Napo (trade union)
Napo | |
Headquarters | 160 Falcon Road, London |
---|---|
Location |
|
Members | 5,242 (2021)[1] |
Key people | Ian Lawrence (General Secretary) |
Affiliations | TUC, GFTU, TUCG |
Website | www.napo.org.uk |
Napo (formerly the National Association of Probation Officers) is the trade union and professional association that represents probation staff including probation officers and other operational and administrative staff and Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service staff in England.
Napo was formed on 22 May 1912. It was a member of the Standing Conference of Organisations of Social Workers from 1962, but decided not to join the new British Association of Social Workers in 1970. In 2001, it opted to change its title to "Napo–the trade union and professional association for family court and probation staff".[2] It holds an annual general meeting which is open to all members of the union.
It retains a campaigning remit on both criminal justice and family court matters and is recognised as an influential and respectable source of information by both the media and politicians of all parties.
General Secretary Ian Lawrence was reappointed unopposed to commence a third 5 year term of office from July 2023. He is among the few senior British/Asian trade union leaders to emerge from the community for some time and currently serves on the TUC General Council as the member representing black workers from unions with less than 200,000 members.
Ian has made a substantial number of contributions in the media on the situation pertaining to the state of the probation service in England and Wales following the part privatisation of services in 2014. He has also contributed to a number of keynote seminars examining issues within the wider UK criminal justice system and has also provided oral evidence to the Parliamentary Justice Select Committee inquiry into the impact of the Transforming Rehabilitation programme. On 13 June 2020 Napo celebrated a major victory following the announcement by the Lord Chancellor that probation services would return to public ownership and control in June 2021. This news followed a long and sometimes attritional campaign which commanded widespread support from many politicians and groups who had also predicted major problems following the ill-fated reforms that were implemented by the then Secretary of State for Justice Chris Grayling.
Napo is an independent trade union but has good relations with the Labour Party front bench and a number of cross-party MP's and Peers in terms of assisting the development of its future policies on the probation and prison service and family justice issues. It is also a founding member of the Justice Unions Parliamentary Group.
The Probation Journal, established in 1929, is published by SAGE Publications in association with Napo.[3][4]
General Secretaries
[edit]- 1930: H. E. Norman
- 1943: E. M. Hughes (acting until 1946)
- 1948: Frank Dawtry
- 1967: David Haxby
- c.1970: Donald Bell
- c.1980: Bill Beaumont
- 1993: Judy McKnight
- 2008: Jonathan Ledger
- 2013 to present: Ian Lawrence
Chairs of National NAPO
[edit]- 1912 — : Mr. Sydney George Edridge, O.B.E.[5]
- Approx. 1928 — 1940: Gertrude Mary Tuckwell, CH[6][7]
- 1941 — 1946: Mr C E Garland[8][9]
- 1946 — 1949: Mr Seldon Charles Forrester Farmer, OBE[10][11]
- — 2014: Tom Rendon[12]
- — 2022: Katie Lomas[13]
- 2022 — 2024: Helen Banner[14]
- 2024: Ben Cockburn[15]
Vice-Chairs of National NAPO
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "NAPO Form AR21 for year ended 31 December 2021" (PDF). GOV.UK. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ Napo and probation–a brief history (PDF), p. 6[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Probation Journal: The Journal of Community and Criminal Justice, SAGE Publications.
- ^ Probation Journal Archived 2012-12-24 at archive.today, Social Care Online.
- ^ Warren, George H. (April 1934). "The Passing of the First Chairman of the National Association of Probation Officers". Probation. 1 (19): 292–293. doi:10.1177/026455053400101903.
- ^ "Napo former President named women of the day". NAPO Magazine. Napo HQ. 26 April 2024. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
- ^ Who's Who 1941. London: Adam & Charles Black. 1941. p. 3181.
- ^ "National Association of Probation Officers 34th Annual Report, 1945". Probation. 5 (3): 30–32. May 1946. doi:10.1177/026455054600500305. ISSN 0048-539X. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
- ^ "National Association of Probation Officers 35th Annual Report, 1946". Probation. 5 (9): 116–118. May 1947. doi:10.1177/026455054700500904.
- ^ "National Association of Probation Officers Annual General Meeting, July 5th, 1946". Probation. 5 (4): 40–40. July 1946. doi:10.1177/026455054600500404. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
- ^ Farmer, S.C.F. (May 1949). "Chairman's Address To Conference". Probation. 5 (21): 275–275. doi:10.1177/026455054900502104.
- ^ Brown, Jim (23 May 2014). "On Probation Blog: Napo - Situation Normal". On Probation Blog. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
- ^ "Transcript of Agenda Item 5 – Probation Services in London" (PDF). London Assembly Police and Crime Committee - Wednesday 20 July 2022. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
- ^ "News | Napo". www.napo.org.uk. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
- ^ "New Chair and Vice-Chair confirmed | Napo". www.napo.org.uk. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
- ^ "National Association of Probation Officers Annual General Meeting, July 5th, 1946". Probation. 5 (4): 40–40. July 1946. doi:10.1177/026455054600500404.
- ^ "New Chair and Vice-Chair confirmed | Napo". www.napo.org.uk. Retrieved 19 November 2024.