thomas Meaney: so female prisoners who are menstrating should not have access to washing facilities? You surely can not be saying that? I’m astonished that you think that. What sort of a person are you? Do you have any female members in your family? Apart from your mother that is.

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    Mute AnthonyK
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    May 26th 2023, 8:07 AM

    Do the crime, serve the time.

    118
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    Mute Karen Lord
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    May 26th 2023, 8:33 AM

    Maybe stop putting men in them for a start.

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    Mute John O Mahony
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    May 26th 2023, 8:27 AM

    Ship all the foreign criminals home l l

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    Mute Emmet Murphy
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    May 26th 2023, 11:34 AM

    Leo said it was a safe Country, don’t be scaring people with stories and our prisons have to operate on a revolving door or suspended sentence system. If they actually, gave long sentences and enforced them? I bet, there’d be room for Leo and Trump in them.

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    Mute Pat Mcleran
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    May 26th 2023, 9:30 AM

    Dochas … isnt that the Government body what looks after Irish folklore?

    8
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    Mute Liam mc liam
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    May 26th 2023, 1:40 PM

    How about stop filling prisons with victimless crime offences…

    End criminalization of people who aren’t infringing on the rights of others…

    6
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    Mute Liam mc liam
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    May 26th 2023, 1:39 PM

    By the way should the shadow banners delete my comments by falsely mass reporting them to get the comment automatically deleted by the algorithm…I will mass flood the articles comment section with this warning…

    This is now a campaign of harresment by shadow banners to have comments deleted they don’t like and to have them banned if they get enough of their comments deleted…

    This that I suspect as shadow banners but not saying they are….

    A D…. a confirmed shadow banner
    Denis Ryan
    Gearóid MacEachaidh
    Tricia G
    Paul furey
    Gavin conran
    Alan
    Alan B
    Elrond Rivendell
    Joe Phillips
    Dawn Harvey who said he is a shadow banner..

    I’ll add more later…their the usual suspects that comment with glee that comments are going to be deleted and or when their deleted….

    This shadow banning to delete users comments and make threats against them just because the shadow banners don’t like others opinions needs to end…Thejournal.ie needs to put a stop to this…

    5
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    Mute Liam mc liam
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    May 26th 2023, 1:40 PM

    Their you have folks….I’ve just proved that theirs a insidious and malicious subset of users on here mass false reporting other users to in order to suppress others and censor you…because they’ve decided their judge, jurry and executioner of what people can and cannot say….their long time users many of them in this insidious and malicious group…they always comment with glee that people’s comments won’t last and when a comment is deleted the comment with such glee again….

    Thejournal.ie needs to permanently ban these people….Thejournal.ie knows who they are and how the harresed many on here deleting their comments and getting people banned…

    I personally have had multiple different attacks on me by these people in their campaign of harresment…I’ve had veiled threats made against…I’ve had my IP attacked….I’ve must have had 3/4 of my comments deleted…I’ve been banned nearly 80 times because of them…they’ve insulted me from the very moment I expressed an opinion they despised and then treated me with derision…

    These are sick people that thejournal.ie needs to deal with…

    This comment section should be a place of free and open discussion once the comments fall with in the guidelines….

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    Mute Kevin O' Brien
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    May 26th 2023, 11:24 AM

    I guess they’ll never learn

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    Mute Liam mc liam
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    May 26th 2023, 1:39 PM

    Shadow banners what did I tell you would happen you keep deleting comments on here….

    Good luck deleting every false reporting on a comment

    2
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    Mute Liam mc liam
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    May 26th 2023, 1:39 PM

    @kevin feeny:

    Shadow banners are insidious and malicious people who harras users by having their comments deleted and or getting them banned by falsely reporting their comments and lying to get the comment deleted….

    False reporting comments are malicious attacks…

    2
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