
Glasgow prison officers get prestigious royal award
Officers Kevin Carberry of HMP Low Moss and Charlie Ross from HMP Barlinnie were commended by Princess Anne during this year's Butler Trust Awards.
The event recognises the extraordinary work of prison, probation and youth justice workers.
Kevin Carberry was honoured for his inspirational work in supporting inmates in their recovery journeys.
(Image: Colin Mearns) (Image: Colin Mearns) (Image: Colin Mearns)
READ NEXT: 'They treat us like human beings': Prisoners praise recovery cafe
Having worked at the Scottish Prison Service (SPS) for 11 years, he recently became a recovery officer and the driving force behind the Bishopbriggs facility's Small Beans Cafe, a therapeutic space dedicated to supporting the men.
Employees work with partners such as Cocaine Anonymous, We Are With You, Narcotics and Alcoholics Anonymous, the Scottish Recovery Consortium and many others to help more than 100 prisoners who attend sessions every week.
One participant said: 'I was in a really bad place before the start-up of the Recovery Cafe.
"I would self-harm regularly, had a really strained relationship with my mum and thought life wasn't worth living.
"Attending the Recovery Cafe has been a lifeline for me. I have stopped cutting myself and thanks to Kevin's intervention, I now have a great relationship with my mum.
"Kevin has a heart of gold, really listens to what you have to say and goes out of his way to help you. I can't speak highly enough of him; he's changed my life.
"I have been in and out of prison for 17 years and I have never met anyone like Kevin. He deserves recognition for what he is doing.'
(Image: Colin Mearns) (Image: Colin Mearns, Newsquest)
READ NEXT: HMP Barlinnie launches world-first fathering programme
Charlie Ross, who works at Barlinnie, was commended for leading the delivery of Healthy Dads, Healthy Kids, a parenting programme designed to improve relationships and healthy behaviours in fathers and their children.
The East End jail was the first to deliver this program internationally, after the former physical education instructor adapted it to a custody setting.
Since its launch in December 2023, the successful initiative has been holding weekly sessions focusing on topics such as the importance of being a dad, raising healthy kids and positive parenting.
Children are also joined by their parents for activity sessions and enjoy a meal together.
Charlie Ross with Princess Anne (Image: Supplied) Healthy Dads, Healthy Kids prorgam (Image: Scottish Prison Service) (Image: Scottish Prison Service) (Image: Scottish Prison Service) One prisoner said: "Charlie was amazing with my children on the course, going out of his way to make them feel secure, wanted and showed them loads of skills in the gym.
"My kids would ask for him the second they came in and especially my daughter loved him. He made me feel human and broke the divide between prisoner and officer.'
The recipient, who has been with SPS for 36 years, said: 'It was a real honour to meet Princess Anne and a bigger surprise was being in the same room as the King, who doesn't normally attend this award, but had made a guest appearance.
"The whole event was very special for me and my wife, who was there as a guest with me. I have met some really good people during my experience, whom I will definitely continue to network with."
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The Guardian
5 days ago
- The Guardian
Friday briefing: The inequality in disability support: what my son gets, and what others can't afford
Good morning. Last weekend, I wrote for the Guardian's Saturday magazine about my two-year-old son, Max, who has cerebral palsy. The piece tried to explain some of the ways Max has changed how I look at the world. But it only really had one line about anyone other than us: 'I feel queasy when I think about all the things we can afford to do that so many parents like us simply cannot.' In fact, that feeling has nagged at me over the last two years, as my wife, Ruth, and I do everything we possibly can for Max – helped to an incalculable degree by our socioeconomic advantages. Today's newsletter, with Katie Ghose, chief executive of the charity KIDS and vice-chair of the Disabled Children's Partnership, a coalition of more than 120 organisations working in the same area, is about what Max gets, and what another child just like him might not. If you're a parent of a disabled child struggling to get the services they need, I'd love to hear from you about your experience – just hit reply to this email. Here are the headlines. Trade | The UK is on the brink of signing a £1.6bn trade agreement with Gulf states, amid warnings from rights groups that the deal makes no concrete provisions on human rights, modern slavery or the environment. The UK has said it hopes the deal will eventually add an extra £8.6bn a year to trade by 2035. Israel-Gaza war | Israel has agreed to a US ceasefire proposal for Gaza, the White House has said, and Hamas said it was reviewing the plan although its terms did not meet the group's demands. A draft seen by Reuters proposed a 60-day ceasefire and the release of 28 Israeli hostages – alive and dead – in the first week. UK news | A man has been charged with multiple offences after a car ploughed into a crowd at the end of Liverpool football club's Premier League victory parade. Paul Doyle, 53, was charged with offences including causing grievous bodily harm with intent and was remanded in custody. UK politics | Keir Starmer has described Nigel Farage and Reform as the main challengers to his Labour government, saying the Conservatives are 'sliding into the abyss'. At an event in St Helens, Starmer accused Reform of 'completely unfunded spending' commitments that he said were 'Liz Truss 2.0'. Trump tariffs | The Trump administration is racing to halt a major blow to the president's sweeping tariffs after a US court ruled they 'exceed any authority granted to the president'. On Thursday, an appeals court agreed to a temporary pause in the decision pending an appeal hearing. Ruth and I have good jobs, and own our own home; we have also had help from our families with the unexpected costs of the last two years. But even for a family like us, the financial burden of Max's disability has been shockingly heavy. For those without our advantages, the so-called 'disability price tag' is completely life-changing: the charity Scope estimated in 2024 that disabled households need an additional £1,010 a month to have the same standard of living as their typical peers, and spend an average of 67% of household income after housing on costs relating to disability. That isn't for the 'nice-to-have' (but actually crucial) stuff like extra physio or additional equipment that we're able to pay for, but the absolute basics. Here's how that breaks down for Max – and for other kids who aren't so lucky. NHS community services | Postcode lottery in provision We live in Hackney in London, where NHS community services are relatively well resourced. Max had access to physiotherapy, speech and language therapy, and occupational therapy within weeks of coming home from hospital, and while there have occasionally been issues, the local provider has been consistent, capable, and responsive. That is crucial when the first two years are the greatest window of opportunity to maximise function for later in life – which is why we and a lot of other families in comparable circumstances pay for private physio as well. But I heard from one family with a child in a similar situation who were told that their waiting time for physio would be more than a year, and who were left in dire financial straits by paying for private provision instead. Last month, Maddison Reading, whose daughter Keeley does not speak, is autistic and has ADHD, told the Times of their 18-month wait for a speech and language therapist, and two-and-a-half year wait to see an occupational therapist. And these are not exceptional cases. 'It is a true postcode lottery across all sorts of services,' Katie Ghose said. 'It's horrendous. You might have a two-year-old waiting half their life before they get their foot in the door for the help they need.' Data on the disparity in different areas is patchy – but the Disabled Children's Partnership has dug up some striking examples. In Devon, the local integrated care board (ICB) reports 1,721 children waiting between one and two years for speech and language services; in Cornwall, not a single child waited that long. In Birmingham and Solihull, 8,213 children with special educational needs or a disability waited between one and two years to see a community paediatrician, often the gatekeeper for other services; in Wolverhampton, there were none. A freedom of information request by Autistica found that waits for autism diagnosis varied widely between different ICBs, from 129 days in Dorset to more than five years for children who needed a multi-disciplinary assessment in Kent. And in 2021, a report by the Education Policy Institute found that children living in the most disadvantaged parts of the country were less likely to be formally recognised as having special educational needs and disabilities – suggesting a 'rationing of support' in areas of high need. Equipment | Why it's often expensive to be able to save money Max is now getting big enough that he needs a supportive stroller, a kind of interim solution for toddlers who need postural support before they're big enough for a wheelchair proper. Max trialled the one offered by the NHS, but it was so heavy and cumbersome as to be deeply impractical. Instead, the NHS offered us a £2,500 voucher to use as we liked – which is amazing, and means that we will be able to get Max a model that weighs half as much for just over £1,000. Even this is a pretty painful additional cost, obviously – and there are accessories to pay for, too. But it's also utterly out of reach for many other children. There are all kinds of other examples of the multiplying benefits of having resources. Max has just been approved for NHS funding to cover an Eyegaze device that he's learning to use to communicate, sparing us from trying to find £10,000 – but he might not have been approved if we hadn't been able to afford the hefty cost of a three-month loan to develop his skills, and a wonderful private speech and language therapist because the local NHS services couldn't provide someone who knew the technology. 'This kind of practical equipment is a lifeline for families,' Ghose said. 'But there are huge differences in families' abilities to get their hands on it. To begin with, there's how you know where to go to get it. There's the lottery of whether your health visitor puts you in touch with the right services. And there are brilliant charities that can help with funding – but for a lot of people, the time to do the research just isn't available.' Respite and support | Inadequate provision puts pressure on relationships Ruth and I both have decently paid jobs with employers who are flexible about accommodating the extra parenting pressures that come with a disability. That fact, plus a crucial assist from the bank of mum and dad, means that we were able to hire a brilliant one-to-one nanny/carer for Max, who puts him through his physiotherapy paces every day while we're busy with our Very Important Typing. Even in our leafy neighbourhood, the provision of decent nursery care for children with disabilities is pretty dismal, and if that was our only option, we probably wouldn't be able to work full-time. For many other parents, there's no choice at all: 40% of SEND parents leave their jobs, and one in three reduce their hours, blaming a lack of local authority help and school support, or inflexible employers. Of course, if you give up work to look after a disabled child, that is likely to come at a real cost to your own wellbeing – which means you would benefit hugely from the short-break respite care which is supposed to be available. That, too, is very variable: freedom of information requests by the Disabled Children's Partnership to local authorities found that whereas almost all short breaks could accommodate children whose SEND needs were related to sensory issues or communication, that fell to 67% when the child was in a wheelchair, 53% if they needed a hoist to get into bed or the bath, and 16% if they needed an oxygen supply. 'Every day we hear about people giving up their careers and suffering severe financial strain as a result,' Ghose said. 'Families suffer mental health strain because they haven't been supported to support their disabled child.' That leads to huge pressure on relationships: a 2023 report by the Disabled Children's Partnership found that 38% of parents of a disabled child had suffered relationship breakdown in the previous year. Intangible advantages | The impact of 'cultural capital' Quite soon after Max's injury, Ruth and I started to research the leading neurologists in the NHS specialising in cerebral palsy in children. We asked around a bit and identified two highly credentialed experts working in London hospitals; it wasn't much more difficult to work out their email addresses, which weren't publicly listed. We sent them carefully worded messages, and followed up politely but persistently. Before long, we had appointments with both of them, even though they weren't part of Max's original care team. All of this cost nothing financially. But it required what we might think of as cultural and social capital in spades: the knowledge of how to navigate systems and institutions that might seem reflexive to a middle class family but is unattainable for lots of other people. It also took time – which we have more of than many others, partly because of the support described above. The same pattern is replicated in lots of other areas: persuasively filling out the tortuous disability living allowance form, prodding our local services to get the help Max is entitled to, persuading the council to do something about the dismal provision for disabled kids at our local playground, and a million other advantages I probably didn't even notice. 'It's present in so many different things,' Ghose said. 'Let's say you have a single mother who is very sleep deprived, and may have poor mental health: she can see her child is developing differently from her friend's child, but she just doesn't have the time or the bandwidth to do the research you need to navigate the system. When resources are so tight, it's the children whose mums and dads can't do the chasing who will be put to the bottom of the pile.' Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion There isn't very good data available on how disabled children's life chances vary according to their parents' backgrounds – but all of the above suggests that the impact will be vast. 'If disabled children have their needs met at the earliest opportunity and there are people thinking with ambition about their future, that makes the world of difference,' Ghose said. 'But for children left on waiting lists for years, or whose parents' have a bureaucratic mountain to climb, things can go very badly wrong.' Disposable barbecues are a simple solution for when the sun's out and you're desperate to grill. But with children injured, wildlife slaughtered, and forests ravaged, Sam Wollaston asks whether its time to ban them. Aamna Raynor Winn's brilliant memoir of her epic walk along the 630-mile South West Coast Path with her husband, Winn, The Salt Path, is now being made into a film. She and Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs, the stars, tell Ryan Gilbey about the delicate process of adapting a story about two people 'carrying their trauma on their back'. Archie The Lords watchdog has launched an investigation into the Earl of Shrewsbury's 'erroneous' travel claims. He is the fifth peer to face an inquiry after the Guardian's jaw-dropping investigation. Aamna As you will have heard, death comes to us all – but we aren't generally that interested in thinking about it. Katie Camero has a fascinating, and quietly moving, piece for Well Actually about what really happens at the end, and why understanding it might help us make our peace with the inevitable. Archie I know her as the wonderfully wicked Morticia Addams, but Oscar winner Anjelica Huston has played a number of brilliant roles over the years. It's hard to disagree with Anne Billson's top 10 ranking. Aamna Cricket | Jacob Bethell starred with a quickfire 82 from 53 balls as England made 400 and bowled West Indies out for 162 in the first one-day international. The result marked a winning start for Harry Brook's reign as captain. French Open | Jack Draper was made to fight but claimed the last five games in a row to complete a 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 7-5 victory over Gaël Monfils. Coco Gauff beat Tereza Valentova 6-2, 6-4 to also reach the third round. Novak Djokovic beat Corentin Moutet 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 to advance. British No 1 Katie Boulter was comprehensively beaten 6-1, 6-3 by Madison Keys, while Cameron Norrie set up an all-British third-round tie against Jacob Fearnley. Football | Chelsea are set to sign Liam Delap after activating the Ipswich striker's £30m release clause. The club are plotting further key additions as they seek to help Enzo Maresca's young side build on qualifying for the Champions League and their triumph in the Conference League. The Guardian leads with 'Protests as ministers prepare to sign 'values-free' Gulf states deal'. Trade matters in the Financial Times as well: 'Trump vows to fight on in trade war after court rules tariff blitz is illegal'. 'The end of the world is Nige!' – Metro after Keir Starmer says the real threat isn't the Tories any more. 'Hermer: Calls to quit ECHR like rise of Nazism' is the top story in the Telegraph, while the i paper has 'PIP disability claimants in key Labour areas 'at greatest risk of welfare cuts''. 'Kemi blasts 'race to the bottom' on welfare handouts' – that's the Daily Mail wherein the Conservative leader doesn't want child benefits expanded. 'NHS rolls out world-first cancer test' reports the Express. 'Seven charges' says the Mirror as the Liverpool parade accused is due in court. Our critics' roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now TVDept. Q | ★★★★☆ After his arrogance results in the death of a young uniformed officer and leaves his partner paralysed, a detective – played by Matthew Goode, the 'blackly shining centrepiece' – is placed on long-term leave. On his return, he's assigned to lead a cold-case department buried in a dank basement in this 'fantastically well, and rigorously, done' adaptation of Danish crime novelist Jussi Adler-Olsen's bestselling series. With a sharp script and standout performances across the board, this harrowing treat is well worth tuning into. Lucy Mangan BookAftertaste by Daria Lavelle An amalgamation of hypermodern satire, slushy romance, and savvy cultural allusion, Aftertaste follows Kostya, a New York dishwasher with a bizarre gift: he can taste other people's food memories. As he rises through New York City's haute restaurantine scene, a ghostly encounter leads him to Maura, a goth psychic who diagnoses his affliction as clairgustance, which allows him to taste the favourite foods of the departed. Imaginative, poignant, and laced with Anthony Bourdain-style bullishness, this genre-blending debut is as smart as it is strange. Suzi Feay Music Miley Cyrus: Something Beautiful | ★★★☆☆The 32-year-old pop star has described her ninth studio album as 'an attempt to medicate somewhat of a sick culture through music', one filled with 'healing sound properties' designed to 'impact frequencies in your body that make you vibrate at a different level'. While the eclectic and disjointed album does not meet those lofty goals – it's all about as psychedelic as a baked potato and there's no concept holding it all together – Something Beautiful is still all very well-written and well-made, a varied succession of good vehicles for Cyrus's powerfully raspy voice. Alexis Petridis A bit of good news to remind you that the world's not all bad The first new reservoirs in England in over 30 years are set to be built. Environment minister Steve Reed has designated two new reservoir projects in East Anglia and Lincolnshire as 'nationally significant' and ordered their construction to proceed. Anglian Water plans to build the Lincolnshire reservoir, which would supply 500,000 homes, by 2040. In partnership with Cambridge Water, it also proposes the Fens reservoir, with a capacity to deliver water to 250,000 homes and with a target date of 2036. The projects will secure water resources in some of England's most water-stressed areas and would unlock stalled housing developments that have been delayed due to insufficient water supply. And finally, the Guardian's puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until Monday. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply


Glasgow Times
27-05-2025
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow City Council criticised over working hours lost to stress
Data obtained through a Freedom of Information request has revealed that in 2024 alone, the local authority had to cope with 1612 instances of absence – the highest figure since 2017. The document also revealed that already in 2025, at least 636 reports of stress-related sickness have been lodged as departments face an ever-increasing workload across education, children's services, social care and health. The figures show that the cumulative time annually lost due to stress has been steadily rising, going up from 963 instances of absence in 2017 to 1478 in 2023. The total number between 2017 and now is a staggering 10,192. Drumchapel and Anniesland councillor Paul Carey BEM believes the data is the result of excessive demands being placed on already-stretched frontline staff. He says people are being asked to cope with a growing burden of more and more work and that these new figures must act as a 'wake-up call' to council chiefs. Cllr Paul Carey (Image: Colin Mearns) He told the Glasgow Times: 'It is not surprising to me that stress-induced absence among staff has continued to rise year upon year. Council bosses must pay close attention to this because we have already experienced a worrying shortfall of teachers, cleaning workers, classroom assistants and home-helps. If more people are off sick, this becomes a vicious circle because those left to pick up the slack then also end up struggling. 'The figures clearly show that frontline workers are being stretched to their absolute limit and feel so stressed out they are forced to take time away from their jobs to recover.' He added: 'I am constantly hearing from employees who feel under strain because of the pressure around their roles. Years of cuts to budgets has piled on the pressure and it's clear from the data here that much of the council's workforce feels exhausted.' However, council bosses say they are committed to supporting staff whose health and wellbeing is being impacted in any way by stress. A spokesperson added: 'Our priority is providing a supportive work environment for all employees. 'Our absence policy focuses on early intervention and supporting staff with their health and wellbeing. The council also has a counselling and information service available to support employees, and line managers are instructed to ensure staff are aware of it and know how to access the help it can provide. 'The council is a large organisation - the largest local authority in the country - with over 25,000 employees and this is reflected in these figures.' We previously told how the cash-strapped local authority was under-fire after paying out more than half a million pounds to staff injured in workplace accidents. READ NEXT: Glasgow City Council paid £600k to employees hurt at work The council has been forced to fork out an eye-watering £629,291 over the last three years to workers injured in slips, trips, falls and manual handling of defective equipment while at work. The highest pay out to staff was £447,487 in the financial year 2022/23, while £181,804 was handed to claimants during 2023/24. Physical injury was the most common reason for action being taken, with a total of 161 claims submitted. This number was followed by physical and psychological injuries, with 45 employees successfully lodging actions.


Glasgow Times
19-05-2025
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow residents to pay to clean up 'increase in needles'
In the letter, which was shared with the Glasgow Times, they state that 'following a review', they will now be charging for the 'clean-up of close areas and bin stores of drug paraphernalia'. Email correspondence was also shared with us, where a factoring officer answered a direct question from the resident over whether there had been an increase in needles since The Thistle drug consumption room opened in January. They replied: "Overall, for Calton and Bridgeton, I would certainly say yes —there are a few locations that Thenue deals with where there has been a significant increase." Thenue Housing Association are based on London Road next to Tobago Street, where we reported last week that union bosses threatened to pull cleansing workers from the area over safety fears for staff tasked with cleaning up a drug den there. Chris Mitchell, GMB convener, said an urgent risk assessment needs to be carried out in the area by the local authority, and action needs to be taken to secure the site as 'it's only a matter of time before they discover a dead body'. READ MORE: GMB Union threatens to pull staff over Glasgow drug den safety fears The concerned resident, who shared the letter with the Glasgow Times but wished to remain anonymous, said: 'Thenue sent out a letter saying they're going to start adding charges to our bill for picking up needles. "I enquired a bit more and was told the number of needles had gone up a lot since January, which is when the centre opened. Thenue Housing Association's offices at London Road's junction with Tobago Street (Image: Colin Mearns) "From what I can see, the number of addicts has definitely increased as Hunter Street adds to its services. "There are a lot more addicts sitting outside Morrisons at the cash machine, but as long as they keep being polite, the staff and police are powerless to move them on. "I'm worried about the new Gaelic primary school, which is set to open in the midst of it all. "What if one of these new school children steps on a needle? Or is confronted by drug dealers hanging around outside school?" A discarded syringe on waste ground on Tobago Street, Calton (Image: Colin Mearns) When approached for comment about the letter, a spokesperson for Thenue Housing said: 'We have recently written to all owners – not just those in Calton - whose properties we factor advising them of an increase in charges. 'This letter referred to such things as the clean-up of close areas and bin stores of drug paraphernalia, the cleaning-up of graffiti, bin replacements an additional rubbish uplift. The factors went on to deny the increase since January to us, despite confirming it with the resident, they said: "This is based on long-term behaviours and not from any recent events. Drug paraphernalia in wooden areas off Tobago Street (Image: Newsquest/Colin Mearns) 'With regard to claims of increased drug paraphernalia and needles and reckless discarding of such items, we do not specifically monitor this in the wider community, though we strongly condemn this behaviour and the risks it presents. 'The wellbeing and safety of our tenants, factored owners and our housing staff is incredibly important to Thenue, and we will always strive to ensure our communities are safe and well maintained.' READ NEXT: Glasgow locals say area 'dumping ground' due to drug consumption room READ NEXT: 'There's no hope' says Glasgow addict over Thistle drug room We previously told how furious residents in Calton said the area has become a 'dumping ground' after the opening nearby of Glasgow's first drug consumption room. Dozens gathered at a community meeting last week to call on First Minister John Swinney to take action, visit and 'admit there's a problem'. Their plea comes after The Thistle Centre opened on Hunter Street in January. Glasgow residents to pay to clean up 'increase in needles' (Image: Colin Mearns) The controversial facility allows users to bring and take illegal substances, with officials hoping that providing a safe space, clean equipment, and medical supervision would lead to fewer drug-related deaths in the city. Colin McGowan from charity Blameless brought a box along to the event at Saint Luke's, which contained 50 used needles he claimed he collected 'in one minute' on Tobago Street, just around the corner from Thenue's offices. The anonymous resident added: "The people in Calton may not all be from privileged backgrounds, but they are decent, kind, intelligent, and hardworking. "It is a very special community because so many of the locals were both born here and raised families here. Some of the families go back generations. "They're a lot more streetwise than the policy makers running the project, that's for sure. "They're not daft and they don't like being talked down to.'