There is a push from the government to stop using short prison sentences, those of less than six months. It will require a change in the law, but the idea has been put out to gauge a response. It will be a tough sell.
Some members of my extended family work in the police and prison services and there is tacit agreement that short sentences do not always work for some crimes and some criminals. However, they will be against a blanket dropping of such sentences as, no doubt, the public will be. The trick, therefore, for the judicial system, will be to filter out those for whom alternatives to prison will work.
The danger with this exercise is that it will be hijacked by libertarian prison reformers. They have already ushered in an era where it is extremely rare for a first offender to get a custodial sentence. Some, as pointed out by the former police inspector who was interviewed, go three or four times before being jailed. Many of those then only get a short sentence when their crimes when the total possible sentences could have accrued many years jail time.
It is not wrong to ask, but the government needs to listen to all sides and alternatives in equal measure.