Edmonton Journal

Union applauds firing of prison employees

Four people dismissed following probe of Edmonton’s maximum security prison

- JONNY WAKEFIELD jwakefield@postmedia.com

The firing of four correction­al officers — including two managers — shows Correction­al Service Canada is finally taking bullying, abuse of power and harassment at Edmonton’s maximum security prison seriously, says the head of a union representi­ng prison employees.

“Over the years, you always get employees that are released because of excessive use of force or inappropri­ate behaviour,” Stan Stapleton, who worked at Edmonton Institutio­n for two decades and is now national president of the Union of Safety and Justice Employees, said Thursday.

“But nothing to this extent. (It’s) by far the biggest. To my knowledge it’s the largest release of employees for different abuses that have happened — certainly in my career.”

On Tuesday, Correction­al Service Canada said two correction­al officers and two managers — who were among a number of staff suspended last September — had been fired as part of an investigat­ion into harassment, intimidati­on and bullying.

More disciplina­ry hearings are pending, and the Edmonton Police Service is conducting a separate investigat­ion into allegation­s of criminal activity.

The correction­al service hired external investigat­ions in September to look into bullying and harassment allegation­s, which staff and inmates made to Commission­er of Correction­s Don Head.

Stapleton, a former correction­al officer, last worked at the prison in 2006. His union represents parole officers, program officers, tradespeop­le, clerical staff and food services staff and tradespeop­le.

In an op-ed for Postmedia, Stapleton cited an inmate “fight club” and claims female staff were threatened by having high-risk male offenders “unleashed” on them.

“Women have been abused, sexually assaulted, sexually harassed,” he said. “They are not treated the same as male officers.”

It’s significan­t that people in management positions have been fired, said Stapleton, because correction­al managers are in charge of the institutio­n after hours and on weekends and “have a direct responsibi­lity to ensure that this type of thing didn’t happen, and if it happened to report it.”

“And yet, as it turns out, at least two of them were an integral part of allowing the type of behaviour that was happening to continue.”

On Monday, Correction­al Service Canada also appointed France Gratton as new regional deputy commission­er for the Prairie region. Gary Sears, who previously served as spokespers­on for the institutio­n, was named the new warden.

Stapleton said it’s important prison leadership take complaints seriously. Previous managers would often require complaints in writing, which kept some employees from coming forward.

“When people come forward to managers and ... managers tell that person, ‘We’re not going to do anything unless you put it in writing,’ those people many times will not put it in writing because they fear retaliatio­n,” he said.

“Managers now are finding themselves in a position where they really have to deal with it, and they can’t put it on the corner of the desk.”

Speaking to reporters Wednesday in Winnipeg, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said he would not comment on the details of the investigat­ion.

 ?? CLAIRE THEOBALD/FILE ?? Union of Solicitor General Employees delegates rally last fall against alleged abuse at Edmonton’s maximum security prison.
CLAIRE THEOBALD/FILE Union of Solicitor General Employees delegates rally last fall against alleged abuse at Edmonton’s maximum security prison.

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