Liverpool Jail findings 'symptomatic of wider failings in prisons'
A group of MPs are warning the conditions at Walton could be the tip of the iceberg
A scathing report which described conditions at Walton Prison as the worst inspectors have encountered is symptomatic of wider failings across the prison estate, a Commons committee has warned.
MPs said the situation at HMP Liverpool is not unique after an assessment condemned the "squalid'' state of the establishment."
Last month the jail was the subject of one of the most critical inspection reports for years.
HM Inspectorate of Prisons found drugs were readily available, communal areas were in a "decrepit'' state and there was a significant problem with cockroaches and rats."
Violence of all kinds had increased, four inmates had taken their own lives since the previous inspection, and two more suspected suicides occurred shortly after the latest visit in September.
In the wake of the findings, the Commons Justice Committee took the unprecedented step of convening a special evidence session about an individual inspection.
In its own report, published on Friday, the committee says: "We are concerned about several issues highlighted by the inspection of HMP Liverpool."
"We take the view that these problems are symptomatic of wider failings across the prison estate which the Government should take extremely seriously.''
The committee argues that national, regional and local management failed in their oversight of HMP Liverpool.
It also calls for the inspectorate to be given additional resources to follow up on its recommendations, and hold jails to account when they are not achieved.
Conservative MP Bob Neill, who chairs the committee, said: The situation at HMP Liverpool is not unique and is symptomatic of shortcomings evident across the prison estate which need to be addressed as a matter of urgency.
"It is clear that HMIP require additional resources so they can make sure that their recommendations are properly acted upon."