KEJAN HAYNES
Lead Editor – Newsgathering
Government plans to recruit 800 new prison officers within months, as part of a broader push to strengthen the country’s prison system under the proposed Parole Bill 2026.
The announcement came from Justice Minister Devesh Maharaj during debate on the legislation in the House of Representatives today, where he defended the bill against criticism from Opposition MPs and outlined what he described as a “whole of justice sector approach” to prison reform.
“Within a few months, the prison service is going to enlist over 800 new prison officers,” Maharaj said.
He said the recruits would be “young people coming with talent” who would be properly trained as Government moves to provide more resources to the prison service and police.
“We are not leaving the prison service to flounder. We’re not leaving the police service to flounder. We are supporting them and giving them resources,” he said.
Maharaj also sought to counter concerns raised about the impact the proposed parole system could have on the judiciary and wider justice system.
He told the House that the Government consulted several stakeholders before expanding the legislation from its original 27 clauses, including the Judiciary, Director of Public Prosecutions, Public Defenders Department, Ministry of Justice, Assembly of Southern Lawyers and Tobago Law Association.
According to Maharaj, the Judiciary submitted a “very long and detailed” response supporting the legislation.
He said the Judiciary agreed that rehabilitation should remain central to modern penal reform efforts and supported parole reform initiatives aimed at allowing offenders opportunities for rehabilitation while under supervision.
Maharaj said the Judiciary also stressed the importance of reducing reliance on incarceration and promoting collaboration across the justice system, including prison services, probation, parole supervision, mental health support and community services.
“We engaged everyone,” he said.
The minister also rejected calls from the Opposition for the bill to be sent to a Joint Select Committee, arguing that extensive consultation had already taken place.
Debate on the Parole Bill 2026 continued in the Lower House this afternoon.
