The man behind a Wearside business legend wants to start a new line of work – building prisons.
Sir Peter Vardy has been involved in education for years. The Vardy Foundation has helped build colleges in Gateshead, Middlesbrough and Doncaster, with a fourth on the way in Blyth.
Now he wants to use that experience to help those the system h
as failed by revolutionising the way prisons work.
The move comes after a visit to a young offenders' institute which brought Sir Peter face-to-face with the reality of life on the inside – and the outside.
"Forty-nine per cent of the inmates were foster children and the reoffending rate was 80 per cent" he said.
"No one had really valued them. One man had been in 22 different foster homes."
Now Sir Peter wants to see a joined-up approach which will provide help and support for young people emerging from foster care to stop them getting into trouble with the law – and offer a helping hand to those who do.
"Through the Vardy Foundation we are looking at how we can help children coming out of foster care and young people coming out of young offenders' institutes," he said.
"Rehabilitation of prisoners, housing for those that need it; there is a whole range of projects.
"There is now going to be the opportunity to build prisons. I would very much like to look at how we can get involved with that."
Joined-up services would provide help to support ex-cons in the community.
"They are often not coming out to a home, they are not coming out to a community. Very often their family has given up on them," said Sir Peter.
"If we can get involved when they first go into prison, then housing could be arranged for them when they come out, a circle of contacts and friends could be established, work could be arranged to try to get them into employment."
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