The Garda Youth Diversion Programme is provided for in the Childrens Act 2001. The Garda Diversion Programme is supported by a network of Garda Youth Diversion Projects (GYDPs).
GYDPs are community-based multi-agency crime prevention initiatives, which seek to divert young people who have become involved in crime/anti-social behaviour and to support wider preventative work within the community and with families at risk. There are currently 105 GYDPs state-wide, and a further 10 projects with a special focus (for example: more challenging children, family support).
GYDPs aim to bring about the conditions whereby the behavioural patterns of young people towards law and order can develop and mature through positive interventions and interaction with the project. They are primarily targeted at 12-17 year old “at risk” youths in communities where a specific need has been identified and where there is a risk of them remaining within the justice system. The objectives of the GYDP are to:
Funding for these interventions is based on evidence that diverting young offenders from the criminal justice system, and preventative work with young people at risk, is to their long-term benefit and that of society as a whole.
GYDPs are administered by the Department of Justice’s Youth Crime Policy and Programmes Division, which operates as part of the Irish Youth Justice Service in partnership with the Garda Youth Diversion Office. Each project is managed by a Community Based Organisation (for example: Foróige, Youth Work Ireland, Crosscare). In 2018, approximately €14 million was allocated by the Irish Youth Justice Service to GYDPs. Garda Youth Diversion Projects are co-funding by the Irish Government and European Social Fund as part of the ESF Programme for Employability, Inclusion and Learning 2014-2020.
ESF Programme for Employability, Inclusion and Learning (PEIL) 2014-2020 for Garda Youth Diversion Projects (GYDPs)
The European Social Fund (ESF) provides the European Union with the financial means to invest in people. The current round of funding will run from 2014 to 2020 during which Ireland will have received more than €500 million in assistance from the European Social Fund. The Irish Youth Justice Service (IYJS) secured co-funding for Garda Youth Diversion Projects through the European Social Fund 2014-2020 Programme for the specific purpose of improving the education and employability prospects of young people engaged in the projects.The allocation of the funding is subject to a number of conditions as outlined in the EU circulars. These circulars can be found on the ESF website.
The Garda Youth Diversion Projects are also funded by the Dormant Accounts Fund.
Overview
The Children Act 2001, which was enacted on 8 July 2001, updated the law in relation to youth justice and certain childcare provisions. The Children Act 2001 is the primary statutory framework for the Irish youth justice system. It adopts a twin-track approach – child welfare and youth justice – to addressing the needs of children who may be in need of special care or protection and offending children. For offending children, the Act emphasises a diversionary and restorative approach based on the principle of the use of detention as a measure of last resort.
The principles of the Children Act 2001 include the following:
Children detention schools provide places for a child to be detained in custody in relation to criminal charges. This can be when a Court remands a child in custody or, following a conviction, when a child is sentenced either to a period of detention only or for a period of detention to be followed by supervision in the community by the Probation Service. Before sending a child to detention, the Court will try to make sure that no other option is available that would address the offences with which the child is charged.
Children Detention Schools Development
On 2nd April, 2012 the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs announced that capital funding over three years had been secured to undertake the National Children Detention Facility Project to be located at Oberstown, Lusk, Co. Dublin. This development project was undertaken on foot of the recommendations made by the Expert Group on Children Detention Schools which reviewed and reported on further development of this area.
The objectives of the project were to:
The development provided new and upgraded detention accommodation, a centralised operations building, associated education, recreation, security and other ancillary facilities and systems.
Oberstown Children Detention Campus (Oberstown)
Oberstown Children Detention Campus (Oberstown) provides a safe and secure environment for young people remanded in custody or sentenced by the Courts for a period of detention. The principal objective of the schools under the Children Act 2001 is to provide care, education, training and other programmes to boys and girls aged between 12 and 18 years to promote their reintegration into society and prepare them to take their place in the community as persons who observe the law and are capable of making a positive and productive contribution to society.
Oberstown is governed under a single Board of Management, including nominees from staff and the local community, five members selected through the State Boards appointment process and representatives of government departments. The Director of Oberstown is responsible for the day to day good order, safety and security within the Campus and acts in loco parentis for each child under the supervision and care of Oberstown. Oberstown is funded by the Irish Youth Justice Service (IYJS) in the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth (DCEDIY).
Historical Background
On June 1 2016, the State’s three children detention schools located at Oberstown, Lusk, Co Dublin, Oberstown Boys School, Oberstown Girls School and Trinity House School, were amalgamated to form one entity, Oberstown Children Detention Campus under Statutory Instrument 273/2016. The campus currently provides accommodation for 48 boys and 6 girls. The amalgamation was possible due to the enactment of the Children (Amendment) Act 2015. The Statutory Instruments and Certificates outlining maximum numbers, sex and ages of children are viewable here:
In April 2012, the Department of Children and Youth Affairs approved the project and allocated the required funding to deliver a National Children Detention Facility to end the practice of detaining 16 and 17 year old boys in St. Patrick's Institution, in line with the Programme for Government.
The Minister for Children and Youth Affairs signed the necessary orders, Statutory Instrument 111/2017, with effect from the 31 March 2017, also under the Children (Amendment) Act 2015, to end the practice of detaining 17-year-old boys in adult prison facilities. From that date all children sentenced to a period of detention by the courts are accommodated in Oberstown and St. Patrick’s Institution has been closed.
Oberstown Board of Management
Following the amalgamation of the 3 Children Detention Schools and the creation of a single legal entity, Oberstown Children Detention Campus, a new Board of Management was appointed in accordance with the Children Act 2001. The Board of Management consists of a chairperson and 12 other members. Of the Board of Management members at least one shall be an officer of the Minister, one shall be an employee of the Child and Family Agency nominated by the Minister for Health and Children, one shall be an officer of the Minister for Education and Science nominated by that Minister, two shall be members of the staff of the children detention school, and two shall be representative of persons living in the area of such school.
The Children Act 2001 provides that’s the Board shall manage the children detention school or schools to which it has been appointed in accordance with criteria laid down from time to time by the Minister to provide safe and secure custody for children in detention and in addition, the safest possible working environment for staff. The Board operates within the governance structures as set out in the Children Act 2001.
Children Detention Schools Policies
The national children detention schools policies created by the IYJS are adopted as operational policies and procedures in Oberstown. Oberstown policies are under continuous review by the Board of Management. A number of policies have been approved by the Board and apply across the Oberstown Campus. See the current policies used in Oberstown.
Education
An Education Strategy provides the framework for the type of education to be delivered and the curriculum to be followed. The attainment of national certificates of educational achievement continues to be a priority within children detention schools. The provision of education in children detention schools is the responsibility of the Department of Education, and is provided through Education Training Boards Ireland. In Oberstown education is provided by the Dublin and Dún Laoghaire Education Training Board. Both primary and secondary level courses as well as a wide range of vocational and Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI) accredited awards are available through the Oberstown Education Centre. The purpose built Education Centre in Oberstown caters to all young people, with opportunities to engage in a range of learning choices during their placement.
Children Detention Schools Inspections
A Safeguarding Policy has been developed by the IYJS, designed to promote children’s welfare, to safeguard children from harm or abuse, and to protect staff from potential false allegations of abuse. This was been put in place following a review of the Child Protection Policy document, which had been developed and was in use across all Children Detention Schools. In addition to this policy, a Child Welfare Advisor is appointed to the IYJS who provides oversight with regard to child protection and welfare issues, as well as standards of children detention schools, inspections and complaint mechanisms in children detention Schools.
The European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) visit to Ireland in September 2014 incorporated a visit to the children detention schools and a subsequent report. The CPT is scheduled to visit Ireland in 2019.
Inspectors from within the Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA),are authorised under the provisions of section 185 and 186 of the Children Act 2001 (as amended), by the Minister of Children and Youth Affairs, to carry out inspections of children detention schools at least once every 12 months. Following inspections the reports and subsequent action plans are published on the HIQA website. Operational policies and procedures in Oberstown are reviewed in light of the findings of the inspections and, actions are taken to meet the HIQA recommendations.
Bail Supervision Scheme (BSS)
In accordance with the key principal of the Children Act 2001, that detention should be used as a last resort, the Minister for Children and Youth Affairs officially launched the Bail Supervision Scheme (BSS) on a pilot basis on 12th June 2017. The pilot is for an initial 2 year period during which time a review and evaluation will be conducted to determine the future of the scheme.
The initial results of the BSS pilot scheme have been impressive and shown increasing compliance with bail conditions; reduction in breaches of bail, reductions in criminal activity, and a return to education/training. By maintaining a number of young people in the community on the BSS there is a consequent reduction in the need for detention places. This approach is in keeping with the key principal of youth justice policy and legislation, that the detention of a child should only be imposed as a last resort.
The Bail Supervision programme provides a court with the option to grant bail to a child, rather than detaining the child, during remand proceedings. The option offered to the court is to release the child on bail with conditions set by the court. The child and his/her family consent to engage in a community based Multi-Systemic Therapy (MST) programme. MST is an evidence-based programme with a verifiable track record in improving the behaviour of children involved in complex and chaotic circumstances.
**Background
The Youth Justice System in Ireland is supported by the statutory framework contained in the Children Act 2001, (as amended) and by the joint efforts of State bodies and community-based organisations.
In the years since the Children Act came into effect there has been some notable progress, including the closure of the old St Patrick’s Institution and the development of a modern national detention school facility at the Oberstown Child Detention Campus. We have also seen the development of a network of 106 Garda Youth Diversion projects in which community organisations play a vital role in helping young people make positive choices about their lives.
However, youth crime and anti-social behaviour still has an adverse effect on local communities and is a cause for great concern. There is much to be done to deal more effectively with the factors that relate to the involvement of children and young people in crime and the impact on victims. This requires a concerted and collaborative approach from all agencies, working with local communities.
Steering Group
It’s nearly two decades since the Children Act was enacted and it is timely to take stock, and focus on how we can do things better. Early this year, Minister of State David Stanton. T.D. who has special responsibility for Youth Justice in the Department of Justice, convened an expert Steering Group to advise and guide the development of a new national Youth Justice Strategy to come into effect during 2020. This work incorporates a review of provisions in the Children Act.
Consultations
The development of the new Strategy will include wide ranging consultations with key stakeholders and an initial draft of the new Strategy will be available to support a public consultation process early in 2020.
In the meantime, we are providing information on the development of the Strategy by posting documents that show the issues being considered and some ideas to help us in the future. These include the minutes of the meetings of the expert Steering Group.
If you want to give your views about the new Youth Justice Strategy you can send us an email at yjs@justice.ie
Youth Justice Strategy Documents
Youth Justice Strategy Background Note
Guiding Principles for the Youth Justice Strategy
Open Policy Forum Report to Inform the Development of a New Youth Justice Strategy
Youth Justice Strategy Steering Group Minutes and Relevant Documents
1. Consultation and Communication for Youth Justice Strategy
1. International Standards
2. Thematic Approach to New Youth Justice Strategy
1. Vision Statement for Youth Justice Strategy
2. Prevention and Early Intervention Discussion Paper
3. Prevention and Early Intervention Overview
4. Early Intervention Chart
1. Diversion Discussion Paper
2. Diversion Overview
3. Diversion Chart