Ministry of Justice

The Ministry of Justice is a major government department, at the heart of the justice system. We work to protect and advance the principles of justice. Our vision is to deliver a world-class justice system that works for everyone in society.



Secretary of State

 Portrait

Alex Chalk
Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice

Shadow Ministers / Spokeperson
Plaid Cymru
Liz Saville Roberts (PC - Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
Shadow PC Spokesperson (Justice)

Liberal Democrat
Lord Marks of Henley-on-Thames (LD - Life peer)
Liberal Democrat Lords Spokesperson (Justice)

Labour
Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede (Lab - Life peer)
Shadow Spokesperson (Justice)

Liberal Democrat
Alistair Carmichael (LD - Orkney and Shetland)
Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Justice)

Scottish National Party
David Linden (SNP - Glasgow East)
Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Social Justice)
Chris Stephens (SNP - Glasgow South West)
Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Justice)

Labour
Shabana Mahmood (Lab - Birmingham, Ladywood)
Shadow Secretary of State for Justice
Junior Shadow Ministers / Deputy Spokesperson
Labour
Alex Cunningham (Lab - Stockton North)
Shadow Minister (Justice)
Janet Daby (Lab - Lewisham East)
Shadow Minister (Youth Justice)
Ruth Cadbury (Lab - Brentford and Isleworth)
Shadow Minister (Justice)
Ministers of State
Edward Argar (Con - Charnwood)
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
Parliamentary Under-Secretaries of State
Lord Bellamy (Con - Life peer)
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
Mike Freer (Con - Finchley and Golders Green)
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
Gareth Bacon (Con - Orpington)
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
Scheduled Event
Tuesday 7th May 2024
Ministry of Justice
Orders and regulations - Grand Committee
Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (Legal Aid: Domestic Abuse) (Amendment) Order 2024
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Scheduled Event
Tuesday 7th May 2024
14:00
Justice Committee - Oral evidence - Select & Joint Committees
7 May 2024, 2 p.m.
Work of the County Court
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Scheduled Event
Wednesday 8th May 2024
09:25
Ministry of Justice
First Delegated Legislation Committee - Debate - General Committee
8 May 2024, 9:25 a.m.
The draft Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (Legal Aid: Domestic Abuse) (Amendment) Order 2024
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Scheduled Event
Wednesday 8th May 2024
09:25
Ministry of Justice
First Delegated Legislation Committee - Debate - Select & Joint Committees
8 May 2024, 9:25 a.m.
The draft Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (Legal Aid: Domestic Abuse) (Amendment) Order 2024
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Scheduled Event
Tuesday 14th May 2024
11:30
Ministry of Justice
Oral questions - Main Chamber
14 May 2024, 11:30 a.m.
Justice (including Topical Questions)
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Scheduled Event
Monday 20th May 2024
Ministry of Justice
Legislation - Main Chamber
Victims and Prisoners Bill – third reading
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Scheduled Event
Tuesday 25th June 2024
11:30
Ministry of Justice
Oral questions - Main Chamber
25 Jun 2024, 11:30 a.m.
Justice (including Topical Questions)
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Debates
Tuesday 30th April 2024
Select Committee Inquiry
Wednesday 22nd November 2023
Written Answers
Wednesday 1st May 2024
Crown Court: Standards
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps his Department is taking to tackle the backlog in the …
Secondary Legislation
Monday 29th April 2024
Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments (2019 Hague Convention etc.) Regulations 2024
The 2019 Hague Convention (“the 2019 Convention”) was signed on behalf of the United Kingdom on 12 January 2024. It …
Bills
Tuesday 21st November 2023
Arbitration Bill [HL] 2023-24
To amend the Arbitration Act 1996.
Dept. Publications
Wednesday 1st May 2024
09:00

Ministry of Justice Commons Appearances

Oral Answers to Questions is a regularly scheduled appearance where the Secretary of State and junior minister will answer at the Dispatch Box questions from backbench MPs

Other Commons Chamber appearances can be:
  • Urgent Questions where the Speaker has selected a question to which a Minister must reply that day
  • Adjornment Debates a 30 minute debate attended by a Minister that concludes the day in Parliament.
  • Oral Statements informing the Commons of a significant development, where backbench MP's can then question the Minister making the statement.

Westminster Hall debates are performed in response to backbench MPs or e-petitions asking for a Minister to address a detailed issue

Written Statements are made when a current event is not sufficiently significant to require an Oral Statement, but the House is required to be informed.

Most Recent Commons Appearances by Category
View All Ministry of Justice Commons Contibutions

Bills currently before Parliament

Introduced: 29th March 2023

A Bill to make provision about victims of criminal conduct and others affected by criminal conduct; about the appointment and functions of advocates for victims of major incidents; about the release of prisoners; about the membership and functions of the Parole Board; to prohibit certain prisoners from forming a marriage or civil partnership; and for connected purposes.

Commons Completed
Lords - 80%

Last Event - Report Stage
Tuesday 30th April 2024
Next Event - Report Stage
Monday 13th May 2024
Introduced: 21st November 2023

To amend the Arbitration Act 1996.

Lords - 60%

Last Event - Lords
Wednesday 27th March 2024
(Read Debate)
Introduced: 14th November 2023

A Bill to make provision about the sentencing of offenders convicted of murder or sexual offences; to make provision about the suspension of custodial sentences; to make provision about the release of offenders, including provision about release on licence; and for connected purposes.

Commons - 40%

Last Event - 2nd Reading
Wednesday 6th December 2023

Acts of Parliament created in the 2019 Parliament

Introduced: 9th March 2021

A Bill to make provision about the police and other emergency workers; to make provision about collaboration between authorities to prevent and reduce serious violence; to make provision about offensive weapons homicide reviews; to make provision for new offences and for the modification of existing offences; to make provision about the powers of the police and other authorities for the purposes of preventing, detecting, investigating or prosecuting crime or investigating other matters; to make provision about the maintenance of public order; to make provision about the removal, storage and disposal of vehicles; to make provision in connection with driving offences; to make provision about cautions; to make provision about bail and remand; to make provision about sentencing, detention, release, management and rehabilitation of offenders; to make provision about secure 16 to 19 Academies; to make provision for and in connection with procedures before courts and tribunals; and for connected purposes.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 28th April 2022 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 21st July 2021

A Bill to Make provision about the provision that may be made by, and the effects of, quashing orders; to make provision restricting judicial review of certain decisions of the Upper Tribunal; to make provision about the use of written and electronic procedures in courts and tribunals; to make other provision about procedure in, and the organisation of, courts and tribunals; and for connected purposes.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 28th April 2022 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 20th May 2020

A Bill to make provision about the sentencing of offenders convicted of terrorism offences, of offences with a terrorist connection or of certain other offences; to make other provision in relation to terrorism; and for connected purposes.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 29th April 2021 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 27th February 2020

A Bill to implement the Hague Conventions of 1996, 2005 and 2007 and to provide for the implementation of other international agreements on private international law.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 14th December 2020 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 8th January 2020

To require the Parole Board to take into account any failure by a prisoner serving a sentence for unlawful killing or for taking or making an indecent image of a child to disclose information about the victim.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 4th November 2020 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 5th March 2020

A Bill to consolidate certain enactments relating to sentencing.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 22nd October 2020 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 7th January 2020

A bill to make in relation to marriage and civil partnership in England and Wales provision about divorce, dissolution and separation; and for connected purposes

This Bill received Royal Assent on 25th June 2020 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 21st January 2020

A bill to give effect to Law Commission recommendations relating to commencement of enactments relating to sentencing law and to make provision for pre-consolidation amendments of sentencing law

This Bill received Royal Assent on 8th June 2020 and was enacted into law.

Introduced: 11th February 2020

A Bill to make provision about the release on licence of offenders convicted of terrorist offences or offences with a terrorist connection; and for connected purposes.

This Bill received Royal Assent on 26th February 2020 and was enacted into law.

Ministry of Justice - Secondary Legislation

The 2019 Hague Convention (“the 2019 Convention”) was signed on behalf of the United Kingdom on 12 January 2024. It will enter into force in respect of the UK on the first day of the month after the end of a period of one year beginning on the date when the UK ratifies it.
This Order amends the Civil Proceedings Fees Order 2008 (S.I. 2008/1053) (‘the 2008 Order’) as a consequence of amendments made to immigration legislation by the Illegal Migration Act 2023 (c. 37) (‘the Act’) and in relation to certain appeal proceedings brought against decisions of the Upper Tribunal under the Act.
View All Ministry of Justice Secondary Legislation

Petitions

e-Petitions are administered by Parliament and allow members of the public to express support for a particular issue.

If an e-petition reaches 10,000 signatures the Government will issue a written response.

If an e-petition reaches 100,000 signatures the petition becomes eligible for a Parliamentary debate (usually Monday 4.30pm in Westminster Hall).

Trending Petitions
Petition Open
210,094 Signatures
(6,862 in the last 7 days)
Petition Open
1,213 Signatures
(245 in the last 7 days)
Petition Open
449 Signatures
(95 in the last 7 days)
Petition Open
1,703 Signatures
(94 in the last 7 days)
Petitions with most signatures
Petition Debates Contributed
231,136
Petition Closed
7 Aug 2022
closed 1 year, 8 months ago

The proposed Human Rights Act reforms must be withdrawn. The Government must not make any changes to the Human Rights Act, especially ones that dilute people's human rights in any circumstances, make the Government less accountable, or reduce people's ability to make human rights claims.

210,094
c. 1,585 added daily
229,199
(Estimated)
5 Jul 2024
closes in 2 months

This petition calls for the Government to allocate Parliamentary time for assisted dying to be fully debated in the House of Commons and to give MPs a vote on the issue. Terminally ill people who are mentally sound and near the end of their lives should not suffer unbearably against their will.

167,690
Petition Closed
5 Jan 2023
closed 1 year, 3 months ago

As Parliament considers the Bill of Rights, the Government must reconsider including abortion rights in this Bill. Rights to abortion must be specifically protected in this legislation, especially as the Government has refused to rule out leaving the European Convention on Human Rights.

View All Ministry of Justice Petitions

Departmental Select Committee

Justice Committee

Commons Select Committees are a formally established cross-party group of backbench MPs tasked with holding a Government department to account.

At any time there will be number of ongoing investigations into the work of the Department, or issues which fall within the oversight of the Department. Witnesses can be summoned from within the Government and outside to assist in these inquiries.

Select Committee findings are reported to the Commons, printed, and published on the Parliament website. The government then usually has 60 days to reply to the committee's recommendations.


10 Members of the Justice Committee
Robert Neill Portrait
Robert Neill (Conservative - Bromley and Chislehurst)
Justice Committee Chair since 29th January 2020
Kieran Mullan Portrait
Kieran Mullan (Conservative - Crewe and Nantwich)
Justice Committee Member since 2nd March 2020
Maria Eagle Portrait
Maria Eagle (Labour - Garston and Halewood)
Justice Committee Member since 2nd March 2020
Paul Maynard Portrait
Paul Maynard (Conservative - Blackpool North and Cleveleys)
Justice Committee Member since 2nd November 2021
Karl Turner Portrait
Karl Turner (Labour - Kingston upon Hull East)
Justice Committee Member since 17th May 2022
James Daly Portrait
James Daly (Conservative - Bury North)
Justice Committee Member since 27th June 2022
Edward Timpson Portrait
Edward Timpson (Conservative - Eddisbury)
Justice Committee Member since 29th November 2022
Tahir Ali Portrait
Tahir Ali (Labour - Birmingham, Hall Green)
Justice Committee Member since 28th March 2023
Chris Stephens Portrait
Chris Stephens (Scottish National Party - Glasgow South West)
Justice Committee Member since 12th September 2023
Rachel Hopkins Portrait
Rachel Hopkins (Labour - Luton South)
Justice Committee Member since 5th December 2023
Justice Committee: Upcoming Events
Justice Committee - Oral evidence
Work of the County Court
7 May 2024, 2 p.m.
At 2:30pm: Oral evidence
Dr Natalie Byrom - Honorary Senior Research Fellow at Faculty of Laws, UCL
Elizabeth Gallagher - Barrister at Temple Garden Chambers, and Member at the Personal Injury Bar Association
Emily Giles - Housing Lawyer at The Hyde Group
Matthew Maxwell Scott - Executive Director at The Association of Consumer Support Organisations (ACSO)
Rachael Wong - Director at Bond Turner (Anexo Group PLC)

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Justice Committee: Previous Inquiries
Constitutional relationship with the Crown Dependencies The work of the Lord Chancellor Coronavirus (COVID-19): The impact on prison, probation and court systems Ageing prison population Joint Enterprise: Follow-Up Mesothelioma claims The work of the Lord Chief Justice The work of the Youth Justice Board Manorial rights The work of the Administrative Justice Forum Women offenders: follow-up session The work of the Secretary of State: one-off Work of the Court of Protection The work of the Judicial Appointments Commission The work of the Parole Board Impact of changes to civil legal aid under the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 Prisons: planning and policies Scrutiny Hearing: Chair of the Office for Legal Complaints Older Prisoners: follow-up MOJ Annual Report and Accounts 2013-14 and related matters Criminal Cases Review Commission Follow up session on crime reduction policies and Transforming Rehabilitation Pre-appointment of new HM Chief Inspector of CPS Robbery Offences Guideline: Consultation Work of the Justice Committee during the 2010-2015 Parliament Health and safety offences, corporate manslaughter and food safety and hygiene offences guidelines consultation The work of HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Work of HM Chief Inspector of the Crown Prosecution Service The work of the Attorney General Ministry of Justice report and accounts 2014-15 and related matters Work of Secretary of State for Justice Courts and tribunals fees and charges inquiry Young adult offenders inquiry Restorative justice inquiry Role of the magistracy inquiry Prison safety one-off evidence session Pre-appointment scrutiny Youth Justice Women Offenders Crown Dependencies: developments since 2010 Older prisoners Crime reduction policies: a co-ordinated approach? Post-Legislative Scrutiny of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 EU Data Protection Framework Proposals Role of the Probation Service Court closures and other issues within the Minister's remit Operation of the Family Courts Access to Justice Draft Sentencing Guideline: Drug Offences and Burglary The Annual Report of the Sentencing Council Administrative Justice and Tribunals Council Ministry of Justice measures in the JHA block opt-out Prison reform inquiry Legal Services Regulation Criminal justice inspectorates and the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman Radicalisation in prisons and other prison matters Pre-appointment scrutiny of the Chair of the Judicial Appointments Commission Law of homicide Ministry of Justice Annual Report and Accounts 2015-16 The Work of the Secretary of State Work of the Serious Fraud Office Children and young people in custody Disclosure of youth criminal records inquiry Implications of Brexit for the justice system inquiry Work of the Crown Prosecution Service HM Inspectorate of Prisons' relationship with the Ministry of Justice The Lord Chief Justice's report for 2015 Prison reform The work of the Law Commission The work of the sentencing council The Lord Chief Justice's report for 2017 inquiry The work of the Ministry of Justice Work of the Parole Board Young adults in the criminal justice system; and youth custodial estate Pre-legislative scrutiny: draft personal injury discount rate legislation inquiry Transforming Rehabilitation inquiry Prison Population 2022: planning for the future inquiry Employment tribunal fees Work of the Crown Prosecution Service Work of the Serious Fraud Office Work of the Victims' Commissioner Implications of Brexit for the Crown Dependencies inquiry Lord Chief Justice's report 2016 Government consultation on soft tissue injury claims Courts and tribunals fees follow-up Transforming Rehabilitation inquiry Pre-appointment hearing: Chair of the Office for Legal Complaints Personal injury: whiplash and the small claims limits inquiry Work of the Prison Service inquiry The work of the Lord Chancellor inquiry Work of the Victims' Commissioner inquiry Ageing prison population - inquiry Children and young people in custody - inquiry Prison governance inquiry HM Chief Inspector of Probation inquiry The work of the Solicitor General inquiry Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 inquiry Progress in the implementation of the Lammy Review's recommendations inquiry Pre-appointment hearing for HM Chief Inspector of Probation inquiry Court and Tribunal Reforms inquiry Work of the Attorney General inquiry Bailiffs: Enforcement of debt inquiry Serious Fraud Office inquiry Director of Public Prosecutions, Crown Prosecution Service - evidence session The Lord Chief Justice's Report for 2018 inquiry The role of the magistracy – follow up inquiry HMP Birmingham inquiry The implications of Brexit for the justice system: follow-up inquiry Pre-commencement hearing: Chair of the Parole Board inquiry Ministry of Justice Annual Report and Accounts 2017-18 inquiry Pre-appointment hearing: Prisons and Probation Ombudsman inquiry The work of the Law Commission Criminal legal aid Disclosure of evidence in criminal cases inquiry Small claims limit for personal injury inquiry The transparency of Parole Board decisions and involvement of victims in the process HM Inspectorate of Prisons report on HMP Liverpool Private prosecutions: safeguards The Coroner Service The future of the Probation Service Pre-legislative scrutiny of the Victims Bill Public opinion and understanding of sentencing The prison operational workforce Whiplash Reform and the Official Injury Claim service Future prison population and estate capacity The use of pre-recorded cross-examination under Section 28 of the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 Work of the County Court Regulation of the legal professions The Coroner Service: follow-up Probate Ageing prison population Bailiffs: Enforcement of debt Children and young people in custody Court and Tribunal Reforms Criminal legal aid Work of the Crown Prosecution Service Director of Public Prosecutions Employment tribunal fees HM Inspectorate of Prisons report on HMP Liverpool HMP Birmingham The implications of Brexit for the justice system: follow-up Prison governance HM Chief Inspector of Probation Progress in the implementation of the Lammy Review's recommendations Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 The Lord Chief Justice's Report for 2018 Ministry of Justice Annual Report and Accounts 2017-18 Work of the Parole Board Pre-appointment hearing for HM Chief Inspector of Probation Pre-commencement hearing: Chair of the Parole Board Prison Population 2022: planning for the future The role of the magistracy – follow up Serious Fraud Office Transforming Rehabilitation Transparency of Parole Board decisions Work of the Victims' Commissioner Work of the Attorney General The work of the Law Commission The work of the Ministry of Justice The work of the Solicitor General Work of the Serious Fraud Office Young adults in the criminal justice system The work of the Lord Chancellor Work of the Prison Service The Lord Chief Justice's report for 2017 inquiry

50 most recent Written Questions

(View all written questions)
Written Questions can be tabled by MPs and Lords to request specific information information on the work, policy and activities of a Government Department

23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps his Department is taking to tackle the backlog in the Crown Court.

We remain committed to tackling the outstanding caseload in the Crown Court and have introduced a range of measures to achieve this aim.

We expect to have sat around 107,000 days at the Crown Court in the last financial year (FY2023/24), representing around a 30% increase on sitting day levels during the 2019/20 financial year. We have also recruited around 1,000 judges and tribunal members across all jurisdictions in the last financial year so we can hear more cases.

Judges have worked tirelessly to complete more cases. HMCTS Management Information shows that disposals have increased throughout the last calendar year, with February disposals being at their highest level than at any other point in the last 12 months, with 9,958 disposals in February 2024, up 18% on February 2023 (8,451).

We are also investing more in our criminal courts. In August 2023, we announced we are investing £220 million for essential modernisation and repair work of our court buildings across the next two years, up to March 2025. We have also continued the use of 20 Nightingale courtrooms into the 2024/25 financial year, to allow courts to work at full capacity.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
24th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps he is taking with Cabinet colleagues to help tackle parental alienation.

The Government does not recognise the concept of “parental alienation” and does not accept that it is a syndrome capable of diagnosis.

In his judgment in the case of Re C the President of the Family Division detailed that the courts focus should be on the “identification of ‘alienating behaviour’” rather than seeking “to determine whether the label ‘parental alienation’ can be applied”. In providing advice to the court, Cafcass does not recognise “parental alienation” and instead looks at the individual behaviours of a parent. In cases where a child is resistant, or refuses, to see a parent Cafcass Family Court Advisers must first consider whether domestic abuse or other forms of harmful parenting are a contributing factor.

The Government is aware of concerns of about unregulated “parental alienation” experts being instructed in the family courts. To address this issue, we are working with the Family Procedure Rule Committee to make changes to the Family Procedure Rules and their associated Practice Directions to prevent the instruction of these unregulated experts.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
17th Apr 2024
To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the adequacy of resources allocated to the Criminal Cases Review Commission.

As part of the departmental allocation process, we assess the needs of individual organisations against the overarching backdrop of the wider departmental finances. The CCRC’s budget has increased year on year since 2020-21 both to increase the size of its caseworker team and to carry out more outreach work with people who may need their services. The budget for 2023/24 was set at just under £8 million, which is an increase of £1.26 million or 18% since 2021/22. Its 2024-25 allocation is under consideration.

Lord Bellamy
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many people were released under the executive release scheme in each year between 2017 and 2023.

In the case of recalled standard determinate sentence and extended sentence offenders, the Secretary of State has an executive power to re-release them, if he considers that the statutory release test is met - that is, that it is no longer necessary on the grounds of public protection for the offender to remain confined. Thus, the Secretary of State’s power is exercised with regard to the same test to which the Parole Board has regard.

The power is exercised by officials in the Public Protection Group (PPG), in His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service under approved delegated authority. In exercising that power, PPG works closely with the Probation Service, in order to put in place a robust risk management plan before a final decision is made to re-release the prisoner.

The number of recalled offenders released using the Secretary of State’s re-release power for each year between 2017 and 2023 is set out in the table below. Executive re-release was refreshed and relaunched as Risk Assessed Recall Review (RARR) on 30 May 2023. Between 7 September and 31 December 2023, 89 people were released following a RARR.

Year of issuing the decision

Number of releases

2017

1,584

2018

1,386

2019

957

2020

725

2021

464

2022

92

2023 up to May

20

The figures in these tables have been drawn from administrative IT systems which, as with any large scale recording system, are subject to possible errors with data entry and processing. As such, figures are subject to change as information is updated.

Data source: Public Protection Unit Database (PPUD)

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many people were released under the Release following Risk Assessed Recall review process between 7 September and 31 December 2023.

In the case of recalled standard determinate sentence and extended sentence offenders, the Secretary of State has an executive power to re-release them, if he considers that the statutory release test is met - that is, that it is no longer necessary on the grounds of public protection for the offender to remain confined. Thus, the Secretary of State’s power is exercised with regard to the same test to which the Parole Board has regard.

The power is exercised by officials in the Public Protection Group (PPG), in His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service under approved delegated authority. In exercising that power, PPG works closely with the Probation Service, in order to put in place a robust risk management plan before a final decision is made to re-release the prisoner.

The number of recalled offenders released using the Secretary of State’s re-release power for each year between 2017 and 2023 is set out in the table below. Executive re-release was refreshed and relaunched as Risk Assessed Recall Review (RARR) on 30 May 2023. Between 7 September and 31 December 2023, 89 people were released following a RARR.

Year of issuing the decision

Number of releases

2017

1,584

2018

1,386

2019

957

2020

725

2021

464

2022

92

2023 up to May

20

The figures in these tables have been drawn from administrative IT systems which, as with any large scale recording system, are subject to possible errors with data entry and processing. As such, figures are subject to change as information is updated.

Data source: Public Protection Unit Database (PPUD)

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what plans he has to reduce over-crowding in HMP Wandsworth.

In prisons where we have crowding in place, a rigorous cell certification process is undertaken that ensures the use of cells is subject to a formal assessment of safety and decency.

We continue to pursue the package of longer-term measures the Lord Chancellor announced on 16 October 2023 to reform the justice system and address the prison capacity challenges. The measures include: the extension of the Early Removal Scheme to deport Foreign National Offenders (FNOs), introducing a presumption to suspend sentences of 12 months or less, curtailing the licence period for IPP sentences and extending the use of Home Detention Curfew. On 11 March, the Lord Chancellor announced the next steps in our plan, to allow us to go further and faster in removing FNOs. This includes expediting prisoner transfers with our priority partners, such as Albania, and the creation of a new taskforce across the Home Office and Ministry of Justice to change the way we process FNO cases radically.

To meet pressing demand, we are building c.20,000 modern, rehabilitative prison places – the biggest prison build programme since the Victorian era. We have already delivered c.5,900 of these, including through our two new 1,700 places prisons, HMP Five Wells and HMP Fosse Way, and c.590 Rapid Deployment Cells across 11 sites. By the end of 2025, we are on track to have delivered around 10,000 places in total.

The Government will continue to monitor the evolving situation with demand for prison places carefully, so that we can make sure we have the right approaches in place to maintain the capacity required for a safe and effective criminal justice system.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps he is taking to reduce drugs use by prisoners in HMP Wandsworth.

HMP Wandsworth has benefitted from our £100 million investment in tough security measures, introducing x-ray body scanning for prisoners and enhanced gate security provisions for visitors and staff, which includes archway metal detectors, drugs dogs and x-ray baggage scanners. These measures are helping to tackle the supply of drugs and other contraband into prisons, and as of October 2023, our x-ray body scanners had recorded more than 46,900 positive indications across the prison estate since their introduction.

We are also expanding the number of Incentivised Substance-Free Living Units (ISFLs), where prisoners commit to remaining free of illicit drugs and alcohol, with regular drug testing and incentives. 80 prisons, including HMP Wandsworth, now have an ISFL. The ISFL at HMP Wandsworth is a 16-bed unit where residents have access to additional support, privileges and substance misuse interventions whilst undergoing voluntary drug testing twice a month.

HMP Wandsworth also works closely with their Substance Misuse Service Provider, “Change, Grow, Live” to deliver a comprehensive programme of recovery workshops, and is currently in the process of recruiting a new, dedicated Drug Strategy Lead to better co-ordinate efforts to keep drugs out of the prison.

As the responsible minister for prisons, I receive regular updates on their conditions and performance, including those at HMP Wandsworth, via a variety of means, including through formal face to face discussion such as the quarterly Ministerial Performance Review Board meetings.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, when and with whom he has had discussions on drugs use in HMP Wandsworth this year.

HMP Wandsworth has benefitted from our £100 million investment in tough security measures, introducing x-ray body scanning for prisoners and enhanced gate security provisions for visitors and staff, which includes archway metal detectors, drugs dogs and x-ray baggage scanners. These measures are helping to tackle the supply of drugs and other contraband into prisons, and as of October 2023, our x-ray body scanners had recorded more than 46,900 positive indications across the prison estate since their introduction.

We are also expanding the number of Incentivised Substance-Free Living Units (ISFLs), where prisoners commit to remaining free of illicit drugs and alcohol, with regular drug testing and incentives. 80 prisons, including HMP Wandsworth, now have an ISFL. The ISFL at HMP Wandsworth is a 16-bed unit where residents have access to additional support, privileges and substance misuse interventions whilst undergoing voluntary drug testing twice a month.

HMP Wandsworth also works closely with their Substance Misuse Service Provider, “Change, Grow, Live” to deliver a comprehensive programme of recovery workshops, and is currently in the process of recruiting a new, dedicated Drug Strategy Lead to better co-ordinate efforts to keep drugs out of the prison.

As the responsible minister for prisons, I receive regular updates on their conditions and performance, including those at HMP Wandsworth, via a variety of means, including through formal face to face discussion such as the quarterly Ministerial Performance Review Board meetings.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
24th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many vacancies there were for band 3 prison officers in the Long Term High Security Estate - South at the start of each year from 2017 to 2023.

Following a period of staffing challenges after the COVID-19 pandemic, we have seen a substantial improvement in the national staffing picture within prisons. The number of Band 3-5 prison officers has increased by 1,634 Full Time Equivalent (FTE) between December 2022 - 2023, and resignation rates have fallen over the same period. This is the result of significant efforts across the agency, including substantial increases in pay for staff and launching our first-ever nationwide advertising campaign.

Table One below shows the number of indicative vacancies for Band 3 Prison Officers in the Long Term & High Security Estate (for prisons in the South) for January 2018, January 2019, January 2020, January 2021, January 2022 and January 2023. Data is not held for the period January 2017 and has not been provided.

In reality, many establishments will routinely sit marginally below their Target Staffing level due to normal attrition and time to hire and so we would not expect establishments to run consistently at 100% staffing.

Where prisons are not at their Target Staffing level, these are routinely supplemented (e.g., by using Payment Plus, a form of overtime) which is not accounted for in the indicative vacancy data provided. Use of detached duty, a long-standing mechanism to deploy staff from one prison or region to support another, is also not reflected in the data.


Table One: Total Band 3 Prison Officer Indicative Vacancies across Long Term & High Security Estate (LTHSE) South, January 2018 to January 2023

Month

Indicative vacancies (FTE)

Jan-18

104

Jan-19

14

Jan-20

62

Jan-21

86

Jan-22

127

Jan-23

323

Notes

  • All data is taken from Workforce Planning Tool returns and show the average position across January for each year, adjusted for joiners and leavers in the month.
  • Workforce Planning Tool returns are manually completed by Prisons each month and, as with any manual returns, are subject to human error.
  • Data shows average resource across the month, adjusted for joiners and leavers in the month.
  • The Long Term & High Security Estate South includes: Belmarsh, Isle of Wight, Long Lartin, Swaleside, Whitemoor and Woodhill.
  • Indicative vacancies are the difference between Target Staffing levels and Staff in Post at an individual establishment level. Where Staff in Post (FTE) exceeds Target Staffing (FTE) for an establishment, the number of indicative vacancies has been shown as 0 FTE. Indicative vacancies have been summed across establishments to give the number of indicative vacancies for LTHSE South.
  • Target Staffing level is the number of staff required to run an optimal regime in each prison. This level is greater than the minimum number of staff required for a prison to operate safely, and includes allowances for staff taking leave, being off sick or being on training.
  • The Target Staffing Figures are set on a site-specific basis and vary in size. Over the reporting period in question, Target Staffing levels for the LTHSE estate has increased which in part explains the increase in vacancies.
  • Band 3 Prison Officers include 'Prison Officer - Band 3' and 'Prison Officer - Youth Justice Worker - Band 3'.
  • Target Staffing levels are established based on a 39-hour working week. Staff in Post (FTE) is set at 1.0 FTE for those on a 39-hour contract / 1.05 FTE for those on a 41-hour contract and 0.95 FTE for those on a 37-hour contract.
  • Target Staffing levels cannot be used to directly calculate vacancies due to the discretion governors have to change establishment level staffing requirements through Governors' Freedoms. As a result, the Ministry of Justice does not regularly present vacancy data and the data presented should be treated with caution.
  • Staff in Post data used to calculate an indicative number of vacancies does not take into account those on long-term absences (e.g. career breaks / loans / secondments / agency staff or other forms of overtime).
  • Where prisons are not at their Target Staffing level, these are routinely supplemented (e.g., by using Payment Plus, a form of overtime) which is not accounted for in the indicative vacancy data provided. Use of detached duty, a long-standing mechanism to deploy staff from one prison or region to support another, is also not reflected in the data.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
17th Apr 2024
To ask His Majesty's Government, further to the report by the University of Manchester Racial Bias and the Bench: A response to the Judicial Diversity and Inclusion Strategy (2020-2025), published in November 2022, what support they will give to recommendations to overhaul judicial appointment processes to deliver a more diverse judiciary and embed equalities within the judiciary.

The Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) is independent of government and has a statutory duty to select candidates for judicial appointment solely on merit; select only people of good character and have regard to the need to encourage diversity in the range of persons available for judicial selection. The JAC keeps its selection processes under continual review to ensure they are transparent, fair, and attract talented candidates from a wide range of backgrounds. In 2022-2023, across all legal JAC exercises, 51% of those recommended for appointment were women and 16% were ethnic minorities, contributing to a more diverse judiciary.

The Ministry of Justice, as a member of the Judicial Diversity Forum (JDF), works closely with the judiciary, the Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC), the Legal Services Board (LSB) and the three largest legal professions on actions to improve judicial diversity. The Forum’s 2024 action plan (https://judicialappointments.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Judicial-Diversity-Forum-Priorities-and-Actions-for-2024.pdf) which was published in January, sets out our shared priorities.

Lord Bellamy
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, if he will make an assessment of the potential merits of bringing forward legislative proposals to require the Office of the Public Guardian to notify all nominated persons when a (a) power of attorney and (b) lasting power of attorney is made.

General, otherwise known as ordinary, powers of attorney are governed by the Powers of Attorney Act 1971. They allow a donor to give power to an attorney to manage their affairs for a defined period of time. There is no requirement to name or notify nominated persons and the Public Guardian is not involved in the process. Powers of attorney are an important mechanism for supporting agency arrangements, often in a commercial context, and there are no plans to change this arrangement to require notification of nominated persons.

Lasting Powers of Attorney (LPAs) are governed by the Mental Capacity Act 2005 which requires that any nominated persons are notified at the point when an application is made to the Office of the Public Guardian to register the LPA. An application to register an LPA can be made either by the donor or by one or more attorneys named in the LPA. Currently, it is the applicant’s responsibility to notify any nominated persons. The Public Guardian maintains a register of all registered LPAs and anyone can request a free search to check if there is a registered LPA for a relative or friend.

The Powers of Attorney Act 2023, when implemented, will improve the process for notification and objections for LPAs. The Public Guardian will in future be responsible for issuing notices to the donor, their attorneys and any persons to be notified that the LPA has been received for registration and appears to be validly made. Furthermore, anyone who is aware that an LPA is being made will be able to object to its registration at an earlier stage in the process if they have concerns. These changes will strengthen the existing safeguards in the system.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps his Department is taking to tackle (a) fraud and (b) misuse of Lasting Power of Attorney.

Under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, execution of a lasting power of attorney (LPA) must be witnessed and a certificate provider must confirm that the donor understands the powers they are conferring on their attorney or attorneys and is not being coerced to make the LPA. A mandatory 4-week period must elapse before registration, allowing time for objections to be raised prior to registration.

Following consultation on ways to strengthen these protections, my department is working with the Office of the Public Guardian to implement a modernised LPA, facilitated by the Powers of Attorney Act 2023.

The modernised LPA will introduce identity checks for donors and certificate providers to reduce the risk that an unknown party could obtain an LPA in another person’s name without their knowledge. The certificate provider will be required to be present at execution of the LPA by the donor and a more streamlined objection process will allow anyone to object, making it easier for potential abuses to be challenged earlier in the process. These measures collectively should reduce the risk of fraudulent LPAs and abuse of the powers they confer.

Once the LPA is registered, any concerns about its use can be reported to the Office of the Public Guardian, which has authority to investigate. It can, if necessary, ask the court to remove the power for an attorney to act.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many and what proportion of inmates in prisons were drug tested at least once in (a) 2022 and (b) 2023.

The information requested could only be obtained at disproportionate cost.

All prisons have a zero-tolerance approach to drugs. Our drug testing contract also enables us to deliver key commitments in the Cross-Government Drug Strategy such as: testing of offenders who receive a Drug Rehabilitation Requirement, the pilot of Intensive Supervision Courts and increased flexibility to test for a broader range of drugs. In addition, all prisons have been provided with access to forensic testing of items seized or found within the estate.

Our £100 million Security Investment Programme completed in March 2022 and delivered 75 additional X-ray body scanners, supplying full coverage across the closed male estate. We have also installed 84 X-ray baggage scanners at 49 sites, drug detection machines and metal detection archways. Furthermore, we are taking steps to support individuals with substance misuse issues in prison. We have dramatically increased the number of incentivised substance-free living units (ISFLs), where prisoners commit to living drug-free with incentives and regular testing. 80 prisons now have an ISFL, up from 25 in summer 2022.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many police detectives are employed by the counter corruption unit in HM Prison and Probation Service.

No Police Detectives are directly employed by HMPPS. HMPPS has, however, funded 20 dedicated Police Detectives employed in Police Regional Organised Crime Units, to support in the investigation of corruption within the organisation.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many appeals for all types of benefit case (a) are awaiting a hearing and (b) were awaiting a hearing on 22 April 2010 (i) nationally, (ii) by region, (iii) by Tribunal Office and (iv) by hearing venue.

The table below sets out the number of appeals for all types of benefit awaiting a hearing (i) nationally, (ii) by region, and (iv) by hearing venue as at end of December 2023 (the latest period for which data are available). There is no separate data collated at (iii) Tribunal office level.

Data for 22 April 2010 could only be obtained at disproportionate cost.

All SSCS Benefits at December 231

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

11785

6166

1401

Bexleyheath

6

3

0

East London

2715

1443

349

Enfield

46

20

4

Fox Court

5765

2996

670

Hatton Cross

436

170

96

Romford

844

516

112

Sutton

1973

1018

170

Midlands

14569

7979

2084

Birmingham

3275

1668

603

Boston

299

196

33

Chesterfield

649

359

84

Coventry

1146

725

102

Derby

1047

618

142

Hereford

162

81

25

Kidderminster

193

93

37

Leicester

1305

700

160

Lincoln

693

422

71

Northampton

736

476

87

Nottingham

1666

906

256

Nuneaton

123

72

13

Shrewsbury

518

283

67

Stoke

681

379

78

Walsall

493

226

86

Wellingborough

280

169

31

Wolverhampton

1058

462

180

Worcester

245

144

29

North East (Leeds)

6382

2903

1205

Barnsley

314

126

67

Bradford

1055

542

178

Doncaster

448

191

75

Grimsby

300

138

57

Huddersfield

36

11

8

Hull

615

327

97

Leeds

957

341

193

Scarborough

241

111

53

Sheffield

1182

554

214

Wakefield

982

473

187

York

252

89

76

North East (Newcastle)

4775

2480

807

Bedlington

234

95

65

Berwick

20

9

4

Darlington

502

251

77

Durham

425

212

95

Gateshead

116

49

32

Newcastle

751

284

176

North Shields

208

56

63

South Shields

361

176

72

Sunderland

792

488

80

Teesside

1366

860

143

North West

10686

5704

1635

Barrow

108

65

12

Birkenhead

440

264

57

Blackburn

401

225

69

Blackpool

545

238

105

Bolton

613

303

108

Burnley

374

200

46

Bury

1

0

0

Carlisle

254

125

42

Chester

627

358

81

Lancaster

157

94

7

Liverpool

1640

778

234

Manchester

2159

1258

331

Preston

317

143

70

Rochdale

636

279

127

Runcorn

1

0

0

St Helens

676

373

99

Stockport

977

581

129

Wigan

581

327

82

Workington

179

93

36

Scotland

1557

411

508

Aberdeen

89

24

27

Ayr

101

20

40

Campbeltown Centre

2

0

0

Dumfries (Cairndale)

26

2

13

Dundee

88

18

22

Dunfermline

27

7

6

Edinburgh

315

92

114

Galashiels

28

9

8

Glasgow

489

143

155

Greenock

46

10

15

Hamilton

130

26

34

Inverness

63

9

24

Kilmarnock

7

2

2

Kirkcaldy

59

22

19

Kirkwall

1

0

1

Lerwick

3

0

1

Lewis

3

0

2

Oban

6

2

3

Stirling

65

22

19

Stranraer

4

2

1

Wick

5

1

2

South East

12225

7369

1200

Ashford

930

533

102

Basildon

399

200

75

Bedford

365

243

33

Brighton

1250

733

109

Cambridge

456

244

61

Chatham

616

434

60

Chelmsford

700

434

64

Eastbourne

135

88

11

Hastings

317

221

23

High Wycombe

509

291

55

Ipswich

619

409

37

Kings Lynn

269

136

33

Luton

605

365

46

Margate

322

197

29

Milton Keynes

309

172

38

Norwich

990

657

87

Oxford

551

351

58

Peterborough

467

243

56

Reading

593

352

53

Southend

220

109

42

Stevenage

239

137

19

Watford

1364

820

109

South West

9782

5401

823

Unallocated 2

247

156

18

Aldershot

555

309

52

Barnstaple

122

60

9

Bournemouth

12

0

1

Bristol

1922

1090

163

Exeter

385

132

55

Gloucester

715

421

54

Havant

1058

684

63

Newport IOW

319

225

20

Newton Abbot

383

190

37

Plymouth

623

303

62

Poole

801

417

67

Salisbury

73

20

12

Southampton

982

594

58

Swindon

532

322

35

Taunton

410

215

32

Truro

435

156

69

Weymouth and Dorchester

2

0

0

Worle

206

107

16

Wales

6471

3470

675

Aberystwyth

82

41

10

Caernarfon

179

64

26

Cardiff

2668

1455

310

Carmarthen

107

36

20

Haverfordwest

153

68

20

Langstone, Newport

1181

703

91

Llandrindod Wells

37

21

8

Llanelli

2

0

0

Llangefni

284

180

25

Port Talbot

531

232

45

Prestatyn

411

247

31

Swansea

317

140

34

Welshpool

81

46

14

Wrexham

438

237

41

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

29

4

2

Grand Total

78261

41887

10340

From April 2023 the SSCS Tribunal started to list cases using a new Scheduling and Listing solution. This, alongside HMCTS migrating to a new Strategic Data Platform, has resulted in some cases heard and decided using this new listing solution not currently being included in the data above.

1. Data pulled 24/4/2024

2. Unallocated relates to appeals that have not yet been allocated to a venue.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Management information reflects the data held on the case management system, which is subject to change, and can differ from the quality-assured MOJ official statistics, which form the agreed definitive position.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
24th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what the reoffending rate was for people convicted of murder in each year since 2005.

Between 2011/12 and 2021/22, the overall proven reoffending rate decreased from 31.3% to 25.2%. As shown in the attached table, the most recent data shows that reoffending rates for both murderers and rapists are at their lowest levels since 2005. In particular, the proportion of rapists who reoffend has fallen from 10.2% in 2005/06 to 5.3% in 2021/22.

We are taking action to drive down the reoffending rate for all offenders by investing in a wide range of rehabilitative interventions to get them into skills training, work, and stable accommodation. Since 2021, we’ve rolled out Employment Hubs and Prison Employment Leads in all resettlement prisons and are delivering our temporary accommodation service for all prisoners at risk of homelessness.

The full information requested can be found in the attached table.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
24th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what the reoffending rate was for people convicted of rape in each year since 2005.

Between 2011/12 and 2021/22, the overall proven reoffending rate decreased from 31.3% to 25.2%. As shown in the attached table, the most recent data shows that reoffending rates for both murderers and rapists are at their lowest levels since 2005. In particular, the proportion of rapists who reoffend has fallen from 10.2% in 2005/06 to 5.3% in 2021/22.

We are taking action to drive down the reoffending rate for all offenders by investing in a wide range of rehabilitative interventions to get them into skills training, work, and stable accommodation. Since 2021, we’ve rolled out Employment Hubs and Prison Employment Leads in all resettlement prisons and are delivering our temporary accommodation service for all prisoners at risk of homelessness.

The full information requested can be found in the attached table.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many convictions under joint enterprise legislation have been successfully overturned on appeal.

The Ministry of Justice does not currently collate data on whether a prosecution or conviction relied on the doctrine of joint enterprise or whether an appeal in such a case resulted in the conviction being quashed or the sentence changed.

The Crown Prosecution Service has recently updated their case management system to enable better tracking of homicide and attempted homicide cases involving joint enterprise.

Laura Farris
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Justice) (jointly with Home Office)
24th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many convictions there were for murder in each year since 2005; and what the conviction rate was in the same period.

The Ministry of Justice holds data on convictions for murder offences.

The published data, from 2010 to 2022, can be found in the following tool: Outcomes by Offence tool: December 2022.

The most recent published data available, from year ending June 2011 until the year ending June 2023, can be found in the following tool: Outcomes by Offence tool: June 2023.

The full calendar year for 2023 will be available in the next update of the Outcomes by Offence tool, expected in May 2024.

The data can be accessed by navigating to the ‘Prosecutions and convictions’ tab and using the offence code filer to select the following offences in the Outcomes by Offence data tool:

  • 00101 Murder – victim aged 1 year or over
  • 00102 Murder – victim under one year old

To cover the full period requested, convictions for murder offences from 2005 to 2009 have been provided in Table 1.

It is not advised to use this data to calculate conviction rate due to the Court Proceedings Database counting two separate records at two separate stages. We cannot track the defendant throughout their court journey and an individual may appear at each court in separate years, or for a different principal offence at different stages. As a result, this rate is not an accurate measure of the proportion of prosecutions that result in a conviction.

Laura Farris
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Justice) (jointly with Home Office)
24th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many convictions there were for rape in each year since 2005; and what the conviction rate was in the same period.

This Government is committed to improving the criminal justice system’s response to rape. In 2019, we commissioned our end-to-end Rape Review, publishing this in 2021 alongside a clear Action Plan that committed to delivering sustained improvements for victims. In this Action Plan, we set ourselves stretching ambitions to return the volumes of adult rape cases being referred by the police, charged by the CPS, and going to court back to 2016 levels by the end of this Parliament.

We have exceeded each of these ambitions ahead of schedule. In practice, this means we have more than doubled the volumes of police referrals, charges, and cases reaching court compared to when the Review was commissioned in 2019.

Increases to conviction volumes or conviction rates were not included as ambitions for the Rape Review. The right to a fair trial means that juries should rightly make decisions independently and based on the facts of the case.

Whilst not being a Rape Review ambition, the Ministry of Justice does hold data on convictions for rape offences.

Published data for calendar years (from 2010 to 2022) can be found in the following tool: Outcomes by Offence tool: December 2022.

The most recent published data available, providing data for the years ending in June from 2011 until 2023, can be found in the following tool: Outcomes by Offence tool: June 2023.

The full calendar year for 2023 will be available in the next update of the Outcomes by Offence tool, expected in May 2024.

This can be accessed by navigating to the ‘Prosecutions and convictions’ tab and using the Offence filter to select the following offences in the Outcomes by Offence data tool:

  • 19C Rape of a female aged 16 or over
  • 19D Rape of a female aged under 16
  • 19E Rape of a female child under 13 by a male
  • 19F Rape of a male aged 16 or over
  • 19G Rape of a male aged under 16
  • 19H Rape of a male child under 13 by a male

To cover the full period requested, previously unpublished convictions for rape offences from 2005 to 2009 have now been provided in Table 1.

It is not advised to use this data to calculate conviction rate (the number of convictions as a proportion of the number of prosecutions). This is due to the Court Proceedings Database counting two separate records at two separate stages (one for prosecution, one for conviction). We cannot track the defendant throughout their court journey and an individual may appear at each court in separate years, or for a different principal offence at different stages. As a result, this rate is not an accurate measure of the proportion of prosecutions that result in a conviction.

However, the most accessible published data for conviction rates is in the quarterly data summaries for the period 2019/20 onwards published by the CPS in the CPS quarterly data summaries | The Crown Prosecution Service. Furthermore, convictions rates 2007/8 to 2013/14 are available in the CPS Violence against Women and Girls crime report 2013-2014.

Laura Farris
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Justice) (jointly with Home Office)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what discussions he has had with the Sentencing Council on the implementation of guidelines that require judges to consider factors such as poverty and social deprivation in sentencing; and whether his Department will provide training on these factors.

On 1 April 2024, the Sentencing Council for England and Wales introduced a new mitigating factor ‘difficult and/or deprived background or personal circumstances’ across all offence specific guidelines, following consultation. As a statutory consultee, the Lord Chancellor made clear in his response his opposition to the inclusion of this new mitigating factor. However, as an independent body, the Government cannot require the Council to review particular guidelines.

Regarding the implementation of the guidelines, under the Coroners and Justice Act 2009, the Council is required to monitor the operation and effect of its guidelines once published. The Council decides on its own priorities and work plan for producing and monitoring guidelines.

In relation to judicial training, in order to preserve the independence of the judiciary, the Lady Chief Justice has statutory responsibility under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 for the maintenance of appropriate arrangements for the welfare, training and guidance of the judiciary. The Lady Chief Justice exercises this responsibility through the Judicial College.

Gareth Bacon
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what guidelines his Department has issued on ensuring the (a) anonymity and (b) safety of jurors in high-profile cases.

There is no expectation of anonymity for jurors in trials. It is standard procedure that jurors’ names are called out to allow the defendant, or the defence’s legal representative, the opportunity to object to any person called, if for example they have knowledge of the defendant or of the case, which may be prejudicial to the trial.

However, Criminal Procedure Rule 25.6(4) allows for jurors to be announced by an identifying number assigned by the court officer to that person (rather than by their name) where the court is satisfied that that is necessary.

We take the safety of jurors and all those who attend the crown court seriously. Jurors are advised to make immediate contact with HMCTS staff if they are approached by anyone they think may be connected to the case they are part of the jury for, or if they feel threatened or concerned. If they are not in the courthouse and think they are in immediate danger, jurors are advised to dial 999.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many people on probation (a) have been assessed as eligible for the Building Better Relationships programme and (b) are waiting for a place on that programme as of 23 April 2024.

We are unable to provide data on the number of people on probation who have been assessed as eligible for the Building Better Relationships programme (BBR) or who are waiting for a place on that programme as of 23 April 2024 without incurring disproportionate cost. We are also unable to provide the number of available places on the BBR programme for people on probation in 2024-25 without incurring disproportionate cost. This information is not collated and recorded centrally. Regions collect their own management information and waiting lists vary with average waiting times for BBR between one and five months. Each region manages their own accredited programme referrals and allocation of places is based on risk and order expiry date.

We are unable to provide data on the number of filled custodial places on the Building Better Relationships (BBR) programme in 2023-24 at this time as to do so would breach official statistics publication rules outlined in the Code of Practice for Statistics as they will form a subset of future published statistics. Data for 2023-2024 will be published in the Prison Education and Accredited Programme Statistics report on 26 September 2024.

There are 210 places available on the BBR programme for people in custody for 2024-25. This is subject to review related to changes in both the demand for different programmes, and the transition to new programmes being introduced in-year.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many of the 200 custodial places on the Building Better Relationships programme were filled in 2023-24.

We are unable to provide data on the number of people on probation who have been assessed as eligible for the Building Better Relationships programme (BBR) or who are waiting for a place on that programme as of 23 April 2024 without incurring disproportionate cost. We are also unable to provide the number of available places on the BBR programme for people on probation in 2024-25 without incurring disproportionate cost. This information is not collated and recorded centrally. Regions collect their own management information and waiting lists vary with average waiting times for BBR between one and five months. Each region manages their own accredited programme referrals and allocation of places is based on risk and order expiry date.

We are unable to provide data on the number of filled custodial places on the Building Better Relationships (BBR) programme in 2023-24 at this time as to do so would breach official statistics publication rules outlined in the Code of Practice for Statistics as they will form a subset of future published statistics. Data for 2023-2024 will be published in the Prison Education and Accredited Programme Statistics report on 26 September 2024.

There are 210 places available on the BBR programme for people in custody for 2024-25. This is subject to review related to changes in both the demand for different programmes, and the transition to new programmes being introduced in-year.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many places will be available on the Building Better Relationships programme for people (a) in custody and (b) on probation in 2024-25.

We are unable to provide data on the number of people on probation who have been assessed as eligible for the Building Better Relationships programme (BBR) or who are waiting for a place on that programme as of 23 April 2024 without incurring disproportionate cost. We are also unable to provide the number of available places on the BBR programme for people on probation in 2024-25 without incurring disproportionate cost. This information is not collated and recorded centrally. Regions collect their own management information and waiting lists vary with average waiting times for BBR between one and five months. Each region manages their own accredited programme referrals and allocation of places is based on risk and order expiry date.

We are unable to provide data on the number of filled custodial places on the Building Better Relationships (BBR) programme in 2023-24 at this time as to do so would breach official statistics publication rules outlined in the Code of Practice for Statistics as they will form a subset of future published statistics. Data for 2023-2024 will be published in the Prison Education and Accredited Programme Statistics report on 26 September 2024.

There are 210 places available on the BBR programme for people in custody for 2024-25. This is subject to review related to changes in both the demand for different programmes, and the transition to new programmes being introduced in-year.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps he has taken to reduce the cost of fraud in his Department in the last three financial years.

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) recognises that the nature of the fraud threat it faces is constantly evolving and that our response must be equally as agile. The MoJ has been developing its Counter Fraud Centre of Expertise (CoEx) since 2019 and this team has a central governance and oversight role across the Department, including its Executive Agencies, Arm’s Length Bodies and core Functions.

The MoJ maintains a collaborative working relationship with the Public Sector Fraud Authority (PSFA) regarding Counter Fraud Functional Standards and performance, and contributes to PSFA thematic working groups, for example internal fraud risks.

The MoJ conducts regular internal reviews against Functional Standards across the Department and collaborates with teams to improve performance and raise awareness in terms of fraud risk assessment, fraud controls and fraud reporting.

The MoJ took part in the 2022 National Fraud Initiative that looked to identify duplicated payroll data held across other public and private sector bodies to prevent and detect fraud.

The MoJ provides management information and updates to the Department Audit and Risk Committee.

The MoJ has always had a current Counter Fraud Strategy, Policy and Response Plan in place, all of which are readily accessible on the respective Intranet sites.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
23rd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, if he will make an assessment of the potential merits of (a) producing and (b) publishing disaggregated justice data for Wales.

The Ministry of Justice produces the data required to deliver justice effectively in Wales. A significant amount of data is already published that is disaggregated for Wales.

Officials in the Ministry of Justice and His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service continue to work with Welsh Government officials to consider areas in which Wales-specific data is not available and examine whether any such data might further aid the delivery of justice in Wales.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
17th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what assessment his Department has made of the potential impact of section 156 (2) of the Police, Crime Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 on levels of attacks on workers undertaking public-facing roles.

Section 156 (2) of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 introduced a new statutory aggravating factor for certain assault offences where they are committed against a person providing a public service, performing a public duty, or providing services to the public. The Government introduced this to ensure that the public-facing nature of a victim's role would be considered, allowing the court to give a longer sentence within the statutory maximum for the offence.

The Ministry of Justice does not collect or publish data on the use of aggravating factors. Currently, there is no specific offence for an attack against a worker undertaking a public-facing role. As assault of a worker in a public-facing role is not a specific offence, we are unable to assess the trends relating to assaults on public-facing workers specifically.

The Government recognises the seriousness of assaults on workers undertaking public-facing roles and is clear that we must adopt a zero-tolerance approach to assault against those who serve the public. This is why in April 2024, the Government published ‘Fighting Retail Crime: more action’, within which the Government announced plans to introduce a new offence of assault against a shop worker, building on the operational policing commitments in the police-led Retail Crime Action Plan published in October 2023.

Laura Farris
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Justice) (jointly with Home Office)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, if he will make an assessment of the cases of Just Stop Oil protestors who were imprisoned on remand for slow-marching.

The decision to remand an individual in custody or to grant bail is solely a matter for the independent judiciary acting in accordance with the law. The Ministry of Justice therefore cannot intervene in any decision made by the court and cannot assess whether remands to custody or bail are more appropriate in these cases.

Gareth Bacon
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what information his Department holds on the longest period of time that a claimant has had to wait for their benefit decision to be heard at tribunal (a) nationally and (b) by region in the last five years.

The information requested is not held centrally.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many appeals relating to Personal Independence Payment claims are awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, (c) by Tribunal Office and (d) by hearing venue; what the average length of time between such appeals being (i) lodged and (ii) heard is (A) nationally, (B) by region, (C) by Tribunal Office and (D) by hearing venue; and in how many cases the length of time waited has exceeded this average (1) nationally, (2) by region, (3) by Tribunal Office and (4) by hearing venue as of 22 April 2024.

The tables below set out the number of Personal Independence Payment, Disability Living Allowance, Employment Support Allowance and Universal Credit appeals awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, and (d) by hearing venue as at end of December 2023 (the latest period for which data are available). There are no separate data collated at (c) tribunal office level.

Information about the average length of time between appeals being lodged and heard; and in how many case the length of time waited has exceeded this average is not held centrally.

Personal Independence Payment1 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

6804

3861

980

Bexleyheath

1

1

0

East London

1543

905

234

Enfield

27

11

3

Fox Court

3318

1846

483

Hatton Cross

243

98

72

Romford

512

353

67

Sutton

1160

647

121

Midlands

9330

5052

1369

Birmingham

1984

1007

354

Boston

202

134

25

Chesterfield

457

255

57

Coventry

698

442

71

Derby

701

417

91

Hereford

101

43

20

Kidderminster

144

60

30

Leicester

813

415

108

Lincoln

427

258

46

Northampton

488

328

56

Nottingham

1135

610

168

Nuneaton

99

58

13

Shrewsbury

333

185

46

Stoke

427

228

63

Walsall

316

136

66

Wellingborough

196

114

22

Wolverhampton

637

262

110

Worcester

172

100

23

North East

7061

3468

1316

Barnsley

193

71

38

Bedlington

159

66

44

Berwick

14

6

3

Bradford

691

334

131

Darlington

356

195

49

Doncaster

316

142

51

Durham

333

169

77

Gateshead

78

33

21

Grimsby

186

80

37

Huddersfield

32

10

8

Hull

342

181

65

Leeds

514

165

132

Newcastle

332

122

80

North Shields

134

34

46

Scarborough

158

75

29

Sheffield

737

381

119

South Shields

233

112

53

Sunderland

545

349

53

Teesside

871

581

85

Wakefield

687

322

138

York

150

40

57

North West

7362

4250

1066

Barrow

84

53

10

Birkenhead

355

223

43

Blackburn

311

180

58

Blackpool

355

189

69

Bolton

414

231

69

Burnley

263

151

31

Carlisle

165

86

32

Chester

500

315

65

Lancaster

105

66

1

Liverpool

1023

495

155

Manchester

1319

821

164

Preston

248

123

58

Rochdale

436

216

90

St Helens

512

301

73

Stockport

699

451

68

Wigan

427

267

49

Workington

146

82

31

Scotland

263

68

114

Aberdeen

3

1

1

Ayr

11

1

4

Dumfries (Cairndale)

3

1

1

Dundee

6

0

2

Dunfermline

7

3

3

Edinburgh

70

19

36

Galashiels

6

1

3

Glasgow

89

24

36

Greenock

5

1

4

Hamilton

24

3

6

Inverness

7

4

1

Kilmarnock

2

1

1

Kirkcaldy

22

8

11

Oban

2

1

1

Stirling

4

0

2

Stranraer

1

0

1

Wick

1

0

1

South East

7696

4930

574

Ashford

556

349

38

Basildon

264

144

43

Bedford

200

133

17

Brighton

842

541

40

Cambridge

238

122

30

Chatham

466

355

23

Chelmsford

408

265

33

Eastbourne

98

64

8

Hastings

243

177

10

High Wycombe

321

192

32

Ipswich

411

283

22

Kings Lynn

181

91

13

Luton

363

229

16

Margate

257

162

20

Milton Keynes

212

119

27

Norwich

659

470

43

Oxford

311

216

27

Peterborough

307

165

33

Reading

361

224

21

Southend

95

33

21

Stevenage

163

94

14

Watford

740

502

43

South West

5916

3428

625

Unallocated 3

177

115

11

Aldershot

289

162

38

Barnstaple

80

36

8

Bristol

1167

724

122

Exeter

224

80

49

Gloucester

432

257

38

Havant

657

440

45

Newport IOW

222

153

13

Newton Abbot

246

126

29

Plymouth

384

193

55

Poole

441

249

49

Salisbury

46

10

10

Southampton

606

401

40

Swindon

320

218

23

Taunton

239

134

24

Truro

255

68

59

Worle

131

62

12

Wales

4181

2180

514

Aberystwyth

49

24

6

Caernarfon

101

23

15

Cardiff

1746

949

250

Carmarthen

72

15

19

Haverfordwest

105

39

16

Langstone, Newport

793

459

76

Llandrindod Wells

32

16

8

Llangefni

199

121

18

Port Talbot

305

112

35

Prestatyn

277

170

13

Swansea

194

75

25

Welshpool

52

31

8

Wrexham

256

146

25

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

10

4

0

National

48623

27241

6558

Disability Living Allowance at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

592

426

73

East London

149

114

22

Enfield

2

2

0

Fox Court

264

180

36

Hatton Cross

20

14

3

Romford

54

41

4

Sutton

103

75

8

Midlands

597

394

91

Birmingham

164

84

39

Boston

10

9

0

Chesterfield

26

20

2

Coventry

46

35

4

Derby

40

32

5

Hereford

7

5

0

Kidderminster

11

8

1

Leicester

43

32

8

Lincoln

36

25

1

Northampton

26

19

4

Nottingham

63

41

10

Nuneaton

4

3

0

Shrewsbury

20

15

3

Stoke

30

23

4

Walsall

19

10

1

Wellingborough

10

9

1

Wolverhampton

34

17

8

Worcester

8

7

0

North East

489

326

68

Barnsley

15

9

2

Bedlington

9

7

0

Bradford

54

36

8

Darlington

29

20

4

Doncaster

14

5

2

Durham

20

15

4

Gateshead

3

1

1

Grimsby

12

5

4

Huddersfield

1

1

0

Hull

23

16

5

Leeds

30

8

12

Newcastle

16

7

5

North Shields

3

2

0

Scarborough

9

5

2

Sheffield

71

52

3

South Shields

19

11

4

Sunderland

40

29

3

Teesside

67

61

1

Wakefield

47

32

6

York

7

4

2

North West

535

372

87

Barrow

5

4

0

Birkenhead

32

19

7

Blackburn

26

17

6

Blackpool

19

10

2

Bolton

30

20

5

Burnley

14

11

2

Carlisle

9

3

4

Chester

20

14

4

Lancaster

6

6

0

Liverpool

70

45

12

Manchester

113

89

14

Preston

14

9

2

Rochdale

40

25

10

St Helens

42

27

9

Stockport

60

49

4

Wigan

31

21

6

Workington

4

3

0

Scotland

8

2

3

Ayr

2

1

0

Dundee

1

0

0

Edinburgh

2

0

2

Glasgow

1

0

0

Inverness

1

0

1

Kirkcaldy

1

1

0

South East

555

427

52

Ashford

33

24

3

Basildon

25

15

5

Bedford

20

16

1

Brighton

46

36

2

Cambridge

10

4

6

Chatham

47

41

4

Chelmsford

38

28

4

Eastbourne

4

3

0

Hastings

13

10

1

High Wycombe

27

18

5

Ipswich

30

23

2

Kings Lynn

12

10

2

Luton

27

26

0

Margate

15

14

1

Milton Keynes

14

8

3

Norwich

46

37

3

Oxford

23

18

1

Peterborough

19

14

3

Reading

26

23

0

Southend

8

4

3

Stevenage

12

8

1

Watford

60

47

2

South West

394

266

45

Unallocated 3

10

6

2

Aldershot

26

20

2

Barnstaple

3

1

0

Bristol

79

52

9

Exeter

13

4

3

Gloucester

27

15

4

Havant

48

33

6

Newport IOW

13

11

1

Newton Abbot

12

8

0

Plymouth

21

15

2

Poole

30

23

2

Salisbury

3

0

1

Southampton

36

26

5

Swindon

24

19

2

Taunton

21

17

2

Truro

16

9

4

Worle

12

7

0

Wales

247

148

35

Aberystwyth

3

3

0

Caernarfon

3

1

2

Cardiff

115

61

18

Carmarthen

1

0

1

Haverfordwest

4

0

3

Langstone, Newport

45

33

3

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

13

10

1

Port Talbot

15

9

2

Prestatyn

16

13

0

Swansea

9

3

4

Welshpool

1

0

0

Wrexham

21

14

1

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

1

0

0

National

3418

2361

454

Employment and Support Allowance4 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

380

158

28

East London

116

59

4

Enfield

2

0

0

Fox Court

149

47

17

Hatton Cross

19

8

3

Romford

24

12

2

Sutton

70

32

2

Midlands

667

351

88

Birmingham

112

57

19

Boston

21

11

1

Chesterfield

33

14

7

Coventry

48

29

5

Derby

48

26

6

Hereford

9

4

2

Kidderminster

13

8

2

Leicester

69

44

7

Lincoln

17

8

1

Northampton

32

14

4

Nottingham

65

31

12

Nuneaton

7

2

0

Shrewsbury

38

21

7

Stoke

49

29

0

Walsall

25

13

4

Wellingborough

11

6

1

Wolverhampton

56

25

8

Worcester

14

9

2

North East

468

188

62

Barnsley

18

7

5

Bedlington

14

2

3

Bradford

41

17

3

Darlington

23

8

2

Doncaster

17

8

2

Durham

22

8

4

Gateshead

5

0

0

Grimsby

19

7

2

Hull

20

15

0

Leeds

20

7

1

Newcastle

25

9

3

North Shields

19

3

5

Scarborough

12

4

4

Sheffield

40

15

6

South Shields

27

8

1

Sunderland

38

20

3

Teesside

49

25

6

Wakefield

42

18

7

York

17

7

5

North West

323

82

72

Barrow

5

0

1

Birkenhead

9

1

2

Blackburn

13

3

3

Blackpool

13

1

4

Bolton

21

6

4

Burnley

7

0

3

Carlisle

9

1

1

Chester

25

5

6

Lancaster

7

3

0

Liverpool

38

16

7

Manchester

50

15

12

Preston

4

2

1

Rochdale

28

6

5

St Helens

21

1

2

Stockport

40

17

9

Wigan

24

4

9

Workington

9

1

3

Scotland

214

20

70

Aberdeen

13

0

3

Ayr

17

1

6

Campbeltown Centre

1

0

0

Dumfries (Cairndale)

9

0

7

Dundee

12

0

3

Dunfermline

5

0

1

Edinburgh

27

1

15

Galashiels

6

2

1

Glasgow

50

6

18

Greenock

12

3

0

Hamilton

19

3

3

Inverness

14

0

6

Kilmarnock

2

0

1

Kirkcaldy

8

2

2

Lerwick

2

0

0

Stirling

17

2

4

South East

420

209

48

Ashford

20

10

1

Basildon

16

7

2

Bedford

13

7

1

Brighton

39

20

6

Cambridge

11

5

1

Chatham

16

8

3

Chelmsford

37

18

3

Eastbourne

2

2

0

Hastings

9

3

4

High Wycombe

19

8

1

Ipswich

25

14

1

Kings Lynn

15

7

3

Luton

22

13

1

Margate

4

1

0

Milton Keynes

9

5

1

Norwich

36

17

5

Oxford

21

13

3

Peterborough

32

12

3

Reading

34

19

4

Southend

2

2

0

Stevenage

9

6

1

Watford

29

12

4

South West

490

295

15

Unallocated 3

14

8

3

Aldershot

31

24

0

Barnstaple

6

4

0

Bristol

80

42

4

Exeter

12

5

1

Gloucester

35

21

0

Havant

65

43

1

Newport IOW

27

21

2

Newton Abbot

26

15

0

Plymouth

31

19

0

Poole

32

25

1

Salisbury

7

3

0

Southampton

49

26

1

Swindon

17

8

2

Taunton

22

12

0

Truro

21

12

0

Worle

15

7

0

Wales

434

278

13

Aberystwyth

10

5

3

Caernarfon

10

6

1

Cardiff

155

108

3

Carmarthen

10

6

0

Haverfordwest

13

8

0

Langstone, Newport

88

55

1

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

23

15

0

Port Talbot

37

26

0

Prestatyn

24

14

2

Swansea

27

11

0

Welshpool

13

6

3

Wrexham

23

17

0

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

3

0

2

National

3399

1581

398

Universal Credit5 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

2659

1361

215

East London

566

294

57

Enfield

8

2

1

Fox Court

1468

754

94

Hatton Cross

102

40

13

Romford

169

85

34

Sutton

346

186

16

Midlands

2602

1489

406

Birmingham

713

381

142

Boston

51

34

7

Chesterfield

62

34

11

Coventry

202

125

14

Derby

159

87

31

Hereford

21

16

0

Kidderminster

20

15

2

Leicester

265

160

29

Lincoln

123

74

19

Northampton

126

82

16

Nottingham

253

148

50

Nuneaton

11

7

0

Shrewsbury

78

45

7

Stoke

99

55

9

Walsall

116

64

15

Wellingborough

43

29

6

Wolverhampton

218

109

44

Worcester

42

24

4

North East

2007

1012

385

Barnsley

55

26

13

Bedlington

46

20

15

Berwick

5

3

0

Bradford

208

118

30

Darlington

70

26

19

Doncaster

84

31

18

Durham

40

17

7

Gateshead

24

11

10

Grimsby

69

41

11

Huddersfield

3

0

0

Hull

108

62

16

Leeds

173

68

30

Newcastle

229

109

48

North Shields

45

16

9

Scarborough

49

24

15

Sheffield

160

67

40

South Shields

71

40

13

Sunderland

124

79

12

Teesside

227

137

37

Wakefield

170

88

32

York

47

29

10

North West

1512

572

308

Barrow

12

6

1

Birkenhead

34

15

5

Blackburn

33

15

2

Blackpool

54

13

10

Bolton

107

32

24

Burnley

65

29

8

Carlisle

29

14

4

Chester

61

17

6

Lancaster

27

13

3

Liverpool

179

49

34

Manchester

467

226

112

Preston

35

7

8

Rochdale

91

23

17

St Helens

79

34

13

Stockport

141

45

43

Wigan

85

29

17

Workington

13

5

1

Scotland

658

187

219

Aberdeen

33

8

15

Ayr

40

12

13

Dumfries (Cairndale)

13

1

5

Dundee

44

10

13

Dunfermline

14

3

2

Edinburgh

120

31

40

Galashiels

14

6

3

Glasgow

206

64

71

Greenock

25

6

10

Hamilton

59

17

19

Inverness

22

3

9

Kilmarnock

2

0

0

Kirkcaldy

22

9

4

Kirkwall

1

0

1

Lerwick

1

0

1

Lewis

2

0

1

Oban

4

1

2

Stirling

29

13

9

Stranraer

3

2

0

Wick

4

1

1

South East

2002

1053

321

Ashford

117

47

28

Basildon

70

24

19

Bedford

48

30

6

Brighton

173

76

35

Cambridge

68

33

11

Chatham

70

27

21

Chelmsford

107

62

11

Eastbourne

26

15

3

Hastings

43

27

8

High Wycombe

125

70

14

Ipswich

89

54

8

Kings Lynn

36

18

12

Luton

110

65

16

Margate

39

18

8

Milton Keynes

48

27

6

Norwich

145

86

22

Oxford

111

66

13

Peterborough

91

45

14

Reading

141

73

21

Southend

65

37

16

Stevenage

45

27

2

Watford

235

126

27

South West

1744

1121

65

Unallocated 3

43

26

2

Aldershot

120

74

5

Barnstaple

24

15

0

Bristol

342

219

11

Exeter

59

32

0

Gloucester

136

99

7

Havant

187

133

5

Newport IOW

49

35

4

Newton Abbot

61

34

4

Plymouth

84

52

0

Poole

159

96

9

Salisbury

15

6

1

Southampton

162

106

5

Swindon

108

71

5

Taunton

71

42

0

Truro

87

58

3

Worle

37

23

4

Wales

1019

712

62

Aberystwyth

16

8

1

Caernarfon

53

32

6

Cardiff

389

277

18

Carmarthen

20

14

0

Haverfordwest

28

19

1

Langstone, Newport

179

133

9

Llandrindod Wells

3

3

0

Llangefni

27

20

1

Port Talbot

91

68

3

Prestatyn

74

46

9

Swansea

58

43

3

Welshpool

14

8

3

Wrexham

67

41

8

National

14203

7507

1981

From April 2023 the SSCS Tribunal started to list cases using a new Scheduling and Listing solution. This, alongside HMCTS migrating to a new Strategic Data Platform, has resulted in some cases heard and decided using this new listing solution not currently being included in the data above.

1. Personal Independence Payment (New Claim Appeals) which replaces Disability Living Allowance was introduced on 8 April 2013, also includes Personal Independence Clams (Reassessments)

2. Data pulled 23/4/2024

3. Unallocated relates to appeals that have not yet been allocated to a venue.

4. Data includes Employment and Support Allowance and Incapacity Benefit reassessment. Employment and Support Allowance was introduced in October 2008 and Incapacity Benefit reassessment followed in October 2010.

5. Universal Credit was introduced on 29 April 2013 in selected areas of Greater Manchester and Cheshire, and has been gradually rolled out to the rest of the UK from October 2013.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Management information reflects the data held on the case management system, which is subject to change, and can differ from the quality-assured MOJ official statistics, which form the agreed definitive position.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many appeals relating to Disability Living Allowance claims are awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, (c) by Tribunal Office and (d) by hearing venue; what the average length of time between such appeals being (i) lodged and (ii) heard is (A) nationally, (B) by region, (C) by Tribunal Office and (D) by hearing venue; and in how many cases the length of time waited has exceeded this average (1) nationally, (2) by region, (3) by Tribunal Office and (4) by hearing venue as of 22 April 2024.

The tables below set out the number of Personal Independence Payment, Disability Living Allowance, Employment Support Allowance and Universal Credit appeals awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, and (d) by hearing venue as at end of December 2023 (the latest period for which data are available). There are no separate data collated at (c) tribunal office level.

Information about the average length of time between appeals being lodged and heard; and in how many case the length of time waited has exceeded this average is not held centrally.

Personal Independence Payment1 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

6804

3861

980

Bexleyheath

1

1

0

East London

1543

905

234

Enfield

27

11

3

Fox Court

3318

1846

483

Hatton Cross

243

98

72

Romford

512

353

67

Sutton

1160

647

121

Midlands

9330

5052

1369

Birmingham

1984

1007

354

Boston

202

134

25

Chesterfield

457

255

57

Coventry

698

442

71

Derby

701

417

91

Hereford

101

43

20

Kidderminster

144

60

30

Leicester

813

415

108

Lincoln

427

258

46

Northampton

488

328

56

Nottingham

1135

610

168

Nuneaton

99

58

13

Shrewsbury

333

185

46

Stoke

427

228

63

Walsall

316

136

66

Wellingborough

196

114

22

Wolverhampton

637

262

110

Worcester

172

100

23

North East

7061

3468

1316

Barnsley

193

71

38

Bedlington

159

66

44

Berwick

14

6

3

Bradford

691

334

131

Darlington

356

195

49

Doncaster

316

142

51

Durham

333

169

77

Gateshead

78

33

21

Grimsby

186

80

37

Huddersfield

32

10

8

Hull

342

181

65

Leeds

514

165

132

Newcastle

332

122

80

North Shields

134

34

46

Scarborough

158

75

29

Sheffield

737

381

119

South Shields

233

112

53

Sunderland

545

349

53

Teesside

871

581

85

Wakefield

687

322

138

York

150

40

57

North West

7362

4250

1066

Barrow

84

53

10

Birkenhead

355

223

43

Blackburn

311

180

58

Blackpool

355

189

69

Bolton

414

231

69

Burnley

263

151

31

Carlisle

165

86

32

Chester

500

315

65

Lancaster

105

66

1

Liverpool

1023

495

155

Manchester

1319

821

164

Preston

248

123

58

Rochdale

436

216

90

St Helens

512

301

73

Stockport

699

451

68

Wigan

427

267

49

Workington

146

82

31

Scotland

263

68

114

Aberdeen

3

1

1

Ayr

11

1

4

Dumfries (Cairndale)

3

1

1

Dundee

6

0

2

Dunfermline

7

3

3

Edinburgh

70

19

36

Galashiels

6

1

3

Glasgow

89

24

36

Greenock

5

1

4

Hamilton

24

3

6

Inverness

7

4

1

Kilmarnock

2

1

1

Kirkcaldy

22

8

11

Oban

2

1

1

Stirling

4

0

2

Stranraer

1

0

1

Wick

1

0

1

South East

7696

4930

574

Ashford

556

349

38

Basildon

264

144

43

Bedford

200

133

17

Brighton

842

541

40

Cambridge

238

122

30

Chatham

466

355

23

Chelmsford

408

265

33

Eastbourne

98

64

8

Hastings

243

177

10

High Wycombe

321

192

32

Ipswich

411

283

22

Kings Lynn

181

91

13

Luton

363

229

16

Margate

257

162

20

Milton Keynes

212

119

27

Norwich

659

470

43

Oxford

311

216

27

Peterborough

307

165

33

Reading

361

224

21

Southend

95

33

21

Stevenage

163

94

14

Watford

740

502

43

South West

5916

3428

625

Unallocated 3

177

115

11

Aldershot

289

162

38

Barnstaple

80

36

8

Bristol

1167

724

122

Exeter

224

80

49

Gloucester

432

257

38

Havant

657

440

45

Newport IOW

222

153

13

Newton Abbot

246

126

29

Plymouth

384

193

55

Poole

441

249

49

Salisbury

46

10

10

Southampton

606

401

40

Swindon

320

218

23

Taunton

239

134

24

Truro

255

68

59

Worle

131

62

12

Wales

4181

2180

514

Aberystwyth

49

24

6

Caernarfon

101

23

15

Cardiff

1746

949

250

Carmarthen

72

15

19

Haverfordwest

105

39

16

Langstone, Newport

793

459

76

Llandrindod Wells

32

16

8

Llangefni

199

121

18

Port Talbot

305

112

35

Prestatyn

277

170

13

Swansea

194

75

25

Welshpool

52

31

8

Wrexham

256

146

25

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

10

4

0

National

48623

27241

6558

Disability Living Allowance at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

592

426

73

East London

149

114

22

Enfield

2

2

0

Fox Court

264

180

36

Hatton Cross

20

14

3

Romford

54

41

4

Sutton

103

75

8

Midlands

597

394

91

Birmingham

164

84

39

Boston

10

9

0

Chesterfield

26

20

2

Coventry

46

35

4

Derby

40

32

5

Hereford

7

5

0

Kidderminster

11

8

1

Leicester

43

32

8

Lincoln

36

25

1

Northampton

26

19

4

Nottingham

63

41

10

Nuneaton

4

3

0

Shrewsbury

20

15

3

Stoke

30

23

4

Walsall

19

10

1

Wellingborough

10

9

1

Wolverhampton

34

17

8

Worcester

8

7

0

North East

489

326

68

Barnsley

15

9

2

Bedlington

9

7

0

Bradford

54

36

8

Darlington

29

20

4

Doncaster

14

5

2

Durham

20

15

4

Gateshead

3

1

1

Grimsby

12

5

4

Huddersfield

1

1

0

Hull

23

16

5

Leeds

30

8

12

Newcastle

16

7

5

North Shields

3

2

0

Scarborough

9

5

2

Sheffield

71

52

3

South Shields

19

11

4

Sunderland

40

29

3

Teesside

67

61

1

Wakefield

47

32

6

York

7

4

2

North West

535

372

87

Barrow

5

4

0

Birkenhead

32

19

7

Blackburn

26

17

6

Blackpool

19

10

2

Bolton

30

20

5

Burnley

14

11

2

Carlisle

9

3

4

Chester

20

14

4

Lancaster

6

6

0

Liverpool

70

45

12

Manchester

113

89

14

Preston

14

9

2

Rochdale

40

25

10

St Helens

42

27

9

Stockport

60

49

4

Wigan

31

21

6

Workington

4

3

0

Scotland

8

2

3

Ayr

2

1

0

Dundee

1

0

0

Edinburgh

2

0

2

Glasgow

1

0

0

Inverness

1

0

1

Kirkcaldy

1

1

0

South East

555

427

52

Ashford

33

24

3

Basildon

25

15

5

Bedford

20

16

1

Brighton

46

36

2

Cambridge

10

4

6

Chatham

47

41

4

Chelmsford

38

28

4

Eastbourne

4

3

0

Hastings

13

10

1

High Wycombe

27

18

5

Ipswich

30

23

2

Kings Lynn

12

10

2

Luton

27

26

0

Margate

15

14

1

Milton Keynes

14

8

3

Norwich

46

37

3

Oxford

23

18

1

Peterborough

19

14

3

Reading

26

23

0

Southend

8

4

3

Stevenage

12

8

1

Watford

60

47

2

South West

394

266

45

Unallocated 3

10

6

2

Aldershot

26

20

2

Barnstaple

3

1

0

Bristol

79

52

9

Exeter

13

4

3

Gloucester

27

15

4

Havant

48

33

6

Newport IOW

13

11

1

Newton Abbot

12

8

0

Plymouth

21

15

2

Poole

30

23

2

Salisbury

3

0

1

Southampton

36

26

5

Swindon

24

19

2

Taunton

21

17

2

Truro

16

9

4

Worle

12

7

0

Wales

247

148

35

Aberystwyth

3

3

0

Caernarfon

3

1

2

Cardiff

115

61

18

Carmarthen

1

0

1

Haverfordwest

4

0

3

Langstone, Newport

45

33

3

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

13

10

1

Port Talbot

15

9

2

Prestatyn

16

13

0

Swansea

9

3

4

Welshpool

1

0

0

Wrexham

21

14

1

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

1

0

0

National

3418

2361

454

Employment and Support Allowance4 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

380

158

28

East London

116

59

4

Enfield

2

0

0

Fox Court

149

47

17

Hatton Cross

19

8

3

Romford

24

12

2

Sutton

70

32

2

Midlands

667

351

88

Birmingham

112

57

19

Boston

21

11

1

Chesterfield

33

14

7

Coventry

48

29

5

Derby

48

26

6

Hereford

9

4

2

Kidderminster

13

8

2

Leicester

69

44

7

Lincoln

17

8

1

Northampton

32

14

4

Nottingham

65

31

12

Nuneaton

7

2

0

Shrewsbury

38

21

7

Stoke

49

29

0

Walsall

25

13

4

Wellingborough

11

6

1

Wolverhampton

56

25

8

Worcester

14

9

2

North East

468

188

62

Barnsley

18

7

5

Bedlington

14

2

3

Bradford

41

17

3

Darlington

23

8

2

Doncaster

17

8

2

Durham

22

8

4

Gateshead

5

0

0

Grimsby

19

7

2

Hull

20

15

0

Leeds

20

7

1

Newcastle

25

9

3

North Shields

19

3

5

Scarborough

12

4

4

Sheffield

40

15

6

South Shields

27

8

1

Sunderland

38

20

3

Teesside

49

25

6

Wakefield

42

18

7

York

17

7

5

North West

323

82

72

Barrow

5

0

1

Birkenhead

9

1

2

Blackburn

13

3

3

Blackpool

13

1

4

Bolton

21

6

4

Burnley

7

0

3

Carlisle

9

1

1

Chester

25

5

6

Lancaster

7

3

0

Liverpool

38

16

7

Manchester

50

15

12

Preston

4

2

1

Rochdale

28

6

5

St Helens

21

1

2

Stockport

40

17

9

Wigan

24

4

9

Workington

9

1

3

Scotland

214

20

70

Aberdeen

13

0

3

Ayr

17

1

6

Campbeltown Centre

1

0

0

Dumfries (Cairndale)

9

0

7

Dundee

12

0

3

Dunfermline

5

0

1

Edinburgh

27

1

15

Galashiels

6

2

1

Glasgow

50

6

18

Greenock

12

3

0

Hamilton

19

3

3

Inverness

14

0

6

Kilmarnock

2

0

1

Kirkcaldy

8

2

2

Lerwick

2

0

0

Stirling

17

2

4

South East

420

209

48

Ashford

20

10

1

Basildon

16

7

2

Bedford

13

7

1

Brighton

39

20

6

Cambridge

11

5

1

Chatham

16

8

3

Chelmsford

37

18

3

Eastbourne

2

2

0

Hastings

9

3

4

High Wycombe

19

8

1

Ipswich

25

14

1

Kings Lynn

15

7

3

Luton

22

13

1

Margate

4

1

0

Milton Keynes

9

5

1

Norwich

36

17

5

Oxford

21

13

3

Peterborough

32

12

3

Reading

34

19

4

Southend

2

2

0

Stevenage

9

6

1

Watford

29

12

4

South West

490

295

15

Unallocated 3

14

8

3

Aldershot

31

24

0

Barnstaple

6

4

0

Bristol

80

42

4

Exeter

12

5

1

Gloucester

35

21

0

Havant

65

43

1

Newport IOW

27

21

2

Newton Abbot

26

15

0

Plymouth

31

19

0

Poole

32

25

1

Salisbury

7

3

0

Southampton

49

26

1

Swindon

17

8

2

Taunton

22

12

0

Truro

21

12

0

Worle

15

7

0

Wales

434

278

13

Aberystwyth

10

5

3

Caernarfon

10

6

1

Cardiff

155

108

3

Carmarthen

10

6

0

Haverfordwest

13

8

0

Langstone, Newport

88

55

1

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

23

15

0

Port Talbot

37

26

0

Prestatyn

24

14

2

Swansea

27

11

0

Welshpool

13

6

3

Wrexham

23

17

0

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

3

0

2

National

3399

1581

398

Universal Credit5 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

2659

1361

215

East London

566

294

57

Enfield

8

2

1

Fox Court

1468

754

94

Hatton Cross

102

40

13

Romford

169

85

34

Sutton

346

186

16

Midlands

2602

1489

406

Birmingham

713

381

142

Boston

51

34

7

Chesterfield

62

34

11

Coventry

202

125

14

Derby

159

87

31

Hereford

21

16

0

Kidderminster

20

15

2

Leicester

265

160

29

Lincoln

123

74

19

Northampton

126

82

16

Nottingham

253

148

50

Nuneaton

11

7

0

Shrewsbury

78

45

7

Stoke

99

55

9

Walsall

116

64

15

Wellingborough

43

29

6

Wolverhampton

218

109

44

Worcester

42

24

4

North East

2007

1012

385

Barnsley

55

26

13

Bedlington

46

20

15

Berwick

5

3

0

Bradford

208

118

30

Darlington

70

26

19

Doncaster

84

31

18

Durham

40

17

7

Gateshead

24

11

10

Grimsby

69

41

11

Huddersfield

3

0

0

Hull

108

62

16

Leeds

173

68

30

Newcastle

229

109

48

North Shields

45

16

9

Scarborough

49

24

15

Sheffield

160

67

40

South Shields

71

40

13

Sunderland

124

79

12

Teesside

227

137

37

Wakefield

170

88

32

York

47

29

10

North West

1512

572

308

Barrow

12

6

1

Birkenhead

34

15

5

Blackburn

33

15

2

Blackpool

54

13

10

Bolton

107

32

24

Burnley

65

29

8

Carlisle

29

14

4

Chester

61

17

6

Lancaster

27

13

3

Liverpool

179

49

34

Manchester

467

226

112

Preston

35

7

8

Rochdale

91

23

17

St Helens

79

34

13

Stockport

141

45

43

Wigan

85

29

17

Workington

13

5

1

Scotland

658

187

219

Aberdeen

33

8

15

Ayr

40

12

13

Dumfries (Cairndale)

13

1

5

Dundee

44

10

13

Dunfermline

14

3

2

Edinburgh

120

31

40

Galashiels

14

6

3

Glasgow

206

64

71

Greenock

25

6

10

Hamilton

59

17

19

Inverness

22

3

9

Kilmarnock

2

0

0

Kirkcaldy

22

9

4

Kirkwall

1

0

1

Lerwick

1

0

1

Lewis

2

0

1

Oban

4

1

2

Stirling

29

13

9

Stranraer

3

2

0

Wick

4

1

1

South East

2002

1053

321

Ashford

117

47

28

Basildon

70

24

19

Bedford

48

30

6

Brighton

173

76

35

Cambridge

68

33

11

Chatham

70

27

21

Chelmsford

107

62

11

Eastbourne

26

15

3

Hastings

43

27

8

High Wycombe

125

70

14

Ipswich

89

54

8

Kings Lynn

36

18

12

Luton

110

65

16

Margate

39

18

8

Milton Keynes

48

27

6

Norwich

145

86

22

Oxford

111

66

13

Peterborough

91

45

14

Reading

141

73

21

Southend

65

37

16

Stevenage

45

27

2

Watford

235

126

27

South West

1744

1121

65

Unallocated 3

43

26

2

Aldershot

120

74

5

Barnstaple

24

15

0

Bristol

342

219

11

Exeter

59

32

0

Gloucester

136

99

7

Havant

187

133

5

Newport IOW

49

35

4

Newton Abbot

61

34

4

Plymouth

84

52

0

Poole

159

96

9

Salisbury

15

6

1

Southampton

162

106

5

Swindon

108

71

5

Taunton

71

42

0

Truro

87

58

3

Worle

37

23

4

Wales

1019

712

62

Aberystwyth

16

8

1

Caernarfon

53

32

6

Cardiff

389

277

18

Carmarthen

20

14

0

Haverfordwest

28

19

1

Langstone, Newport

179

133

9

Llandrindod Wells

3

3

0

Llangefni

27

20

1

Port Talbot

91

68

3

Prestatyn

74

46

9

Swansea

58

43

3

Welshpool

14

8

3

Wrexham

67

41

8

National

14203

7507

1981

From April 2023 the SSCS Tribunal started to list cases using a new Scheduling and Listing solution. This, alongside HMCTS migrating to a new Strategic Data Platform, has resulted in some cases heard and decided using this new listing solution not currently being included in the data above.

1. Personal Independence Payment (New Claim Appeals) which replaces Disability Living Allowance was introduced on 8 April 2013, also includes Personal Independence Clams (Reassessments)

2. Data pulled 23/4/2024

3. Unallocated relates to appeals that have not yet been allocated to a venue.

4. Data includes Employment and Support Allowance and Incapacity Benefit reassessment. Employment and Support Allowance was introduced in October 2008 and Incapacity Benefit reassessment followed in October 2010.

5. Universal Credit was introduced on 29 April 2013 in selected areas of Greater Manchester and Cheshire, and has been gradually rolled out to the rest of the UK from October 2013.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Management information reflects the data held on the case management system, which is subject to change, and can differ from the quality-assured MOJ official statistics, which form the agreed definitive position.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many appeals relating to Employment Support Allowance claims are awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, (c) by Tribunal Office and (d) by hearing venue; what the average length of time between such appeals being (i) lodged and (ii) heard is (A) nationally, (B) by region, (C) by Tribunal Office and (D) by hearing venue; and in how many cases the length of time waited has exceeded this average (1) nationally, (2) by region, (3) by Tribunal Office and (4) by hearing venue as of 22 April 2024.

The tables below set out the number of Personal Independence Payment, Disability Living Allowance, Employment Support Allowance and Universal Credit appeals awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, and (d) by hearing venue as at end of December 2023 (the latest period for which data are available). There are no separate data collated at (c) tribunal office level.

Information about the average length of time between appeals being lodged and heard; and in how many case the length of time waited has exceeded this average is not held centrally.

Personal Independence Payment1 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

6804

3861

980

Bexleyheath

1

1

0

East London

1543

905

234

Enfield

27

11

3

Fox Court

3318

1846

483

Hatton Cross

243

98

72

Romford

512

353

67

Sutton

1160

647

121

Midlands

9330

5052

1369

Birmingham

1984

1007

354

Boston

202

134

25

Chesterfield

457

255

57

Coventry

698

442

71

Derby

701

417

91

Hereford

101

43

20

Kidderminster

144

60

30

Leicester

813

415

108

Lincoln

427

258

46

Northampton

488

328

56

Nottingham

1135

610

168

Nuneaton

99

58

13

Shrewsbury

333

185

46

Stoke

427

228

63

Walsall

316

136

66

Wellingborough

196

114

22

Wolverhampton

637

262

110

Worcester

172

100

23

North East

7061

3468

1316

Barnsley

193

71

38

Bedlington

159

66

44

Berwick

14

6

3

Bradford

691

334

131

Darlington

356

195

49

Doncaster

316

142

51

Durham

333

169

77

Gateshead

78

33

21

Grimsby

186

80

37

Huddersfield

32

10

8

Hull

342

181

65

Leeds

514

165

132

Newcastle

332

122

80

North Shields

134

34

46

Scarborough

158

75

29

Sheffield

737

381

119

South Shields

233

112

53

Sunderland

545

349

53

Teesside

871

581

85

Wakefield

687

322

138

York

150

40

57

North West

7362

4250

1066

Barrow

84

53

10

Birkenhead

355

223

43

Blackburn

311

180

58

Blackpool

355

189

69

Bolton

414

231

69

Burnley

263

151

31

Carlisle

165

86

32

Chester

500

315

65

Lancaster

105

66

1

Liverpool

1023

495

155

Manchester

1319

821

164

Preston

248

123

58

Rochdale

436

216

90

St Helens

512

301

73

Stockport

699

451

68

Wigan

427

267

49

Workington

146

82

31

Scotland

263

68

114

Aberdeen

3

1

1

Ayr

11

1

4

Dumfries (Cairndale)

3

1

1

Dundee

6

0

2

Dunfermline

7

3

3

Edinburgh

70

19

36

Galashiels

6

1

3

Glasgow

89

24

36

Greenock

5

1

4

Hamilton

24

3

6

Inverness

7

4

1

Kilmarnock

2

1

1

Kirkcaldy

22

8

11

Oban

2

1

1

Stirling

4

0

2

Stranraer

1

0

1

Wick

1

0

1

South East

7696

4930

574

Ashford

556

349

38

Basildon

264

144

43

Bedford

200

133

17

Brighton

842

541

40

Cambridge

238

122

30

Chatham

466

355

23

Chelmsford

408

265

33

Eastbourne

98

64

8

Hastings

243

177

10

High Wycombe

321

192

32

Ipswich

411

283

22

Kings Lynn

181

91

13

Luton

363

229

16

Margate

257

162

20

Milton Keynes

212

119

27

Norwich

659

470

43

Oxford

311

216

27

Peterborough

307

165

33

Reading

361

224

21

Southend

95

33

21

Stevenage

163

94

14

Watford

740

502

43

South West

5916

3428

625

Unallocated 3

177

115

11

Aldershot

289

162

38

Barnstaple

80

36

8

Bristol

1167

724

122

Exeter

224

80

49

Gloucester

432

257

38

Havant

657

440

45

Newport IOW

222

153

13

Newton Abbot

246

126

29

Plymouth

384

193

55

Poole

441

249

49

Salisbury

46

10

10

Southampton

606

401

40

Swindon

320

218

23

Taunton

239

134

24

Truro

255

68

59

Worle

131

62

12

Wales

4181

2180

514

Aberystwyth

49

24

6

Caernarfon

101

23

15

Cardiff

1746

949

250

Carmarthen

72

15

19

Haverfordwest

105

39

16

Langstone, Newport

793

459

76

Llandrindod Wells

32

16

8

Llangefni

199

121

18

Port Talbot

305

112

35

Prestatyn

277

170

13

Swansea

194

75

25

Welshpool

52

31

8

Wrexham

256

146

25

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

10

4

0

National

48623

27241

6558

Disability Living Allowance at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

592

426

73

East London

149

114

22

Enfield

2

2

0

Fox Court

264

180

36

Hatton Cross

20

14

3

Romford

54

41

4

Sutton

103

75

8

Midlands

597

394

91

Birmingham

164

84

39

Boston

10

9

0

Chesterfield

26

20

2

Coventry

46

35

4

Derby

40

32

5

Hereford

7

5

0

Kidderminster

11

8

1

Leicester

43

32

8

Lincoln

36

25

1

Northampton

26

19

4

Nottingham

63

41

10

Nuneaton

4

3

0

Shrewsbury

20

15

3

Stoke

30

23

4

Walsall

19

10

1

Wellingborough

10

9

1

Wolverhampton

34

17

8

Worcester

8

7

0

North East

489

326

68

Barnsley

15

9

2

Bedlington

9

7

0

Bradford

54

36

8

Darlington

29

20

4

Doncaster

14

5

2

Durham

20

15

4

Gateshead

3

1

1

Grimsby

12

5

4

Huddersfield

1

1

0

Hull

23

16

5

Leeds

30

8

12

Newcastle

16

7

5

North Shields

3

2

0

Scarborough

9

5

2

Sheffield

71

52

3

South Shields

19

11

4

Sunderland

40

29

3

Teesside

67

61

1

Wakefield

47

32

6

York

7

4

2

North West

535

372

87

Barrow

5

4

0

Birkenhead

32

19

7

Blackburn

26

17

6

Blackpool

19

10

2

Bolton

30

20

5

Burnley

14

11

2

Carlisle

9

3

4

Chester

20

14

4

Lancaster

6

6

0

Liverpool

70

45

12

Manchester

113

89

14

Preston

14

9

2

Rochdale

40

25

10

St Helens

42

27

9

Stockport

60

49

4

Wigan

31

21

6

Workington

4

3

0

Scotland

8

2

3

Ayr

2

1

0

Dundee

1

0

0

Edinburgh

2

0

2

Glasgow

1

0

0

Inverness

1

0

1

Kirkcaldy

1

1

0

South East

555

427

52

Ashford

33

24

3

Basildon

25

15

5

Bedford

20

16

1

Brighton

46

36

2

Cambridge

10

4

6

Chatham

47

41

4

Chelmsford

38

28

4

Eastbourne

4

3

0

Hastings

13

10

1

High Wycombe

27

18

5

Ipswich

30

23

2

Kings Lynn

12

10

2

Luton

27

26

0

Margate

15

14

1

Milton Keynes

14

8

3

Norwich

46

37

3

Oxford

23

18

1

Peterborough

19

14

3

Reading

26

23

0

Southend

8

4

3

Stevenage

12

8

1

Watford

60

47

2

South West

394

266

45

Unallocated 3

10

6

2

Aldershot

26

20

2

Barnstaple

3

1

0

Bristol

79

52

9

Exeter

13

4

3

Gloucester

27

15

4

Havant

48

33

6

Newport IOW

13

11

1

Newton Abbot

12

8

0

Plymouth

21

15

2

Poole

30

23

2

Salisbury

3

0

1

Southampton

36

26

5

Swindon

24

19

2

Taunton

21

17

2

Truro

16

9

4

Worle

12

7

0

Wales

247

148

35

Aberystwyth

3

3

0

Caernarfon

3

1

2

Cardiff

115

61

18

Carmarthen

1

0

1

Haverfordwest

4

0

3

Langstone, Newport

45

33

3

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

13

10

1

Port Talbot

15

9

2

Prestatyn

16

13

0

Swansea

9

3

4

Welshpool

1

0

0

Wrexham

21

14

1

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

1

0

0

National

3418

2361

454

Employment and Support Allowance4 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

380

158

28

East London

116

59

4

Enfield

2

0

0

Fox Court

149

47

17

Hatton Cross

19

8

3

Romford

24

12

2

Sutton

70

32

2

Midlands

667

351

88

Birmingham

112

57

19

Boston

21

11

1

Chesterfield

33

14

7

Coventry

48

29

5

Derby

48

26

6

Hereford

9

4

2

Kidderminster

13

8

2

Leicester

69

44

7

Lincoln

17

8

1

Northampton

32

14

4

Nottingham

65

31

12

Nuneaton

7

2

0

Shrewsbury

38

21

7

Stoke

49

29

0

Walsall

25

13

4

Wellingborough

11

6

1

Wolverhampton

56

25

8

Worcester

14

9

2

North East

468

188

62

Barnsley

18

7

5

Bedlington

14

2

3

Bradford

41

17

3

Darlington

23

8

2

Doncaster

17

8

2

Durham

22

8

4

Gateshead

5

0

0

Grimsby

19

7

2

Hull

20

15

0

Leeds

20

7

1

Newcastle

25

9

3

North Shields

19

3

5

Scarborough

12

4

4

Sheffield

40

15

6

South Shields

27

8

1

Sunderland

38

20

3

Teesside

49

25

6

Wakefield

42

18

7

York

17

7

5

North West

323

82

72

Barrow

5

0

1

Birkenhead

9

1

2

Blackburn

13

3

3

Blackpool

13

1

4

Bolton

21

6

4

Burnley

7

0

3

Carlisle

9

1

1

Chester

25

5

6

Lancaster

7

3

0

Liverpool

38

16

7

Manchester

50

15

12

Preston

4

2

1

Rochdale

28

6

5

St Helens

21

1

2

Stockport

40

17

9

Wigan

24

4

9

Workington

9

1

3

Scotland

214

20

70

Aberdeen

13

0

3

Ayr

17

1

6

Campbeltown Centre

1

0

0

Dumfries (Cairndale)

9

0

7

Dundee

12

0

3

Dunfermline

5

0

1

Edinburgh

27

1

15

Galashiels

6

2

1

Glasgow

50

6

18

Greenock

12

3

0

Hamilton

19

3

3

Inverness

14

0

6

Kilmarnock

2

0

1

Kirkcaldy

8

2

2

Lerwick

2

0

0

Stirling

17

2

4

South East

420

209

48

Ashford

20

10

1

Basildon

16

7

2

Bedford

13

7

1

Brighton

39

20

6

Cambridge

11

5

1

Chatham

16

8

3

Chelmsford

37

18

3

Eastbourne

2

2

0

Hastings

9

3

4

High Wycombe

19

8

1

Ipswich

25

14

1

Kings Lynn

15

7

3

Luton

22

13

1

Margate

4

1

0

Milton Keynes

9

5

1

Norwich

36

17

5

Oxford

21

13

3

Peterborough

32

12

3

Reading

34

19

4

Southend

2

2

0

Stevenage

9

6

1

Watford

29

12

4

South West

490

295

15

Unallocated 3

14

8

3

Aldershot

31

24

0

Barnstaple

6

4

0

Bristol

80

42

4

Exeter

12

5

1

Gloucester

35

21

0

Havant

65

43

1

Newport IOW

27

21

2

Newton Abbot

26

15

0

Plymouth

31

19

0

Poole

32

25

1

Salisbury

7

3

0

Southampton

49

26

1

Swindon

17

8

2

Taunton

22

12

0

Truro

21

12

0

Worle

15

7

0

Wales

434

278

13

Aberystwyth

10

5

3

Caernarfon

10

6

1

Cardiff

155

108

3

Carmarthen

10

6

0

Haverfordwest

13

8

0

Langstone, Newport

88

55

1

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

23

15

0

Port Talbot

37

26

0

Prestatyn

24

14

2

Swansea

27

11

0

Welshpool

13

6

3

Wrexham

23

17

0

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

3

0

2

National

3399

1581

398

Universal Credit5 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

2659

1361

215

East London

566

294

57

Enfield

8

2

1

Fox Court

1468

754

94

Hatton Cross

102

40

13

Romford

169

85

34

Sutton

346

186

16

Midlands

2602

1489

406

Birmingham

713

381

142

Boston

51

34

7

Chesterfield

62

34

11

Coventry

202

125

14

Derby

159

87

31

Hereford

21

16

0

Kidderminster

20

15

2

Leicester

265

160

29

Lincoln

123

74

19

Northampton

126

82

16

Nottingham

253

148

50

Nuneaton

11

7

0

Shrewsbury

78

45

7

Stoke

99

55

9

Walsall

116

64

15

Wellingborough

43

29

6

Wolverhampton

218

109

44

Worcester

42

24

4

North East

2007

1012

385

Barnsley

55

26

13

Bedlington

46

20

15

Berwick

5

3

0

Bradford

208

118

30

Darlington

70

26

19

Doncaster

84

31

18

Durham

40

17

7

Gateshead

24

11

10

Grimsby

69

41

11

Huddersfield

3

0

0

Hull

108

62

16

Leeds

173

68

30

Newcastle

229

109

48

North Shields

45

16

9

Scarborough

49

24

15

Sheffield

160

67

40

South Shields

71

40

13

Sunderland

124

79

12

Teesside

227

137

37

Wakefield

170

88

32

York

47

29

10

North West

1512

572

308

Barrow

12

6

1

Birkenhead

34

15

5

Blackburn

33

15

2

Blackpool

54

13

10

Bolton

107

32

24

Burnley

65

29

8

Carlisle

29

14

4

Chester

61

17

6

Lancaster

27

13

3

Liverpool

179

49

34

Manchester

467

226

112

Preston

35

7

8

Rochdale

91

23

17

St Helens

79

34

13

Stockport

141

45

43

Wigan

85

29

17

Workington

13

5

1

Scotland

658

187

219

Aberdeen

33

8

15

Ayr

40

12

13

Dumfries (Cairndale)

13

1

5

Dundee

44

10

13

Dunfermline

14

3

2

Edinburgh

120

31

40

Galashiels

14

6

3

Glasgow

206

64

71

Greenock

25

6

10

Hamilton

59

17

19

Inverness

22

3

9

Kilmarnock

2

0

0

Kirkcaldy

22

9

4

Kirkwall

1

0

1

Lerwick

1

0

1

Lewis

2

0

1

Oban

4

1

2

Stirling

29

13

9

Stranraer

3

2

0

Wick

4

1

1

South East

2002

1053

321

Ashford

117

47

28

Basildon

70

24

19

Bedford

48

30

6

Brighton

173

76

35

Cambridge

68

33

11

Chatham

70

27

21

Chelmsford

107

62

11

Eastbourne

26

15

3

Hastings

43

27

8

High Wycombe

125

70

14

Ipswich

89

54

8

Kings Lynn

36

18

12

Luton

110

65

16

Margate

39

18

8

Milton Keynes

48

27

6

Norwich

145

86

22

Oxford

111

66

13

Peterborough

91

45

14

Reading

141

73

21

Southend

65

37

16

Stevenage

45

27

2

Watford

235

126

27

South West

1744

1121

65

Unallocated 3

43

26

2

Aldershot

120

74

5

Barnstaple

24

15

0

Bristol

342

219

11

Exeter

59

32

0

Gloucester

136

99

7

Havant

187

133

5

Newport IOW

49

35

4

Newton Abbot

61

34

4

Plymouth

84

52

0

Poole

159

96

9

Salisbury

15

6

1

Southampton

162

106

5

Swindon

108

71

5

Taunton

71

42

0

Truro

87

58

3

Worle

37

23

4

Wales

1019

712

62

Aberystwyth

16

8

1

Caernarfon

53

32

6

Cardiff

389

277

18

Carmarthen

20

14

0

Haverfordwest

28

19

1

Langstone, Newport

179

133

9

Llandrindod Wells

3

3

0

Llangefni

27

20

1

Port Talbot

91

68

3

Prestatyn

74

46

9

Swansea

58

43

3

Welshpool

14

8

3

Wrexham

67

41

8

National

14203

7507

1981

From April 2023 the SSCS Tribunal started to list cases using a new Scheduling and Listing solution. This, alongside HMCTS migrating to a new Strategic Data Platform, has resulted in some cases heard and decided using this new listing solution not currently being included in the data above.

1. Personal Independence Payment (New Claim Appeals) which replaces Disability Living Allowance was introduced on 8 April 2013, also includes Personal Independence Clams (Reassessments)

2. Data pulled 23/4/2024

3. Unallocated relates to appeals that have not yet been allocated to a venue.

4. Data includes Employment and Support Allowance and Incapacity Benefit reassessment. Employment and Support Allowance was introduced in October 2008 and Incapacity Benefit reassessment followed in October 2010.

5. Universal Credit was introduced on 29 April 2013 in selected areas of Greater Manchester and Cheshire, and has been gradually rolled out to the rest of the UK from October 2013.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Management information reflects the data held on the case management system, which is subject to change, and can differ from the quality-assured MOJ official statistics, which form the agreed definitive position.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
22nd Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many appeals relating to Universal Credit claims are awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, (c) by Tribunal Office and (d) by hearing venue; what the average length of time between such appeals being (i) lodged and (ii) heard is (A) nationally, (B) by region, (C) by Tribunal Office and (D) by hearing venue; and in how many cases the length of time waited has exceeded this average (1) nationally, (2) by region, (3) by Tribunal Office and (4) by hearing venue as of 22 April 2024.

The tables below set out the number of Personal Independence Payment, Disability Living Allowance, Employment Support Allowance and Universal Credit appeals awaiting a hearing (a) nationally, (b) by region, and (d) by hearing venue as at end of December 2023 (the latest period for which data are available). There are no separate data collated at (c) tribunal office level.

Information about the average length of time between appeals being lodged and heard; and in how many case the length of time waited has exceeded this average is not held centrally.

Personal Independence Payment1 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

6804

3861

980

Bexleyheath

1

1

0

East London

1543

905

234

Enfield

27

11

3

Fox Court

3318

1846

483

Hatton Cross

243

98

72

Romford

512

353

67

Sutton

1160

647

121

Midlands

9330

5052

1369

Birmingham

1984

1007

354

Boston

202

134

25

Chesterfield

457

255

57

Coventry

698

442

71

Derby

701

417

91

Hereford

101

43

20

Kidderminster

144

60

30

Leicester

813

415

108

Lincoln

427

258

46

Northampton

488

328

56

Nottingham

1135

610

168

Nuneaton

99

58

13

Shrewsbury

333

185

46

Stoke

427

228

63

Walsall

316

136

66

Wellingborough

196

114

22

Wolverhampton

637

262

110

Worcester

172

100

23

North East

7061

3468

1316

Barnsley

193

71

38

Bedlington

159

66

44

Berwick

14

6

3

Bradford

691

334

131

Darlington

356

195

49

Doncaster

316

142

51

Durham

333

169

77

Gateshead

78

33

21

Grimsby

186

80

37

Huddersfield

32

10

8

Hull

342

181

65

Leeds

514

165

132

Newcastle

332

122

80

North Shields

134

34

46

Scarborough

158

75

29

Sheffield

737

381

119

South Shields

233

112

53

Sunderland

545

349

53

Teesside

871

581

85

Wakefield

687

322

138

York

150

40

57

North West

7362

4250

1066

Barrow

84

53

10

Birkenhead

355

223

43

Blackburn

311

180

58

Blackpool

355

189

69

Bolton

414

231

69

Burnley

263

151

31

Carlisle

165

86

32

Chester

500

315

65

Lancaster

105

66

1

Liverpool

1023

495

155

Manchester

1319

821

164

Preston

248

123

58

Rochdale

436

216

90

St Helens

512

301

73

Stockport

699

451

68

Wigan

427

267

49

Workington

146

82

31

Scotland

263

68

114

Aberdeen

3

1

1

Ayr

11

1

4

Dumfries (Cairndale)

3

1

1

Dundee

6

0

2

Dunfermline

7

3

3

Edinburgh

70

19

36

Galashiels

6

1

3

Glasgow

89

24

36

Greenock

5

1

4

Hamilton

24

3

6

Inverness

7

4

1

Kilmarnock

2

1

1

Kirkcaldy

22

8

11

Oban

2

1

1

Stirling

4

0

2

Stranraer

1

0

1

Wick

1

0

1

South East

7696

4930

574

Ashford

556

349

38

Basildon

264

144

43

Bedford

200

133

17

Brighton

842

541

40

Cambridge

238

122

30

Chatham

466

355

23

Chelmsford

408

265

33

Eastbourne

98

64

8

Hastings

243

177

10

High Wycombe

321

192

32

Ipswich

411

283

22

Kings Lynn

181

91

13

Luton

363

229

16

Margate

257

162

20

Milton Keynes

212

119

27

Norwich

659

470

43

Oxford

311

216

27

Peterborough

307

165

33

Reading

361

224

21

Southend

95

33

21

Stevenage

163

94

14

Watford

740

502

43

South West

5916

3428

625

Unallocated 3

177

115

11

Aldershot

289

162

38

Barnstaple

80

36

8

Bristol

1167

724

122

Exeter

224

80

49

Gloucester

432

257

38

Havant

657

440

45

Newport IOW

222

153

13

Newton Abbot

246

126

29

Plymouth

384

193

55

Poole

441

249

49

Salisbury

46

10

10

Southampton

606

401

40

Swindon

320

218

23

Taunton

239

134

24

Truro

255

68

59

Worle

131

62

12

Wales

4181

2180

514

Aberystwyth

49

24

6

Caernarfon

101

23

15

Cardiff

1746

949

250

Carmarthen

72

15

19

Haverfordwest

105

39

16

Langstone, Newport

793

459

76

Llandrindod Wells

32

16

8

Llangefni

199

121

18

Port Talbot

305

112

35

Prestatyn

277

170

13

Swansea

194

75

25

Welshpool

52

31

8

Wrexham

256

146

25

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

10

4

0

National

48623

27241

6558

Disability Living Allowance at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

592

426

73

East London

149

114

22

Enfield

2

2

0

Fox Court

264

180

36

Hatton Cross

20

14

3

Romford

54

41

4

Sutton

103

75

8

Midlands

597

394

91

Birmingham

164

84

39

Boston

10

9

0

Chesterfield

26

20

2

Coventry

46

35

4

Derby

40

32

5

Hereford

7

5

0

Kidderminster

11

8

1

Leicester

43

32

8

Lincoln

36

25

1

Northampton

26

19

4

Nottingham

63

41

10

Nuneaton

4

3

0

Shrewsbury

20

15

3

Stoke

30

23

4

Walsall

19

10

1

Wellingborough

10

9

1

Wolverhampton

34

17

8

Worcester

8

7

0

North East

489

326

68

Barnsley

15

9

2

Bedlington

9

7

0

Bradford

54

36

8

Darlington

29

20

4

Doncaster

14

5

2

Durham

20

15

4

Gateshead

3

1

1

Grimsby

12

5

4

Huddersfield

1

1

0

Hull

23

16

5

Leeds

30

8

12

Newcastle

16

7

5

North Shields

3

2

0

Scarborough

9

5

2

Sheffield

71

52

3

South Shields

19

11

4

Sunderland

40

29

3

Teesside

67

61

1

Wakefield

47

32

6

York

7

4

2

North West

535

372

87

Barrow

5

4

0

Birkenhead

32

19

7

Blackburn

26

17

6

Blackpool

19

10

2

Bolton

30

20

5

Burnley

14

11

2

Carlisle

9

3

4

Chester

20

14

4

Lancaster

6

6

0

Liverpool

70

45

12

Manchester

113

89

14

Preston

14

9

2

Rochdale

40

25

10

St Helens

42

27

9

Stockport

60

49

4

Wigan

31

21

6

Workington

4

3

0

Scotland

8

2

3

Ayr

2

1

0

Dundee

1

0

0

Edinburgh

2

0

2

Glasgow

1

0

0

Inverness

1

0

1

Kirkcaldy

1

1

0

South East

555

427

52

Ashford

33

24

3

Basildon

25

15

5

Bedford

20

16

1

Brighton

46

36

2

Cambridge

10

4

6

Chatham

47

41

4

Chelmsford

38

28

4

Eastbourne

4

3

0

Hastings

13

10

1

High Wycombe

27

18

5

Ipswich

30

23

2

Kings Lynn

12

10

2

Luton

27

26

0

Margate

15

14

1

Milton Keynes

14

8

3

Norwich

46

37

3

Oxford

23

18

1

Peterborough

19

14

3

Reading

26

23

0

Southend

8

4

3

Stevenage

12

8

1

Watford

60

47

2

South West

394

266

45

Unallocated 3

10

6

2

Aldershot

26

20

2

Barnstaple

3

1

0

Bristol

79

52

9

Exeter

13

4

3

Gloucester

27

15

4

Havant

48

33

6

Newport IOW

13

11

1

Newton Abbot

12

8

0

Plymouth

21

15

2

Poole

30

23

2

Salisbury

3

0

1

Southampton

36

26

5

Swindon

24

19

2

Taunton

21

17

2

Truro

16

9

4

Worle

12

7

0

Wales

247

148

35

Aberystwyth

3

3

0

Caernarfon

3

1

2

Cardiff

115

61

18

Carmarthen

1

0

1

Haverfordwest

4

0

3

Langstone, Newport

45

33

3

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

13

10

1

Port Talbot

15

9

2

Prestatyn

16

13

0

Swansea

9

3

4

Welshpool

1

0

0

Wrexham

21

14

1

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

1

0

0

National

3418

2361

454

Employment and Support Allowance4 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

380

158

28

East London

116

59

4

Enfield

2

0

0

Fox Court

149

47

17

Hatton Cross

19

8

3

Romford

24

12

2

Sutton

70

32

2

Midlands

667

351

88

Birmingham

112

57

19

Boston

21

11

1

Chesterfield

33

14

7

Coventry

48

29

5

Derby

48

26

6

Hereford

9

4

2

Kidderminster

13

8

2

Leicester

69

44

7

Lincoln

17

8

1

Northampton

32

14

4

Nottingham

65

31

12

Nuneaton

7

2

0

Shrewsbury

38

21

7

Stoke

49

29

0

Walsall

25

13

4

Wellingborough

11

6

1

Wolverhampton

56

25

8

Worcester

14

9

2

North East

468

188

62

Barnsley

18

7

5

Bedlington

14

2

3

Bradford

41

17

3

Darlington

23

8

2

Doncaster

17

8

2

Durham

22

8

4

Gateshead

5

0

0

Grimsby

19

7

2

Hull

20

15

0

Leeds

20

7

1

Newcastle

25

9

3

North Shields

19

3

5

Scarborough

12

4

4

Sheffield

40

15

6

South Shields

27

8

1

Sunderland

38

20

3

Teesside

49

25

6

Wakefield

42

18

7

York

17

7

5

North West

323

82

72

Barrow

5

0

1

Birkenhead

9

1

2

Blackburn

13

3

3

Blackpool

13

1

4

Bolton

21

6

4

Burnley

7

0

3

Carlisle

9

1

1

Chester

25

5

6

Lancaster

7

3

0

Liverpool

38

16

7

Manchester

50

15

12

Preston

4

2

1

Rochdale

28

6

5

St Helens

21

1

2

Stockport

40

17

9

Wigan

24

4

9

Workington

9

1

3

Scotland

214

20

70

Aberdeen

13

0

3

Ayr

17

1

6

Campbeltown Centre

1

0

0

Dumfries (Cairndale)

9

0

7

Dundee

12

0

3

Dunfermline

5

0

1

Edinburgh

27

1

15

Galashiels

6

2

1

Glasgow

50

6

18

Greenock

12

3

0

Hamilton

19

3

3

Inverness

14

0

6

Kilmarnock

2

0

1

Kirkcaldy

8

2

2

Lerwick

2

0

0

Stirling

17

2

4

South East

420

209

48

Ashford

20

10

1

Basildon

16

7

2

Bedford

13

7

1

Brighton

39

20

6

Cambridge

11

5

1

Chatham

16

8

3

Chelmsford

37

18

3

Eastbourne

2

2

0

Hastings

9

3

4

High Wycombe

19

8

1

Ipswich

25

14

1

Kings Lynn

15

7

3

Luton

22

13

1

Margate

4

1

0

Milton Keynes

9

5

1

Norwich

36

17

5

Oxford

21

13

3

Peterborough

32

12

3

Reading

34

19

4

Southend

2

2

0

Stevenage

9

6

1

Watford

29

12

4

South West

490

295

15

Unallocated 3

14

8

3

Aldershot

31

24

0

Barnstaple

6

4

0

Bristol

80

42

4

Exeter

12

5

1

Gloucester

35

21

0

Havant

65

43

1

Newport IOW

27

21

2

Newton Abbot

26

15

0

Plymouth

31

19

0

Poole

32

25

1

Salisbury

7

3

0

Southampton

49

26

1

Swindon

17

8

2

Taunton

22

12

0

Truro

21

12

0

Worle

15

7

0

Wales

434

278

13

Aberystwyth

10

5

3

Caernarfon

10

6

1

Cardiff

155

108

3

Carmarthen

10

6

0

Haverfordwest

13

8

0

Langstone, Newport

88

55

1

Llandrindod Wells

1

1

0

Llangefni

23

15

0

Port Talbot

37

26

0

Prestatyn

24

14

2

Swansea

27

11

0

Welshpool

13

6

3

Wrexham

23

17

0

SSCS Regional Centre Not Known

3

0

2

National

3399

1581

398

Universal Credit5 at December 232

Region / Venue

Total Open Caseload

Ready To List

Listed For Hearing

London

2659

1361

215

East London

566

294

57

Enfield

8

2

1

Fox Court

1468

754

94

Hatton Cross

102

40

13

Romford

169

85

34

Sutton

346

186

16

Midlands

2602

1489

406

Birmingham

713

381

142

Boston

51

34

7

Chesterfield

62

34

11

Coventry

202

125

14

Derby

159

87

31

Hereford

21

16

0

Kidderminster

20

15

2

Leicester

265

160

29

Lincoln

123

74

19

Northampton

126

82

16

Nottingham

253

148

50

Nuneaton

11

7

0

Shrewsbury

78

45

7

Stoke

99

55

9

Walsall

116

64

15

Wellingborough

43

29

6

Wolverhampton

218

109

44

Worcester

42

24

4

North East

2007

1012

385

Barnsley

55

26

13

Bedlington

46

20

15

Berwick

5

3

0

Bradford

208

118

30

Darlington

70

26

19

Doncaster

84

31

18

Durham

40

17

7

Gateshead

24

11

10

Grimsby

69

41

11

Huddersfield

3

0

0

Hull

108

62

16

Leeds

173

68

30

Newcastle

229

109

48

North Shields

45

16

9

Scarborough

49

24

15

Sheffield

160

67

40

South Shields

71

40

13

Sunderland

124

79

12

Teesside

227

137

37

Wakefield

170

88

32

York

47

29

10

North West

1512

572

308

Barrow

12

6

1

Birkenhead

34

15

5

Blackburn

33

15

2

Blackpool

54

13

10

Bolton

107

32

24

Burnley

65

29

8

Carlisle

29

14

4

Chester

61

17

6

Lancaster

27

13

3

Liverpool

179

49

34

Manchester

467

226

112

Preston

35

7

8

Rochdale

91

23

17

St Helens

79

34

13

Stockport

141

45

43

Wigan

85

29

17

Workington

13

5

1

Scotland

658

187

219

Aberdeen

33

8

15

Ayr

40

12

13

Dumfries (Cairndale)

13

1

5

Dundee

44

10

13

Dunfermline

14

3

2

Edinburgh

120

31

40

Galashiels

14

6

3

Glasgow

206

64

71

Greenock

25

6

10

Hamilton

59

17

19

Inverness

22

3

9

Kilmarnock

2

0

0

Kirkcaldy

22

9

4

Kirkwall

1

0

1

Lerwick

1

0

1

Lewis

2

0

1

Oban

4

1

2

Stirling

29

13

9

Stranraer

3

2

0

Wick

4

1

1

South East

2002

1053

321

Ashford

117

47

28

Basildon

70

24

19

Bedford

48

30

6

Brighton

173

76

35

Cambridge

68

33

11

Chatham

70

27

21

Chelmsford

107

62

11

Eastbourne

26

15

3

Hastings

43

27

8

High Wycombe

125

70

14

Ipswich

89

54

8

Kings Lynn

36

18

12

Luton

110

65

16

Margate

39

18

8

Milton Keynes

48

27

6

Norwich

145

86

22

Oxford

111

66

13

Peterborough

91

45

14

Reading

141

73

21

Southend

65

37

16

Stevenage

45

27

2

Watford

235

126

27

South West

1744

1121

65

Unallocated 3

43

26

2

Aldershot

120

74

5

Barnstaple

24

15

0

Bristol

342

219

11

Exeter

59

32

0

Gloucester

136

99

7

Havant

187

133

5

Newport IOW

49

35

4

Newton Abbot

61

34

4

Plymouth

84

52

0

Poole

159

96

9

Salisbury

15

6

1

Southampton

162

106

5

Swindon

108

71

5

Taunton

71

42

0

Truro

87

58

3

Worle

37

23

4

Wales

1019

712

62

Aberystwyth

16

8

1

Caernarfon

53

32

6

Cardiff

389

277

18

Carmarthen

20

14

0

Haverfordwest

28

19

1

Langstone, Newport

179

133

9

Llandrindod Wells

3

3

0

Llangefni

27

20

1

Port Talbot

91

68

3

Prestatyn

74

46

9

Swansea

58

43

3

Welshpool

14

8

3

Wrexham

67

41

8

National

14203

7507

1981

From April 2023 the SSCS Tribunal started to list cases using a new Scheduling and Listing solution. This, alongside HMCTS migrating to a new Strategic Data Platform, has resulted in some cases heard and decided using this new listing solution not currently being included in the data above.

1. Personal Independence Payment (New Claim Appeals) which replaces Disability Living Allowance was introduced on 8 April 2013, also includes Personal Independence Clams (Reassessments)

2. Data pulled 23/4/2024

3. Unallocated relates to appeals that have not yet been allocated to a venue.

4. Data includes Employment and Support Allowance and Incapacity Benefit reassessment. Employment and Support Allowance was introduced in October 2008 and Incapacity Benefit reassessment followed in October 2010.

5. Universal Credit was introduced on 29 April 2013 in selected areas of Greater Manchester and Cheshire, and has been gradually rolled out to the rest of the UK from October 2013.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Management information reflects the data held on the case management system, which is subject to change, and can differ from the quality-assured MOJ official statistics, which form the agreed definitive position.

Every effort is made to ensure that the figures presented are accurate and complete. However, it is important to note that the data have been extracted from large administrative data systems generated by the courts. As a consequence, care should be taken to ensure data collection processes and their inevitable limitations are taken into account when data are used.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
16th Apr 2024
To ask His Majesty's Government what specific budget is allocated for the implementation of the current Imprisonment for Public Protection action plan.

HM Prison and Probation Service is using existing resources to deliver the requirements of the IPP Action Plan, ensuring that it is used to best effect to support those serving IPP sentences to achieve their sentence plan objectives and reduce their risks. HMPPS does not allocate funding in such a way as it would be possible to disaggregate specific amounts dedicated to sentence planning, offender management and support for IPP offenders.

Unto that end, the Action Plan focuses on ensuring offenders can access the required services or interventions in order to take positive steps towards a future release, a sustainable life in the community and, ultimately, the end of their sentence altogether. Further, when it comes to those serving the IPP sentence in prison, the Action Plan requires that they have an up to date sentence plan and are held in a prison which provides the intervention(s) specified in the sentence plan. It is expected that the latest IPP Annual Report and Action Plan will be published in mid-May.

We have taken significant action through the Victims and Prisoners Bill to curtail IPP licence periods to give offenders the opportunity to move on with their lives. In addition to these changes, the actions this Government is taking are working; the number of prisoners serving the IPP sentence who have never been released now stands at 1,180 as of 31 March 2024, down from more than 6,000 in 2012.

Lord Bellamy
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
17th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps he is taking to manage prison population levels.

We continue to focus on the prison capacity challenge.

To meet rising demand, we are building c.20,000 modern, rehabilitative prison places – the biggest prison build programme since the Victorian era. We have already delivered c.5,900 of these, including through our two new 1,700 places prisons, HMP Five Wells and HMP Fosse Way, and c.590 Rapid Deployment Cells across 11 sites. By the end of 2025, we are on track to have delivered around 10,000 places in total.

On 11 March, I announced the next steps in our plan, to allow us to go further and faster in removing FNOs. This includes expediting prisoner transfers with our priority partners such as Albania and the creation of a new taskforce across the HO and MoJ to change the way we process FNO cases radically.

We have also put in place short-term measures across the prison estate to expand useable capacity, while ensuring our prisons remain safe for staff and offenders.

The Government will continue to monitor the evolving situation with demand for prison places carefully, so that we can make sure we have the right approaches in place to maintain the capacity required for a safe and effective criminal justice system.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
17th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps he is taking to ensure that (a) educational and (b) vocational training opportunities are not reduced in prisons; and whether he plans to use those training opportunities to help reduce prison overcrowding.

Education is key for reducing reoffending and research indicates that prison education reduces reoffending by 9 percentage points. In September 2023, we set out our plans to deliver an improved Prison Education Service that will support more prisoners to improve their literacy and numeracy and increase the number of prison leavers employed on release.

Over the past 12 months we have seen a sustained delivery in the number vocational courses undertaken by prisoners following increases to 95,000. To ensure the right education and vocational training opportunities are available across prisons we have:

  • Introduced new Head of Education Skills and Work roles in every prison to provide tailored education plans to meet the needs of their jail.
  • Enabled the first ever prisoner apprenticeships in catering and construction through ground-breaking partnerships with Greene King, Kier and Clipper, with talks underway to open up apprenticeships in other industries.
  • Recruited Neurodiversity Support Managers in every prison to support offenders with neurodivergent needs in accessing education, skills and work opportunities within the prison.
  • Launched a Future Skills programme to train up over 2,000 offenders over the next two years in vital industries such as scaffolding and electrics, before linking them up with employers in the local community and guaranteeing interviews on release.
  • We are investing £16 million to test new ways of increasing workshop activity to get prisoners work-ready and improve labour supply.
  • £1.8 million in the Literacy Innovation Fund which is delivering pilots in 15 prisons targeting those with low literacy levels.

I am pleased to say that we have seen positive outcomes in employment in support of our work to make best use of prison capacity. The proportion of prison leavers in employment six months after release has more than doubled in the two years to March 2023, from 14% to over 30%and between 2011/12 and 2021/22, the overall proven reoffending rate has decreased from 31.3% to 25.2%.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
18th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what investigation HM Prison and Probation Service has carried out into the causes of the hospitalisation of (a) prison staff and (b) prisoners at HMP Lewes on 28 March 2024.

On 28 March, following a Maundy Thursday service and meal in the prison chapel at HMP Lewes, two people who were present collapsed and were taken to hospital. After others who had attended the service also reported feeling unwell, the 32 prisoners and six staff who had attended were checked by paramedics. In total, six people required hospital treatment. The police are conducting an investigation into the incident. His Majesty’s Prison & Probation Service is continuing to engage with them and to obtain regular updates on the investigation.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
18th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, pursuant to the Answer of 18 April 2024 to Question 21066 on Prisons: Civil Disorder, how may Tornado trained officers each prison should aim to have trained.

Operation Tornado is a national mutual aid plan by which prisons support one another in the event of a serious incident or occurrence requiring a reinforcement of staff. Operation Tornado is employed by HMPPS for three main reasons:

  • In response to a serious incident requiring a reinforcement of staff.
  • In response to other events or crisis requiring additional staff, who may not necessarily need to be Tornado trained.
  • To aid the transfer of prisoners in the event of a serious incident or the threat of one (with the GOLD commander’s agreement).

HMPPS aims to have 2,100 volunteers trained in readiness for Operation Tornado. Since the inception of Operation Tornado in the late 1980s, HMPPS has allocated a commitment to each prison for how many Tornado staff they should have trained. HMPPS monitors the number of staff available for deployment and offer training spaces to ensure resilience to respond to serious incidents.

In the event of a serious incident, all prisons, including those who have a commitment of zero, receive the same level of support from the Operation Response and Resilience Unit and Tornado trained staff from other prisons if required.

The requested information is in the table attached.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, if he will make an assessment of the reasons for which some Just Stop Oil protestors who were under the age of 18 were held on remand in adult prisons.

Custody should always be a last resort for children, including on remand. The Government raised the legal test for remanding a child to custody in the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022. A child must have committed a violent or sexual offence or have been charged with an offence where an adult may receive a custodial sentence of 14 years, and the court must consider it very likely that the child will receive a custodial sentence.

Any person under the age of 18 will not be remanded in an adult prison. Instead, they are remanded into Young Offender Institutions (YOIs), a Secure Training Centre (STC), or Secure Children’s Homes (SCHs). Specific placement decisions for custodial remands are made by the Youth Custody Service (YCS), factoring in the needs of the child.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
15th Apr 2024
To ask His Majesty's Government how many super-injunctions are currently in effect in England and Wales.

There is currently one super-injunction in force which was made in the Kings Bench Division of the High Court.

Lord Bellamy
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many and what proportion of cases referred by the Criminal Cases Review Commission for appeal were successful in each year since 2019.

The number and proportion of successful cases referred by the CCRC and heard by appeal courts each year since 2019/20 is:

Number of successful referrals

Proportion of successful referrals

2019/20

10

58.8%

2020/21

30

88%

2021/22

57

88%

2022/23

17

89%

2023/24

19

79%

2024/25 (year to date)

2

100%

Laura Farris
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Justice) (jointly with Home Office)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what steps his Department is taking to help support victims of historic miscarriages of justice to appeal their convictions.

Where the normal time limit for appeals through the courts has passed and where an individual believes they have been wrongly convicted of a crime in England, Wales or Northern Ireland, including in historic cases, they can apply to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) which is an independent public body funded by the Ministry of Justice. The CCRC can investigate and where it considers that there is a real possibility that the conviction would not be upheld were the reference to be made, can refer cases back to the courts.

There is no time limit on any application and the service is free.

To ensure that the appeals system is working effectively, the Government has asked the Law Commission to conduct an independent and wide-ranging Review of the appeals system. The Review will consider the issues raised by the Westminster Commission (2021) on miscarriages of justice, which includes the tests used by the CCRC and the Court of Appeal, and the government will then consider the review’s findings, and any recommendations for change in the law, very carefully.

Laura Farris
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Ministry of Justice) (jointly with Home Office)
19th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, with reference to the contract agreed by his Department with ZK Analytics Limited on 18 March 2024, procurement reference 23425, if he will publish the deliverables specified in Annex F of that contract.

A redacted copy of Annex F – Deliverables will be uploaded to Contracts Finder within the next 10 days.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
15th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what estimate he has made of the number of rape trials that have been postponed within 24 hours' notice in each year since 2010.

The data held centrally by the Ministry of Justice on ineffective trials does not specifically identify those that have been postponed within 24 hours' notice. This information may be held on court records but to examine individual court records would be of disproportionate costs.

The Government is committed to improving the Criminal Justice System’s response to adult rape.  This includes the significant progress we have made in delivering our Rape Review Action Plan. Within this plan, we set ourselves stretching ambitions to return the volumes of police referrals to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), CPS charges and Crown Court receipts for adult rape to 2016 levels. In practice, this means more than doubling the number of cases reaching court since the Rape Review was commissioned in 2019. We are pleased to say we have already exceeded these ambitions.

We also recognise that lengthy waiting times can be particularly difficult for victims of rape and other serious sexual offences who wish to see justice done and move on with their lives. The Senior Presiding Judge for England and Wales has recently announced that all rape cases outstanding for more than two years will be listed by the end of July 2024, providing certainty to those victims that their cases will be prioritised and heard as soon as possible.

Alongside the SPJ’s efforts, we continue to make sure we do more than ever to improve timeliness at court. This includes delivering over 107,000 additional sitting days in Crown Courts; opening two permanent ‘super courtrooms’ in Manchester and Loughborough; increasing criminal legal aid spending by £141 million per year; investing over £220 million for essential modernisation and repair work of court buildings (up to March 2025); and investing further in judicial recruitment and retention.

We know that support services play a critical role in supporting victims including those engaging with the Criminal Justice System. This is why we are quadrupling funding for victims and witness support services by 2024/25, up from £41 million in 2009/10. The funding will allow us to increase the number of Independent Sexual and Domestic Violence Advisors to around 1,000 by 2025.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
15th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, whether he (a) is taking and (b) plans to take steps to assess the efficacy of restraining orders in preventing repeat incidents of domestic violence (i) in minority ethnic communities and (ii) generally.

Restraining orders play an important role in ensuring that victims are appropriately protected, and feel safer, particularly within the context of repeated and/or escalating behaviour that disproportionately impacts women and girls, such as domestic abuse.

They are one of several existing protective orders that can be used in cases of domestic abuse to protect a victim, such as Non-Molestation Orders, Stalking Protection Orders, and Domestic Violence Protection Orders.

Abusers who breach restraining orders face tough penalties including jail time. Where a restraining order is breached, CPS guidance encourages prosecutors to consider whether a new course of conduct is present and, if so, to ensure that it is prosecuted in addition to the breach in question.

Safeguarding victims of all crimes, and particularly from those such as domestic abuse is a priority for this Government. That is why we are going further to protect victims of domestic abuse by piloting a new Domestic Abuse Protection Order from Spring 2024 which will give courts the power to impose exclusion zones, curfews, and electronic monitoring tags on abusers. The order will be independently evaluated to understand its effectiveness in protecting all victims.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
15th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what the unused court capacity was in each year since 2015.

HMCTS had the following number of sessions recorded as either available or unavailable since 2015:

Period

Available verified sessions

Unavailable verified sessions

FY 15-16

1,552,490

42,692

FY 16-17

1,512,424

36,811

FY 17-18

1,387,270

37,598

FY 18-19

1,347,648

36,507

FY 19-20

1,302,006

38,408

FY 20-21

1,062,856

130,071

FY 21-22

1,277,033

86,511

FY 22-23

1,277,981

42,665

FY 23-24

1,281,838

48,201

A ‘session’ represents the time that court/hearing room space is available, with up to two sessions available each day. Available and unavailable sessions are recorded for all jurisdictions.

HMCTS record a session being unavailable for a number of reasons, including important alternative uses. For example:

  • box work
  • case-related unavailability
  • commercial use (e.g., filming)
  • community engagement
  • where the room is connected to chambers which are in use
  • court closures due to severe weather or security incidents, holidays (not public holiday) or formerly due to COVID
  • external meetings (e.g., Court User Group)
  • use for external organisations (e.g., Coroner)
  • Judges office, meeting space, mentoring and/or reading time
  • maintenance work
  • mediation (parties present)
  • overspill (in support of a hearing taking place elsewhere)
  • room closed due to COVID outbreak
  • staff meetings and/or training
  • video link being used for other matter

HMCTS’ Courtroom Planner performance database was introduced in April 2015 to collect information on the availability of courtrooms. The data was suspended in April 2020 due to COVID disruption and resumed in September 2020. The data between April and August 2020 is therefore incomplete.

The amount of time we use our available estate for hearings is also connected to the funded number of sitting days in any one year, and the availability of key participants such as judiciary and legal professionals.

To maintain session levels, we are investing £220m in the two years to March 2025 for essential maintenance and repair work across the estate to ensure we are keeping as many courtrooms open as possible to hear more cases. This two-year capital maintenance allocation enables us to plan major estate projects in advance and with certainty. Maintenance funding is prioritised to sites that need it most, and this investment is a step forward in improving the quality of the court estate. We have a planned pipeline of future works to improve the resilience and quality of the court estate, and this is kept under regular review.

We have also introduced additional measures to speed up justice for victims and improve the justice system, including:

o Extending 20 Nightingale courtrooms beyond March 2024 to provide additional capacity in the court estate.

o Investing in judicial recruitment since 2017 which has resulted in the annual recruitment of approximately 1000 judges and tribunal members across all jurisdictions. In particular, this has led to an overall increase in the number of judges in the Crown Court.

Please note all data provided is internal and subject to data quality issues inherent in any large-scale manual system.

Mike Freer
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Ministry of Justice)
15th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, what estimate he has made of the average time from sentence to start of community payback in each year since 2015.

Year

Average days from sentence to start of Community Payback

Number of offenders who did not complete their first session of Community Payback

Total caseload

2021

87

8,830

44,108

2022

63

7,822

47,421

2023

37

6,604

48,058

The dataset includes all offenders starting an order with a community payback requirement between 1 January 2021 and 31 December 2023. The start of the community payback requirement has been defined as either the first attended session of group work, or an individual placement, or the completion of Employment, Training and Education work.

There are a variety of reason why a person hasn't completed their first community payback session. These include receiving a custodial sentence or remanded into custody, recall to prison, a warrant for their arrest, deportation, suitability of sentence and non -compliance. For issues of suitability or non-compliance requirements are returned to court for appropriate action to be taken.

People whose first community payback session took place over a year from their order start date have been excluded from the average days calculation as additional court work would need to be completed to ensure that the first session was worked within a lawful period.

People who have not completed a first work session have also been excluded from the average day calculation, along with those where a first work session has been recorded after the community payback requirement was terminated.

The 2023 figure is subject to change as offenders sentenced in late 2023 will still have time to complete their first community payback session.

Centrally collected data are only available from 2021.

Between 2021 and 2023, a total of 23,256 offenders did not complete their first session of community payback.

This figure is subject to change as offenders sentenced in late 2023 will still have time to complete their first community payback session.

Data as at 15 April 2024. Data are sourced from nDelius and while these data have been assured as much as practical, as with any large administrative dataset, the data should not be assumed to be accurate to the last value presented.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)
15th Apr 2024
To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many people have not completed their first session of community payback.

Year

Average days from sentence to start of Community Payback

Number of offenders who did not complete their first session of Community Payback

Total caseload

2021

87

8,830

44,108

2022

63

7,822

47,421

2023

37

6,604

48,058

The dataset includes all offenders starting an order with a community payback requirement between 1 January 2021 and 31 December 2023. The start of the community payback requirement has been defined as either the first attended session of group work, or an individual placement, or the completion of Employment, Training and Education work.

There are a variety of reason why a person hasn't completed their first community payback session. These include receiving a custodial sentence or remanded into custody, recall to prison, a warrant for their arrest, deportation, suitability of sentence and non -compliance. For issues of suitability or non-compliance requirements are returned to court for appropriate action to be taken.

People whose first community payback session took place over a year from their order start date have been excluded from the average days calculation as additional court work would need to be completed to ensure that the first session was worked within a lawful period.

People who have not completed a first work session have also been excluded from the average day calculation, along with those where a first work session has been recorded after the community payback requirement was terminated.

The 2023 figure is subject to change as offenders sentenced in late 2023 will still have time to complete their first community payback session.

Centrally collected data are only available from 2021.

Between 2021 and 2023, a total of 23,256 offenders did not complete their first session of community payback.

This figure is subject to change as offenders sentenced in late 2023 will still have time to complete their first community payback session.

Data as at 15 April 2024. Data are sourced from nDelius and while these data have been assured as much as practical, as with any large administrative dataset, the data should not be assumed to be accurate to the last value presented.

Edward Argar
Minister of State (Ministry of Justice)