logo
#

Latest news with #PathwayTrust

Bike repair programme helps prisoners navigate cycles of life
Bike repair programme helps prisoners navigate cycles of life

Otago Daily Times

time10 hours ago

  • Automotive
  • Otago Daily Times

Bike repair programme helps prisoners navigate cycles of life

By Gwenaëlle Chollet Youth offenders are learning lifelong skills while providing transport for released prisoners and their families. The bike repair programme at Paparua Christchurch Men's Prison youth unit has been running for more than 10 years. Volunteer bike mechanic 'Bike Mike' Nixon has been involved since the early days, when a church initiative partnered with Pathway Trust to repair and supply bikes for recently released prisoners. When keeping up with the demand for bikes became a struggle, the programme was taken behind bars. Nixon said he enjoys working in the youth unit every second Friday with the 'young fellas', who are 'quite keen'. 'They're going to finish their sentence, they're going to go to work, they're going to ride a bike … I'm passing this skill on that lasts a lifetime, that they can pass on to their own kids,' he said. Nixon works with groups of two to three 18 to 20-year-olds at a time. Some he has for six months, others for up to three years. He teaches them how to use tools, strip down the bikes, replace parts and service them. 'We just work together building bikes,' he said. The budding mechanics also get to build their own bike, which 'slowly gets better and better, because they know all the good bits and they start putting them on'. When they leave, it is with a top-quality bike. At the start of the programme, Nixon said, some youth don't know which way to turn a spanner. By the end, they're all quite good mechanics. One inmate said the programme taught him many useful skills, which could help him find work once released. 'It's good keeping busy, and good that the bikes go to someone that'll use them,' he said. Nixon reckoned they refurbish up to 50 bikes a year, with mountain bikes a speciality. They also repair children's and women's bikes for families. Old bikes are donated and 'scrounged' from places such as the Eco Store and Recycle A Dunga (RAD) and restored with new parts. 'They just need love and care, and hey presto, you get a really nice bike,' Nixon said. Extra bikes go to Pathway Trust's Navigate Initiative, which helps recently released prisoners reintegrate into society and find work and accommodation. Having a means of transport is crucial for finding and getting to work and for keeping appointments, such as probation meetings. Pathway Trust's website says 'an efficient, cost-effective mode of transport can make all the difference in settling back into life on the outside.' Nixon is delighted that some former prisoners have even found work in bike shops. 'We've had a couple of guys that loved it that much.' Wanting to continue the cycle of help, Nixon is looking for a new volunteer to help him run the programme and eventually take it over.

Release plan for Joseph James Brider 'a very good one', insists Corrections
Release plan for Joseph James Brider 'a very good one', insists Corrections

RNZ News

time01-05-2025

  • RNZ News

Release plan for Joseph James Brider 'a very good one', insists Corrections

Coroner Alexandra Cunninghame presides over an inquest into the murder of Juliana Bonilla-Herrera. Photo: KAI SCHWOERER / POOL A former Corrections' manager has defended how the release of a convicted rapist on parole was handled, before he brutally murdered a woman in her Christchurch home. Juliana Bonilla-Herrera was stabbed to death by Joseph James Brider in January 2022, 10 weeks after he was paroled to an adjoining unit in Grove Street, Addington. An inquest into the Colombian woman's death continued on Thursday in front of Coroner Alexandra Cunninghame. Darius Fagan, who was chief probation officer at Corrections at the time of Brider's release in November 2021, gave evidence in court, as the department's procedures and policies in place at the time were again put under the microscope. Counsel assisting the coroner Rebekah Jordan asked what rights probation officers had to identify people who could be at risk from Brider. Fagan said directly informing neighbours of a potential risk was fraught with difficulty. Juliana Bonilla-Herrera was murdered by convicted rapist Joseph James Brider. Photo: Supplied "[Neighbourhoods] are dynamic environments," he said. "Things change all the time as we know. "When a probation officer becomes aware that an address is no longer suitable or there are some concerns with an address, there are a number of actions they can take at that point and time. "They can direct people... not to associate or interact with a particular person, they can consider changing the address, they can consider enforcement action depending on what the situation is." Brider had told his probation officer that all his neighbours were elderly, but the probation was unable to confirm this during several visits in the middle of the day. An option of leaving a business card with neighbours should any concerns arise was put to Fagan, but he argued this action would not lessen risk or concern. "I think providing a number and a card without any context is not going to help anyone," he said. "That's why we have a policy and some procedures that have quite a high bar to reach around risk, before we would go and do this kind of activity." Fagan said he had reservations about the department being portrayed as an emergency service and that concerns could be flagged with police. Although Brider was initially endorsed to be moved into the more intensive Salisbury Street Foundation rehabilitation centre, doubts over capacity saw his parole accommodation being managed through the Pathway Trust charity. Counsel assisting the coroner Rebekah Jordan during an inquest into the murder of Juliana Bonilla-Herrera. Photo: KAI SCHWOERER / POOL Brider's release plan through Pathway remained "a very good one", Fagan said. Listening in via audio-visual link, Bonilla-Herrera's sister, Saray Bonilla, put questions to Corrections, through the in-court interpreters that were present for proceedings. "If Mr Brider were assigned as a neighbour to your sister, your niece, your cousin, would you not consider it necessary to warn them that they might be in danger?" Fagan said the department did not consider what happened to Bonilla-Herrera so soon after he had been paroled as a possibility. "If someone was being released to be a neighbour of anyone in my family or friends, I know from my work, they're much safer with the oversight of Corrections and providers like Pathways than without that oversight. "That support frequently prevents serious situations from occurring, just not all of those situations." Coroner Cunninghame asked how the department legally weighed up reducing risk against protecting Brider's privacy. "Is an attractive female who moves next door to an identifiable group of persons where the protective elements of the Corrections Act should trump the Privacy Act?" Fagan replied that was a possible scenario, but Brider did not fall into the community notification criteria. Alerting the community could also heighten a situation. "Telling people doesn't, in itself, reduce the risk in any way," he said. "In doing that, we exercise a lot of caution, because it can also be quite disruptive to a reintegration process. "There's a likelihood that it can increase the risk." Chief probation officer for Corrections Toni Stewart, who began her evidence on Thursday afternoon, also expressed similar sentiments over alerting neighbouring residents. Stewart also said Corrections was hampered by a lack of rehabilitative community providers for paroled prisoners. "If somewhere like Salisbury Street or another provider had more capacity, it would be used," she said. "Another complicating factor often is that the number of people needing the service exceeding the bed availability means there is the constant need to prioritise. "People who might have been suited to a service are effectively trumped by someone who needs it just that little bit more." The inquest will enter a fifth day on Friday. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store