Sunday, December 6, 2015

The current hunger strike at the Innes Road Jail is more important than you think

by Laura McKendy, PhD Candidate, Sociology, Carleton University

Prisoners in the maximum security unit at the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre began a hunger strike this week to protest conditions at the jail. Ongoing problems at the detention centre, including crowding, unsanitary conditions, violence, routine lockdowns, and lack of medical and psychiatric care, have long been condemned by prisoners. The current protest, however, has been largely driven by the chaos accompanying months-long construction projects, which have resulted in sections of the institution being merged, without measures in place to accommodate prisoners’ daily routines.

A representative of MOMS (Mothers Offering Mutual Support) explains the current situation in max:

“The jail appears to be making a mess of managing maintenance projects in the maximum ranges. Inmates had worked with staff to develop a provisional roster and daily routine for showers, phones and meals, but this has apparently been thrown out. The hunger strike is a peaceful demand for a return to orderly daily routines, instead of chaos and inmates being forced to eat meals on the floor in their cells”.

This is not the first hunger strike at the Innes Road jail. In 1988, the Ottawa Citizen reported that 20 prisoners engaged in a peaceful hunger strike to oppose prisoner relocations within the institution. The following year, about 50 prisoners engaged in another hunger strike, this time opposing systemic problems, including crowding, insufficient clothing changes, and lack of phone and yard time. The Ottawa Citizen, who covered the protest, reported that prisoners had been thrown in solitary confinement for speaking to the media. Newspaper archives reveal hunger strikes also took place in 1990, 1997 and 1998, while several more have likely escaped widespread media attention.

Hunger strikes are a well-established peaceful tactic of opposing various forms of injustice. Around the world and across history prisoners have often employed this method of protest, given their lack of alternatives. When a repressed group’s only means of resistance is self-starvation, the public must – at the very least – listen to their grievances that see them risking their lives.

The current state of conditions at the Innes Road jail is unquestionably ‘barbaric’, conditions that we associate with non-democratic regimes – not Canada. However, you will see comments claiming current prisoners are merely seeking ‘five star hotel’ accommodations. These comments are quickly discredited by the nature of the prisoners’ demands, which couldn’t be more basic; they want showers, food and beds to sleep on.

This situation is particularly concerning for the state of Canadian democracy since most of the prisoners (60 – 70%) at Innes Road are pre-trial; they have not been found guilty of anything yet, but are merely awaiting their court date. On top of that, we know from official court statistics that people in the jail are most commonly charged with non-violent offences; in fact, the most common category of offence for people on remand is ‘administrative’.

Regardless of the reasons that brought them there, we must ask ourselves: What social purpose is served by treating prisoners as sub-human - depriving them of showers, food, beds, support, or any form of stimulation? As a prisoner said to me earlier this week, “when you keep treating people like animals, they will eventually start acting like animals”. In light of this, we must ask ourselves whether we will tolerate such brutality in the face of such damaging consequences.

Monday, November 30, 2015

A new federal government, a new direction for solitary confinement in Canada? Leading experts to discuss future directions of isolation in Canadian prisons

Tomorrow a panel will be held between noon and 1:00pm at the University of Ottawa (Faculty of Social Sciences building, Room 14001) to discuss the future of solitary confinement in Canada. Speakers include Kim Pate (Executive Director, Canadian Asssociation of Elizabeth Fry Societies / Sallows Chair in Human Rights, University of Saskatchewan), Catherine Latimer (Executive Director, John Howard Society of Canada) and Paul Champ (Lawyer, Champ & Associates), who have all played instrumental roles in challenging isolation in Canadian federal penitentiaries and/or provincial prisons and remand centres. 

This event is taking place in a context where the new federal government has made a commitment to place additional restrictions on the use of solitary confinement in Canada as outlined in the mandate letter to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General. The panel aims to rekindle discussions about the negative consequences of this practice, which are accentuated when used on more vulnerable parts of the prisoner population, such as youth and individuals with mental health concerns. Speakers will also discuss potential avenues for policy reform concerning solitary confinement and will press the Government of Canada to ensure that their words translate into concrete actions and gains as it concerns the treatment of its prisoners. 

This discussion is important to have now in the wake of a decade of punitive reforms by previous administrations that worsened prison conditions and negatively affected the successful re-entry of prisoners into Canadian society. Previous federal governments have also ignored key recommendations proposed after tragic deaths in custody while in isolation such as the highly publicized cases of Ashley Smith who died in Grand Valley Institution in 2007 and Edward Snowshoe who died in Edmonton Institution in 2010. Action is needed immediately to prevent deaths in custody going forward. Tomorrow’s panel is being organized by four concerned undergraduate students under the supervision of their professor Dr. Justin Piché (Criminology, University of Ottawa) in partnership with the Criminalization and Punishment Education Project (www.cp-ep.org). 

 Through an in-depth class research project on the use of solitary confinement in Canadian prisons, as well as its consequences on prisoners and society (see www.endsolitarycanada.wordpress.com on 1 December 2015), we have come to the conclusion that the abolition of this form of torture should be a long-term goal. In the short-term, we encourage federal and provincial governments to set shorter limits on the time adults spend in isolation and to ban its use for youth and individuals with mental health concerns. 


Media Contacts: 

Paul Champ, Champ & Associates
pchamp@champlaw.ca / 613-237-4740 ext. 2 

Catherine Latimer, John Howard Society of Canada
clatimer@johnhoward.ca, 613-384-6272 

Kim Pate, Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies / University of Sasketchewan
kpate@web.ca, 613-238 2422

Monday, November 9, 2015

The Community Advisory Board’s report on sub-standard jail conditions at the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre reaffirms need for imminent action

by Laura McKendy (PhD Student) and Aaron Doyle (Associate Professor), Sociology, Carleton University

A new report on the Ottawa Carleton Detention Centre outlines many of the same concerns raised by CPEP over the last couple of years, regarding brutal crowding and inhumane conditions.

The community advisory board (CAB) set up to monitor the infamous Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre (OCDC) has released its first annual report, available on the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services’ website.

Such oversight boards were set up across the province in 2014 to provide a community perspective on jail conditions. Members of the board have unfettered, unrestricted access to the jails. For the most part, they can show up unannounced, at any time, and venture into all parts of the jail. On OCDC’s CAB,
five of its six positions are currently held by community volunteers, with one vacancy.

CPEP, along with our close allies, Mothers Offering Mutual Support (MOMS), have been in regular contact with the CAB since its inception last year. We have kept the board up-to-date with our knowledge of the institution, and have relayed complaints and concerns from our contacts inside and outside the jail. Thus far, the board has been limited in its ability to communicate with the public due to a confidentiality agreement. The Ministry's decision to make their annual report public is the step in the right direction towards making the work of the board more transparent.

The report lists concerns based on observations made during a total of 16 visits. Concerns echo those made over the years by prisoners, lawyers, the guards’ union, criminologists, social service workers and other community members.
 
A chief concern is understaffing – a problem that has also recently been stressed by the guards’ union. The report claims that, despite the addition of 11 new staff members in the past five years, staff shortages disrupt daily operations and result in routine lockdowns, during which prisoners are simply kept in cells or communal sleeping spaces all day with yard time, programs, and visits are cancelled.

But it is under the section called ‘Treatment of Inmates’, where the report describes a jail that most Canadians would probably be shocked to know exists in our capital city. Key problems listed include: inadequate mental health services for the many prisoners who wish to access it, sub-standard food which leaves many prisoners “constantly hungry”, triple-bunking in smalls cells and prisoners sleeping on mats on the floors, prisoners going up to two weeks without yard time, limited medical services, dirty showers, inadequate cleaning supplies, nail clippers being shared without sterilization, freezing temperatures and minimal programming. The report also provides a list of 22 recommendations for action.

In a seven page response to the report, found
here, the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services restates an intention to transform Ontario’s correctional system and responds to each of the 22 recommendations outlined by the CAB, although a number of the Ministry’s responses are vague or simply restate the existing situation without suggesting a solution.

While some small steps have been taken to improve staff training and the screening of prisoners with mental health concerns, we strongly agree with the call for a robust action plan to provide more appropriate accommodation for the 25 per cent or more of prisoners at OCDC with mental health issues.

The Ministry states it has hired 14 new guards, as well as an Assistant Health Manager and two full-time nurses, and has implemented a new mental health screening procedure. It is also not clear whether the 14 staff members mentioned in the Ministry’s response represent additional staff members, or simply replacements for people that have been lost, and it is not clear how many of them have already started. Regardless, in a situation where the jail is locked down virtually every week due to staffing shortages, it will scarcely begin to address these concerns.

Moreover, in relation to pleas for more staff, CPEP is concerned that beefing up security staff is a strategy that merely seeks to manage, rather than address, the crisis of over-population in jails. Rather than trying to more effectively house thousands of pre-trial detainees, the government should address Ontario’s dysfunctional bail system and rethink its approach to dealing with mental health and addictions problems by way of the correctional system.

That the Ministry is acknowledging the severe problems highlighted in the report is a positive sign. We are pleased that the Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services, Yasir Naqvi, met with us in June to discuss similar concerns, and agreed there is a need for transformation. But he needs to take concrete steps soon to make that happen.

Transformation will require more than a set of small changes that partially tackle particular problems. The key issue that is absent from the discussion is the spike in pre-trial detention in a context of declining reported crime. In Ontario, statistics from Statistics Canada reveal that out of an average daily count of 8,807 provincial prisoners, approximately 5,309 (60%) are on “remand”,  meaning they have yet to be charged with a criminal offence and are awaiting their day in court. They are presumed innocent under the law.  

Most people on remand are there for non-violent offences. In fact, the most common category of offence for remand prisoners in administrative (e.g. failure to comply with their bail conditions). The dysfunctional bail system – which is actually producing crime through the criminalization of ordinary behaviours as part of bail release – is herding thousands of people in jails who, on the basis of their original charges, would be otherwise living and working community as they await their trial date.

Ontario in particular has one of the most ineffective bail systems in the country, leading to a massive increase in the remand population, as outlined by the excellent 2014 report by the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, Set Up to Fail: Bail and the Revolving Door of Pretrial Detention. 

For transformation, the Ontario government must take action to address the fact that the majority of people in Ontario jails like OCDC are pre-trial and hence presumed innocent. The dysfunctional bail system, which is contributing to provincial jail crowding and court backlog, needs to be a top priority for reform. The government should also question the current approach of criminalizing those suffering with mental health concerns and addictions issues. Rather than trying to manage the disaster in Ontario’s correctional system, we should be trying to extinguish it.

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Prisoners' Justice Day march tomorrow at 4pm on Algonquin Territory / in Ottawa



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Calls renewed for an end to solitary confinement and other prison policies
and practices that contribute to deaths in custody

August 9, 2015 (Algonquin Territory / Ottawa) Prisoners’ Justice Day (PJD) emerged as a prisoner-initiated day of non-violent strike action to commemorate the death of Eddie Nalon in the segregation unit of Millhaven maximum-security penitentiary on August 10th 1974.  It was first observed in 1975, and in 1976 the prisoners of Millhaven issued a communication calling for one-day hunger strikes in opposition to the use of solitary confinement and in support of prisoners’ rights, in memory of Eddie Nalon and Robert Landers, who also died alone in solitary confinement.  Since then, PJD has become an internationally-recognized day of solidarity and action, both inside and outside prison walls, to commemorate deaths in custody and to demand justice for the human rights atrocities that states and their officials authorize and engage in.

Tomorrow, we will observe PJD for the 40th time because preventable deaths in custody, like that of Ashley Smith who died in a segregation cell at Grand Valley Institution in 2007, still occur.  Despite occasional public outcries and government promises for much needed reforms to save lives, little has changed.   While many Canadians were in tears at the images of Ashley’s treatment in prison, at least 321 prisoners died in federal penitentiaries from 2008 to 2014, according to Correctional Service of Canada and Public Safety Canada figures compiled by the Criminalization and Punishment Education Project.  Between 2008-09 and 2010-11, 80 deaths were reported in provincial jails and prisons, where people continue to die.  The recent deaths of Edward Snowshoe and Kinew James behind bars are a solemn and tragic reminder that Canada’s prisons disproportionately target, warehouse and harm indigenous people, part of the colonial legacy highlighted by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.  As they did four decades ago, prisons still kill and maim, still traumatize captives and captors alike during their time behind bars, and still greatly diminish the common humanity we all share.

It is not enough to shed tears and ask for change – we must demand it. A PJD march is taking place tomorrow at 4:00pm on Algonquin Territory / in Ottawa. It begins at the Jack Purcell Community Centre (320 Jack Purcell Lane).  Following a land acknowledgement and brief introduction to PJD, demonstrators will proceed to the constituency office of Ontario Minister of Corrections and Community Safety Yasir Naqvi (109 Catherine Street). There, former prisoners from the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre (OCDC) and groups like the End Immigration Detention Network, which have been advocating for detainees held indefinitely in a maximum-security wing of the Lindsay jail, will talk about conditions and make demands concerning provincial prisons operated by the Government of Ontario.  Marchers will then walk to Correctional Service of Canada national headquarters (340 Laurier Avenue West).  Ex-prisoners and family members with loved ones behind bars will discuss living and dying in federal penitentiaries, and demand real change to uphold human rights and prevent deaths in facilities run by the Government of Canada going forward.  The action concludes at the Human Rights Monument (at the corner of Elgin Street and Lisgar Street) where 40 seconds of silence will be observed to mark the past 40 years of inaction during which hundreds lost their lives while under the ‘care’ of Canada’s ‘correctional’ authorities.   

Concerned members of the community are encouraged to participate in this non-violent action.  Journalists are also welcome to attend.   



OUR DEMANDS FOR #pjd2015

End the mass incarceration of indigenous peoples and minorities

End the use of solitary confinement

End prison crowding

End pre-trial, immigration and foreign worker detention

End the criminalization of political dissidents, sex workers, and those with mental health and substance (mis)-use issues



To arrange for media interviews with former prisoners, 
relatives of current prisoners and their supporters contact:
Justin Piché, Criminalization and Punishment Education Project, 
613-793-1093 or justin.piche@uottawa.ca