Funding To Improve Security At Prisons

SA Gov

The Malinauskas Labor Government is taking action to improve staff and prisoner safety and reduce the amount of contraband entering prisons.

The 2025-26 State Budget will provide $6.8 million over four years to improve security at prisons in metropolitan Adelaide and regional SA.

The new measures will see high-tech security scanners at prisons across the state, including Port Augusta Prison and Mobilong, enabling the detection of banned items and serving as a powerful deterrent.

This follows the installation of new body scanners at Yatala Labour Prison and the Adelaide Women's Prison which can detect small substances that are often difficult to identify using traditional search methods.

At Adelaide Women's Prison new barriers will be installed on the perimeter fence, to stop contraband being flung over to prisoners. People have recently been caught hitting tennis balls filled with contraband into the prison yard.

There will also be further digital upgrades at the prison and cameras with built-in Artificial Intelligence.

These measures will improve safety for the prisoners, staff and the community and prevents the introduction of items which may pose a safety and security risk, such as drugs, weapons, cash and powders.

More searches are being conducted at SA correctional facilities, with more than 104,000 searches conducted in 2023-24, resulting in nearly 1,600 contraband discoveries – compared to 88,000 searches in 2022-23 and over 900 prohibited items seized.

For examples of contraband seized in SA prisons, click here.

As put by Stephen Mullighan

Safety is the number one priority for our prisons, so this Government is doing more to protect the staff and prisoners.

We are cracking down on contraband, so we can stop dangerous items entering correctional facilities.

As put by Emily Bourke

We continue to find new ways to target dangerous contraband and keep it out of our prisons.

Our Government is doing thousands more searches each year and upgraded security will stop more banned items from entering sites.

We're sending a clear message to anyone thinking of introducing contraband into the system it's not worth the risk.

/Public News. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).