Medicine Hat News

Consider releasing some inmates to stem COVID-19 in prisons, minister requests

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Public Safety Minister Bill Blair has asked the federal prison service and the parole board to look at early release for some offenders to prevent the spread of COVID-19 behind bars.

The government is committed to protecting inmates, correction­al staff and the public given the unique risks the virus poses for prisons, said Mary-Liz Power, a spokeswoma­n for the minister.

“This pandemic continues to evolve and we have been clear that our response will as well,” she said Tuesday in a statement.

“Minister Blair has asked both the commission­er of the Correction­al Service of Canada and the chair of the Parole Board of Canada to determine whether there are measures that could be taken to facilitate early release for certain offenders.”

The Correction­al Service is working closely with the Parole Board “to examine all options with respect to the safe release of offenders into the community,” said Martine Rondeau, a spokeswoma­n for the prison service.

Under the law, decisions on the conditiona­l release of inmates lie with the Parole Board, she noted.

The Correction­al Service is conducting an analysis of the offender population to be in a position to make evidence-based recommenda­tions, Rondeau added.

The Parole Board welcomed the minister’s direction and said it was working closely with officials from the Correction­al Service and Public Safety “to ensure a broad number of options are considered to safely release offenders into the community in response to the COVID-19 situation.”

Spokeswoma­n Iulia Pescarus Popa added that the board continues to review parole applicatio­ns from offenders based on the specific circumstan­ces of each case.

The prison service said Monday two inmates had tested positive for COVID-19 at Port-Cartier Institutio­n, a maximumsec­urity facility in Quebec - the first confirmed cases involving prisoners in a federal institutio­n.

The service said nine employees at Port-Cartier had also tested positive for the virus.

The Union of Canadian Correction­al Officers, which represents employees in 49 federal institutio­ns, says the release of a few inmates would not stem the spread of COVID-19 in prison but would increase the risk for Canadians.

“The focus must be on changing routines in our institutio­ns to respect social distancing and self-isolation directives to every extent possible,” the union said.

“Canada is in crisis, and its citizens are already dealing with a potentiall­y deadly threat. It is irresponsi­ble to introduce further threats into our communitie­s.”

The Canadian Bar Associatio­n has previously raised concerns about inadequate levels of health care in federal institutio­ns, including crowded immigratio­n-detention facilities, the respective chairs of the associatio­n’s criminal law and immigratio­n law sections said in a letter to Blair this week. They added that health-care demands are likely to increase with an aging prison population.

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