Yetta Dhinnakkal Centre Explained

Prison Name:Yetta Dhinnakkal Centre
Location:Brewarrina, New South Wales
Status:Closed
Classification:Minimum
Opened:2000
Managed By:Corrective Services NSW
Coordinates:-30.3508°N 146.891°W

Yetta Dhinnakkal Centre, also known as the Brewarrina (Yetta Dhinnakkal) Centre, Brewarrina Correctional Centre and Brewarrina Prison, and referred to informally as Brewarrina jail, was an Australian minimum security prison for young Indigenous Australian men. It was located in Gongolgon, approximately south of Brewarrina, New South Wales. The centre was operated by Corrective Services NSW, an agency of the Department of Communities and Justice, of the Government of New South Wales, until its closure in mid-2020. Many of its inmates were first offenders, and the centre offered various types of educational opportunities, in particular farming skills.[1] [2]

Yetta dhinnakkal is a phrase in the Ngemba language meaning "the right pathway".[1]

Facilities

In response to the rising number of Indigenous men being incarcerated in New South Wales prisons, Corrective Services NSW purchased a remote cattle station around 2000 and transformed it into an outdoor prison, without walls, bars, armed guards, or electric fences.[3] Located on and opened in 2000, the centre was a working farming property, maintained by inmates under officer supervision and guided by elders. The centre's behavioural change programs targeted first-time young Aboriginal offenders aged from 18 to 25, through culturally relevant intensive case management. Vocational training courses were offered in information technology, horticulture, construction, visual arts and contemporary craft.[4] [5] Other practical skills, including small motor maintenance, welding, road sealing, building skills, literacy and numeracy and first aid are also provided.

The reoffending rate in 2004 was assessed at 20 per cent, compared with 40 per cent across NSW.[6] In 2005/2006, the centre was awarded the Gold Award at the NSW Premier's Public Sector Awards in the Social Justice Category.[7]

In January 2011, the centre was isolated by flooding waters affecting northern NSW and Queensland.[8] During April 2011, there were five separate escapes from the minimum security centre.[5]

The closure of the centre was announced in mid-2019, planned for 2020.[1] [2] Ownership of the site was split between the local Aboriginal land council and the Brewarrina Shire Council. Orana Haven was planning to lease the Shire's land and facilities for use as a drug and alcohol rehabilitation centre from sometime during 2021.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cross . Hannah . Successful community prison set to close mid-2020 . National Indigenous Times . 15 November 2019 . 24 June 2021.
  2. Web site: Davies . Jessie . Brewarrina jail is closing and the community warns it will have a devastating effect . ABC News . Australian Broadcasting Corporation . 19 October 2019 . 24 June 2021.
  3. News: Don't Fence Me In . Lee, Tim . Landline . transcript . 11 July 2010 . . 28 December 2018 . (Note: updated url since the original one was dead, to a republished version; however, (as of 1 July 2021) the incorrect date (Thu 4 Apr 2019) is displayed. Following up.)
  4. Web site: Brewarrina (Yetta Dhinnakkal) Centre . Correctional Services NSW . 2 May 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101020195314/http://www.correctiveservices.nsw.gov.au/offender_management/correctional_centres/brewarrina_yetta_dhinnakkal . 20 October 2010 .
  5. News: Break-out at Brewarrina: Region on lookout for escapees . 27 April 2011 . 2 May 2012 . The Northern Daily Leader .
  6. News: Freedom in a prison with boundaries, but no walls . Pearlman, Jonathan . 17 August 2004 . 2 May 2012 . The Sydney Morning Herald .
  7. Web site: NSW Corrections and Indigenous people: Annual Reports . Australian Prisons Project . University of New South Wales . 2005 . 2 May 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130410183642/http://www.app.unsw.edu.au/annual-reports-1 . 10 April 2013 . dead .
  8. News: Goodooga prepared for lengthy isolation . ABC News . Australia . 7 January 2011 . 2 May 2012 .
  9. Web site: Ivanhoe and Brewarrina correction facilities repurposed . Condobolin Argus . 25 February 2021 . 24 June 2021.