Oral Answers to Questions — Home Department – in the House of Commons at 12:00 am on 4 June 1964.
Mr Alan Brown
, Tottenham
12:00,
4 June 1964
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many children, being persons under the age of 17, were remanded to prison instead of remand homes and remand centres during the period 1st January to 30th April, 1964.
Miss Mervyn Pike
, Melton
213 persons under 17 were remanded to prison in this period.
Mr Alan Brown
, Tottenham
Is my hon. Friend aware that that figure seems slightly higher than the figure for the corresponding period last year? Is she aware that as long ago as July, 1960, the then Minister of State, Home Department, promised the House that steps would be taken to end this out-dated practice of remanding children to prison?
Miss Mervyn Pike
, Melton
I assure my hon. Friend that the number does not show an increase. It is the general trend. We are not complacent about it. We are anxious to bring it down.
Miss Alice Bacon
, Leeds South East
Is the hon. Lady aware that in 1961 the then Home Secretary, now the Foreign Secretary, promised that we should very soon have many new remand centres opened? When will they be opened? Three years later very little appears to have been done.
Miss Mervyn Pike
, Melton
There is a Question later on the Order Paper on this subject.
Mrs Bessie Braddock
, Liverpool Exchange
Is the hon. Lady aware that many magistrates, myself included, when they sit in juvenile courts are informed by the clerk of the court before even the case starts that there are no vacancies in remand homes? Is she aware that the magistrates are left in the position, when there is no place of security, despite the fact that they do not want children to be sent to prison, of having to send them there in many cases in order to avoid difficulties and to save the time of the police in looking for boys who do not come to court when they have been allowed to go home? This is a difficult matter which ought not to be allowed to continue any longer.
Miss Mervyn Pike
, Melton
I think that the hon. Lady will be more than satisfied when she hears the Answer to a later Question.
Secretary of State was originally the title given to the two officials who conducted the Royal Correspondence under Elizabeth I. Now it is the title held by some of the more important Government Ministers, for example the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.
Ministers make up the Government and almost all are members of the House of Lords or the House of Commons. There are three main types of Minister. Departmental Ministers are in charge of Government Departments. The Government is divided into different Departments which have responsibilities for different areas. For example the Treasury is in charge of Government spending. Departmental Ministers in the Cabinet are generally called 'Secretary of State' but some have special titles such as Chancellor of the Exchequer. Ministers of State and Junior Ministers assist the ministers in charge of the department. They normally have responsibility for a particular area within the department and are sometimes given a title that reflects this - for example Minister of Transport.
The order paper is issued daily and lists the business which will be dealt with during that day's sitting of the House of Commons.
It provides MPs with details of what will be happening in the House throughout the day.
It also gives details of when and where the standing committees and select committees of the Commons will be meeting.
Written questions tabled to ministers by MPs on the previous day are listed at the back of the order paper.
The order paper forms one section of the daily vote bundle and is issued by the Vote Office