Skip to content
Crime, Government NSW

$500 million criminal justice package misses opportunity to make NSW safer

Justice Reform Initiative 2 mins read

The NSW Government’s planned $500 million criminal justice package doubles down on failed policies that prioritise prisons and punishment over the evidence-based solutions proven to reduce crime and improve community safety.

Under the 2025/26 Budget, the Minns Government will spend more than $100 million to expand prison operations to respond to growing pressure on the system. This comes as the state’s adult prison population hits its highest point in five years—driven largely by a sharp rise in the number of people held on remand.

Justice Reform Initiative Executive Director Dr Mindy Sotiri said that while the simultaneous investment in victim support services is welcome, the overall funding package represents a missed opportunity to prioritise evidence-based policymaking that works to keep communities safe.

“This budget announcement once again misrepresents investing in ineffective and costly incarceration as the solution to community safety in NSW,” Dr Sotiri said.

“While we absolutely support increased funding to improve support for victims of crime – it is incredibly misleading to suggest alongside this measure, that spending hundreds of millions of dollars on expanding the punitive end of the justice system will improve community safety.”

“The evidence is very clear that the experience of prison increases the likelihood of future offending If we want to get serious about community safety, we need to invest in the drivers of incarceration. All the research shows us that jailing is failing; it doesn’t work to deter crime; it doesn’t work to address the drivers of crime; and it increases the likelihood of crime on release from custody. NSW taxpayers are footing the bill for this ineffective approach.”

The Budget includes $272.7 million for frontline domestic, family and sexual violence (DFSV) services—including $11.2 million to support early intervention reforms. While welcome, Dr Sotiri said this commitment must go further by meaningfully investing in community-led supports that address the underlying drivers of crime and incarceration.

“A safer community starts with investing in services in the community, not expanding prisons,” Dr Sotiri said.

“A commitment to early intervention for domestic, family and sexual violence is critical and needs to be matched across the sector to ensure the community has access to supports that stop people from being funnelled into the justice system in the first place.”

Dr Sotiri said the vast expenditure on prisons comes at the cost of genuine community safety.

“Investing in prisons to respond to overcrowding is an incredibly short-sighted approach. The most effective way to respond to overcrowding is to address the drivers of crime in the community. “Locking up more people in a system already in crisis will only exacerbate overcrowding and ultimately further drive-up incarceration rates— it certainly won’t reduce crime.”

“This investment also diverts critical funding away from mental health, disability, education, family support and other key programs which are proven to reduce crime and make communities safer.”

The Justice Reform Initiative is calling for urgent investment in evidence-based alternatives to incarceration, including diversion programs, community-based supports, and First Nations placed based strategies that have been shown to reduce offending and improve community safety.

“Real answers to community safety are not found in sending more people to prison,” Dr Sotiri said. “They are found in greater and targeted investment in community programs and First Nations-led initiatives that work to address the drivers of offending and reduce contact with the justice system in the long term.”

For more information visit https://www.justicereforminitiative.org.au


Contact details:

Amy Price 0437 027 156

More from this category

  • Government NSW, Oil Mining Resources
  • 10/12/2025
  • 11:05
Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia

CCAA Welcomes NSW Government’s Progress on New Strategic Planning Framework

Key Facts: CCAA welcomes new Draft Sydney Plan and related planning documents aimed at improving coordination and recognising the construction materials industry's role in NSWIndustry faces critical challenges, including sand supply exhaustion at Kurnell Peninsula by 2030, while NSW targets 377,000 new homesThe reforms aim to protect industrial lands and strengthen strategic planning for freight corridors and essential construction materialsCCAA advocates for a dedicated Heavy Construction Materials Plan to ensure long-term supply security and efficient materials deliveryReforms recognise need for long-term planning certainty for capital-intensive operations like quarries and concrete plantsCement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) welcomes the release of…

  • Community, Government NSW
  • 09/12/2025
  • 08:44
Homelessness NSW

Homelessness NSW backs Wentworth Park plan to deliver 2,500 new homes

Homelessness NSW strongly backs the NSW Government's decision to raze Wentworth Park to build 2,500 new homes. “Providing housing to the people of Sydney is far more important than watching dogs race around a track,” said Homelessness NSW CEO Dominique Rowe. “Turning Wentworth Park into a public space and building 2,500 new homes is exactly the kind of bold decision we need more of. “Wentworth Park should serve the people of Sydney, not gambling interests which have caused financial hardship and homelessness for decades. “We call on the government to ensure at least 10% of the new homes built on…

  • Government Federal, Government NSW
  • 08/12/2025
  • 21:44
In Front PR

Emma Mason, mother to 15-year-old Tilly who died by suicide after social media bullying, releases support video for families. Please share

Key Facts: Emma Mason is an Australian lawyer and a leading global campaigner for stronger social media laws, motivated by the suicide of her…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.