UK's first ever women's community custody unit opening in Dundee
The site at the former Our Lady’s Primary School opens next month
Last updated 28th Jul 2022
The UK's first ever women's community custody unit is set to open in Dundee next month.
The 16-space Bella Centre unit has been designed to blend in with into the surroundings, with no bars on the windows, no barded wire and no high walls.
It's at the former Our Lady’s Primary School in the city.
It will focus on "custody in the community" with women there being supported to live independently and develop a range of life skills.
Community Safety Minister Ash Regan, who toured the facility today, said it marks a "step change" in the way Scotland supports women in custody.
The centre's completion is part of a wider ÂŁ600 million plan to improve Scotland's custodial estate.
The Bella Centre will have a sister site in Glasgow and work is progressing on a replacement for HMP YOI Cornton Vale near Stirling, the national facility for female offenders.
Ms Regan said:
"The Bella Centre marks a step change in the way Scotland supports women in custody, and is the first facility of its kind in the UK.
"It takes a gender-specific and trauma-informed approach to better prepare women for re-integration back into their communities.
"Enhanced access to the community will enable women to retain family ties while allowing supportive partnerships in the locality to flourish. This visionary new centre has been specifically designed to better prepare women for release and to reduce reoffending.
"It relies heavily on collaboration with and between a wide range of partners, enabling a multi-disciplinary approach that will serve the rehabilitative needs of women, supporting them to reintegrate back into their communities."
The facility has shared house-style accommodation with communal living spaces downstairs and individual bedrooms upstairs.
There is also a Community Hub where women can meet with visitors and access a range of activities and local services which will help them to develop the skills and support networks necessary for successful reintegration into the community.
The Scottish Prison Service said every woman allocated to a community custody unit will have undergone a "robust" risk and needs assessment process.
SPS said:
"The units will accommodate women of mixed custodial sentence lengths and women will, following appropriate risk assessments, have the opportunity to access the community.
"Living in the CCUs will enable these women to foster stronger and closer links within the appropriate community support agencies they will be working with prior to release."