Results 141–160 of 2033 for speaker:Jess Phillips

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 73 - Ethical policing (including duty of candour) (25 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: The enormous list of amendments in my name—it is time for everybody to strap in—is not necessarily a criticism of police forces, but is real recognition that women in our country do not trust the police. That is dangerous, because the women I work with have no choice but to trust the police. It is not a privileged position that they can take; they have to trust them, but they do not....

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 71 - Reviews of responses to complaints about anti-social behaviour (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: The Minister has somewhat answered my question, but what happens if the police do not follow up on every line of inquiry? Let us be honest: we will all have cases in our constituencies where that has happened.

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 71 - Reviews of responses to complaints about anti-social behaviour (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: The Minister’s story about Manchester was great and a delight to hear; I hope that is replicated elsewhere because of this scheme. Are the Government committing to opening magistrates courts that have been closed in order to deal with that capacity?

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 61 - Nuisance rough sleeping conditions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: I will not speak for long. The Minister and I have had a back and forth, and for the benefit of Hansard, when I called him a geek it was definitely a compliment. He is without a doubt on top of the detail not only of this Bill but of how it interacts with other legislation. It is a pleasure to sit on a Committee with a Minister in that position. I am a massive geek about how all these nice...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 61 - Nuisance rough sleeping conditions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: Oh, 1986. I was actually five years old then. I was a big fan of it back then. But why do we need a specific law about this group of people? Why can they not be covered by the laws on the nuisances, insults and harassment that we can all define easily? That is the bit that I find alarming. If people are shooting up in the street or are openly engaged in dangerous practices such as pimping...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 61 - Nuisance rough sleeping conditions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: I just wonder what else that is annoying that might be outside the front of someone’s business that we could criminalise. The bin lorry? It seems like there are loads of things. Cars get parked outside the front of businesses where I live, and it impedes the Warburtons van bringing in the loaves. The literally happens outside the corner shop right next to my house—bloody criminal! Why is...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 61 - Nuisance rough sleeping conditions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: Oh yes, absolutely. It seems to me that there is this idea that it would cause distress to somebody to see a homeless person in a tent. I have greater faith in the British public than that. They are not just immediately distressed by somebody who is down and out. I am not immediately distressed by homeless people; I am distressed that they are homeless, but my distress is directed at the...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 61 - Nuisance rough sleeping conditions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: Just to push my example, if I am obstructed in my daily life by a group of schoolchildren doing exactly that—using abusive, insulting words, saying “bitch” and things when I walk past—why is that any different? Surely causing distress to people is already illegal, so we do not need to define it in terms of rough sleepers.

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 52 - Nuisance rough sleeping prevention notices (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: To go back to a conversation that we were having prior to the sitting about fentanyl in the US, does the Minister agree that the very strict rules about these sorts of things in various other US states have also led to terrible outcomes with regard to substance misuse?

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 51 - Nuisance rough sleeping directions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: Will the hon. Gentleman give way?

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 51 - Nuisance rough sleeping directions (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: I feel differently about begging compared with nuisance rough sleeping. I have taken the words of my later mother on board. My brother lived on the streets for about six years in total, on and off, while he was in and out of various institutions. He used to annoy me. I did not like the trouble that he brought to my family’s door. He was, without a shadow of a doubt, a nuisance. I remember...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 48 - Offence of engaging in nuisance begging (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: As the Minister has said, I have outlined the places where I do feel intimidated. There was a homeless man—he died recently—who used to sit outside the local Asda where I live. He was a lovely man who chatted to everybody, and he was not intimidating at all. Would this definition account for him? He did not do anything wrong and I do not think he caused anyone any offence. Would he have...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 48 - Offence of engaging in nuisance begging (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: This is quite an exhaustive list, but much of the law is often London-centric. One of the problems where I live, certainly as a woman driving late at night, is people stopping traffic at road intersections. The feeling of intimidation can differ from person to person, but as a woman on her own at a crossroads in Birmingham, it feels intimidating to have people standing outside my car. How can...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 39 - Nuisance begging prevention notices (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: What concerns me, regarding certainty of referral, is if there are cases where people—where I live in Birmingham, the biggest problem in nuisance begging is Romanian women who are clearly being trafficked; there are no two ways about that. I fear their criminalisation more so than their traffickers’ criminalisation, which is nil. I wonder whether there could be a mechanism for referral...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 39 - Nuisance begging prevention notices (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: The expectation, rather than necessarily the duty in law, is a referral. Beyond a referral, what happens if a woman nuisance begs in the 1,000 days that it takes to get referral through the national referral mechanism? It takes women 1,000 days to get a conclusive grounds decision, and it takes men 500. Or what if someone is waiting for a mental health referral? As I think every Member will...

Public Bill Committee: Criminal Justice Bill: Clause 39 - Nuisance begging prevention notices (23 Jan 2024)

Jess Phillips: Who have never heard of the NRM.


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