Holidaying in brisbane so it looks like I've beat @Dave to the creation (no thanks to the building site across the road!)
I've got a contentious question however: How does one get an exemption from home detention in order to work on a job?
I get that this is likely a rehabilitation measure and generally a good thing, but it stands out like the proverbial dogs bollocks in the awful situation around the AKL shooting...
Smells of underpaid prison labour, too, but I really am jumping to conclusions here.
For some reason today I put 07 for July instead of just 7, so the duplicate detection wouldn't have brought it up.
But anyway...
I’ve got a contentious question however: How does one get an exemption from home detention in order to work on a job?
If you prevent someone from going to their job they already have, then they lose their job. They then become more likely to commit crimes in future because now they have no money, no reason to get up in the morning, nothing to fill their time with.
The idea is solid, but for violent crime like this dude, maybe it should be treated a little different.
Smells of underpaid prison labour, too, but I really am jumping to conclusions here.
I don't have any more information than anyone else, but most likely this was a job he was already working at before his sentencing and is getting paid for. Getting him fired is not helpful for getting his life back on track.
I'd guess in a perfect world he should have been able to return to work supervised, with mandated anger management and mental health support. But we aren't willing to spend money on that so what can you do.
Dang, I remember pausing to consider whether I should pad the zeros or not! But if it's too weird to use yyyy mm dd then they simply must be padded, or my nerdiness will have a fit :)
I figured home D was kind of a parole measure, but that's a good point, he may not have been inside the prison system beforehand - this could just be an awkward systematic failing, with tragic results...