Youth Justice Board review will not maintain status quo
By Neil Puffett Wednesday, 11 November 2009
The governance review of the Youth Justice Board (YJB) will not seek to maintain the status quo, the woman in charge of the exercise has declared.
The running of the public body is currently under the spotlight after the government announced a review of its operating arrangements in September.
It has been claimed that the review, ordered by the Ministry of Justice, could be part of a plan to prevent the Conservatives breaking up the agency should they come to power at the next general election.
However, Dame Sue Street, independent co-chair of the review, said she will look at "anything and everything". "I am not known for sticking to my remit," she told delegates at the YJB annual convention in Southport.
"If it is seen as a status quo preserving exercise, I don't want to lead it and ministers of any complexion won't want to follow it."
As well as probing how the YJB is led, the review will assess the management of major projects the commissioning of custodial places.
Street, a former permanent secretary at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, is co-chairing the review alongside YJB chair Frances Done.
Latest stories from CYP Now
Related Articles
Would you like to post a comment?
Additional Information
Latest jobs Jobs web feed
- Contract and Performance Manager Woking YMCA £27,000 per annum pro rata, Woking with travel across Surrey
- Senior Practitioner 1625 Independent People Qualified: £26,276 - £28,636, Bristol and surrounding area
- 3 Project Workers (Mental Health, Accommodation, Learning and Work) 1625 Independent People Various £21,519 and £27,852, Bristol and surrounding area
- Macmillan Family Worker Jigsaw4U Band 5 A4C, Guildford + travel across Surrey
- Senior Macmillan Project Co-ordinator Jigsaw4U Salary scale band 6A4C, Guilford + travel across surrey
Most read
- BBC social work film prompts calls for early police support
- Young people laud benefits of mentor experience
- YMCA hostel closure to leave 250 young people without housing
- Government urged to address disparate uptake of free childcare
- Social workers lack time to work with children
- Adoption service inspections not tough enough, Ofsted concedes
Most commented
- BBC social work film prompts calls for early police support
- Political parties urged to back loan scheme for childcare
- Government urged to address disparate uptake of free childcare
- Participation in Practice: Young skaters triumphant in bid to build improved park
- Youth involvement in HealthWatch must be mandatory, say sector bodies
- Met Police outlines strategy to combat gang crime




