Contents
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Commencement
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Bills
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Parliamentary Procedure
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Parliamentary Committees
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Ministerial Statement
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Question Time
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Bills
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Resolutions
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Bills
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C.S. Hare Centre
The Hon. G.E. GAGO (15:16): My question is to the Minister for Correctional Services. Can the minister update the chamber on what new facilities have been opened to enable the Department for Correctional Services to better manage at-risk prisoners?
The Hon. P. MALINAUSKAS (Minister for Police, Minister for Correctional Services, Minister for Emergency Services, Minister for Road Safety) (15:16): I thank the honourable member for her question, and I am very grateful for her interest in correctional services but more specifically the department's commitment to rehabilitate those people who are in the state's custody.
On 2 February, only a few weeks ago, I was delighted to have the privilege to officially open the C.S. Hare Centre and the health centre, which is a high-dependency unit at Yatala named Marnirni Trruku. The C.S. Hare Centre was named after a gentleman by the name of Charles Simeon Hare who was a politician. He was born in 1808. He represented Yatala in the House of Assembly and was first elected in 1857. Mr Hare had to wait over 100 years to have an institution named after him, but I am sure he would be very grateful nevertheless.
The naming of the centre, though, is entirely appropriate as Mr Hare was a great believer in prisoners being employed and moved in council that £5,000 be set aside to enable a prison to be constructed next to a quarry. C.S. Hare in turn later became a superintendent of Yatala prison, a post he held for almost two years. C.S. Hare's story, and his belief that work served as a pathway back to the community, tails nicely into the name given to the health centre, which is Marnirni Trruku, as I mentioned. In the language of the traditional owners, Marnirni Trruku means 'becoming better centre'.
The new facility will provide prisoners who are unwell with specialised care to the same standards as those in the community at large. Prisoners with a variety of needs and health issues from across the state will be able to become better whilst retaining their dignity and self-worth, critical elements within the rehabilitation journey.
The high-dependency unit was completed in January this year and comprises a 26-bed complex-needs unit. This includes a six-bed acute area for the assessment, treatment and observation of prisoners who are considered to be of high risk. It also includes a 12-bed therapeutic area for assessment, intervention, support, therapeutic programs and transition planning for prisoners with complex needs. An eight-bed aged-care/infirm facility is also included for assessment, specialty care and rehabilitation of older and infirm prisoners.
The health centre, also completed in January this year, comprises 12 beds for the monitoring of unwell prisoners. It has also generated approximately 20 new full-time positions within correctional operations. These facilities provide a much needed improvement to South Australia's health care for prisoners and are a big step forward for the welfare of critical-need prisoners within the state.
I, like all Labor governments, am a firm believer in universal health care and that health is an equaliser. I am pleased that those in prison will have the same rights to basic health care as everybody else. I would like to thank all the staff involved in the planning, development and construction of the health centre and high-dependency unit. It was an honour to be able to officially open the centre and to see those who played an integral role in its facilitation and who are so proud of a facility that is so critical in ensuring that prisoners become better and that we better facilitate their rehabilitation as they enter back into the community.
This government and I are incredibly proud of our 'tough on crime' record, but it is also true that this government has a responsibility, once people enter into our correctional facilities, to do everything that we can to rehabilitate them in a way that when they re-enter the community they make a positive contribution rather than a negative one. This facility will go a long way in achieving that objective.