asked the Secretary of State for Social Services if he will take steps to implement recommendations made by the House of Commons Expenditure Committee report on the reduction of pressure on the prison system, concerning detoxification centres.
My right hon. Friends the Secretary of State for Social Services and the Secretary of State for the Home Department are considering these recommendations, together with the related recommendations of the May
Number of beds | Average DHSS Grant per bed | |||||
£ | ||||||
Leeds | … | … | … | … | 24 | 7,167 (full cost) |
Manchester | … | … | … | 15 | 10,667 (full cost) | |
Tower Hamlets | … | … | … | 11 | 2,091 (part cost |
All new building schemes are scrutinised by the Department, but only those rehabilitation schemes above cost limit are subject to scrutiny. The information is as follows:committee of inquiry into the prison services, published on 31 October 1979.
asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) what research has been ongoing into the effectiveness and use of detoxification centres; and if he will give estimated comparisons of the approximate cost of police arrest, confinement to police cell, court appearance and week's imprisonment as against a 24-hour admission to a centre;(2) if he will list the experimental detoxification centres established since 1973, with details of the number of beds provided in each and the average cost.
In September 1975 the Salvation Army established a detoxification centre at Tower Hamlets towards whose costs the Department contributes. The Department financed the establishment of a centre at Leeds in May 1976 and one at Manchester in November 1977, and undertook to fund each in full for an experimental period of three years—subsequently extended by six months at Leeds.The number of beds provided at each detoxification centre, and the average cost per bed to the Department for the year 1978–79, are as follows: