Why the public should care about prisons
a shocking ombudsman investigation.
The ombudsman’s detailed report on the excessive use of force by
correctional officers in Ontario’s provincial detention centres exposes
the inexcusable behaviour of some correctional officers and the context
in which this behaviour arises.
Prisons are uniquely isolated and isolating places. These
institutions, typically closed off from public view, have recently
become the subject of
Correctional officers are tasked with very challenging and often
unenviable jobs. The behaviours reflected in the report are by no means
representative of all of the men and women working within corrections,
as both Ombudsman Andre Marin and Minister of Community Safety and
Correctional Services Madeleine Meilleur aptly point out. While the use
of some force cannot be prevented given the nature of the correctional
environment, its application requires strict professionalism,
regulation, accountability and oversight. To the ministry’s credit, its
line-by-line response to the report’s recommendations and its immediate
commitment to shifting corrections in Ontario is commendable.
Why should you care about the treatment of prisoners?
For one, the large majority of them will eventually be released.
Every year about 70,000 provincial prisoners return to communities
across Ontario. How they are treated inside impacts how well they fare
upon release. An unsafe prison environment does not lend itself to
producing well-adjusted, law-abiding citizens; in fact, quite the
opposite.
Regardless of the offences committed, we have a responsibility to
ensure that all prisoners have their basic needs met, have opportunities
for rehabilitation and are safe from harm while inside our prisons. The
excessive use of force is one of a number of serious issues endemic to
our correctional system, and indeed, cannot be fully examined in
isolation from these broader conditions.
What are these conditions?
Overcrowding, growing rates of mental health problems among
prisoners, and high remand populations, to name a few. Picture a
concrete room the size of an average household washroom, and imagine two
to three complete strangers having to live and sleep there. It is not
uncommon for prisoners to be sleeping on cell floors in prison cells
originally designed for one.
Now consider that the majority of these people are not convicted of
any charges and are awaiting trial (most prisoners in our provincial
correctional system are not sentenced). In addition, of these
incarcerated cellmates, chances are high that at least one, if not
several, suffer from undiagnosed or unmanaged mental health or
addictions problems.
Now magnify and multiply this scenario: data show that most
provincial correctional institutions are maxing out their rated
capacities, at a time when government resources are increasingly scarce.
These circumstances exacerbate tensions, conflicts and worsen
pre-existing mental health concerns; all of which impact correctional
officers’ work environment. These conditions are also counterproductive
to effective corrections.
During a time of historically low crime rates, there are more
effective and innovative methods of dealing with crime than simply
building more prisons, or packing more people into existing ones.
Prisons require disproportionate amounts of our tax dollars to build and
operate, and as the ombudsman’s report shows, crowded prisons create
unsafe environments for both staff and prisoners. Prisons, though a
necessary part of society, do not always provide the public with the
best return on investment, particularly when it comes to individuals who
can be managed safely and effectively in the community.
Yes, the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services owns
the responsibility of ensuring that prisoners are treated with the
dignity, respect and protection that they deserve as citizens and human
beings. The ombudsman was crystal clear on this point, and laid out
concrete ways in which the ministry can redress some of the issues
around oversight of the specific issue of excessive use of force.
But what of the other challenges facing our prisons? The conditions
that put our civil servants, prisoners and communities at risk?
These issues require a strong commitment from the government to
address at the early stages of the criminal justice process, long before
these individuals wind up in our jails. For the time being, however,
there needs to be at least be recognition from our leaders that current
conditions are not acceptable and a commitment to meaningfully tackling
these problems.
And the government is not, and should not be, alone on solving this
problem; there are many community-based organizations willing to roll up
their sleeves. John Howard Society
staff have been providing services to youth, prisoners, ex-prisoners,
their families and Ontario’s neighbourhoods for decades. Our staff are
inside the prisons and on the ground in our communities every day
assisting those affected by the criminal justice system, in an effort to
build safer neighbourhoods. Ultimately, prison safety is community
safety — the sooner we all recognize prison conditions as a public
issue, the better.
Paula Osmok is executive director of the John Howard Society of Ontario.Source
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