Montreal Gazette

HUNGRY INMATES BARTER FOR FOOD

‘National menu’ raising tensions, official says

- DYLAN C. ROBERTSON in Ottawa

A program aimed at cutting the cost of feeding federal prisoners has achieved only “dubious” savings while sparking racial tensions and contributi­ng to a deadly riot, the prison ombudsman believes.

Documents obtained through access to informatio­n laws reveal problems with the “cook-chill” program, which since November 2014 has had large prisons prepare food and freeze it before shipping it to smaller institutio­ns, similar to airline food.

“Playing with food can have detrimenta­l effects on the inmate population,” Correction­al Investigat­or Ivan Zinger said in an interview. “It can lead to tension.”

An April 2015 letter from his predecesso­r, Howard Sapers, states that “a large number of inmates are not receiving a complete meal” because of a buffet-style service that frequently runs out of food.

When Mission, B.C., inmates complained that selfserve portions often run out, Correction­al Service Canada responded that “we do not have the extra rations prepared or available.”

“This issue is beyond my control,” wrote one prison official, saying they’d asked colleagues “to suggest to the men to be more considerat­e of their fellow inmates when taking rations.”

As reported two years ago, inmates got sick after eating from malfunctio­ning heated food carts. Inmates have since phoned the ombudsman to report “eggs have ice on them,” and diabetics claim they’ve struggled to get timely access to food.

That led the ombudsman’s investigat­ors to visit a handful of institutio­ns to observe meals and photograph them. Images of chunky yellow goo prompted Zinger to respond with a single-word email: “Yuck!”

Another investigat­or emailed his photos under the subject line: “mmmhhh … delicious …”

Zinger says he realizes Correction­al Service Canada (CSC) isn’t a restaurant. “We’re not looking at filet mignon,” he said. But he’s concerned inmates aren’t getting a baseline of adequate food. “The pictures speak for themselves.”

Alongside the cook-chill system, CSC rolled out a national menu to standardiz­e prison meals across the country. Each inmate is given 2,600 calories, enough for a low-activity man aged 31 to 50 under Canada’s Food Guide. But Zinger said younger, active men require more calories, and his office estimates 68 per cent of offenders are obese and eight per cent are diabetic.

Zinger said canteen-purchased sausages and potatoes are now being bartered. “Food has become, in certain institutio­ns, even a commodity. And it’s now being monitored as contraband, because extra food can be provided and traded for other things.”

Within the prisons, the unsightly food has sparked wild rumours.

“The food is being tampered with. People are spitting, urinating and putting infected hepatitis C blood in the food,” an inmate claimed in a call to the ombudsman, which was never proven.

Similar rumours around the rollout of the national menu played a key role in last December’s Saskatchew­an Penitentia­ry riot, which left one inmate dead. “Food was certainly part of one of the triggering events that led to the deadly riots late last year,” Zinger said.

He also said the focus on reheating cooked food has closed one of the few career pathways that help inmates reintegrat­e into the job market. The national menu has also sparked racial tension.

In one facility, a Ramadan event went sideways when a group of inmates “was supposed to get halal chicken, but they ended up (being) given regular chicken,” according to one complainan­t. Around that time, the directive on religious diets mysterious­ly disappeare­d from inmates’ internal computers.

Zinger said prisons are also seeing an uptick in people subscribin­g to religious and medical diets, and he suspects many are doing so to avoid the unsightly food.

With new kitchens, more complaints and wardens changing meal plans, Zinger believes the cost-cutting program has had the opposite effect. “The savings are dubious to me,” he said.

A December 2015 slideshow showed CSC grappling with its $5.35 target to feed each inmate daily, sparking several proposals to save pennies on each meal.

While replacing English muffins with toast would save one cent, replacing four monthly chicken leg servings with “chicken casserole” to save six cents “was the most controvers­ial proposed change due to its popularity.” (CSC kept one monthly chicken leg while replacing the other three with stew.)

“All this, I think, has made for a bad policy,” Zinger said. “We see now fewer complaints, and I think that’s because of the hard work of wardens to use their autonomy to get around these national policies.”

CSC said in a statement it will complete an internal audit of its food policy in the 2017-2018 year, with results published in late 2018.

“All meals served to inmates must meet appropriat­e nutrition standards, and each menu must be reviewed and approved by a registered dietitian,” spokeswoma­n Avely Serin wrote in an email. “When the regular meal plan is not appropriat­e for a specific offender, an individual­ized nutritiona­l care plan is used that is based on nutritiona­l assessment­s.”

CSC houses all adult inmates serving sentences of two years or more, accounting for roughly 40 per cent of the 40,000 incarcerat­ed population.

 ??  ?? This photo of a food tray showing a typical federal prison meal was taken at Kent Institutio­n in Agassiz, B.C. The changeover to a “cook-chill system” has triggered many complaints about food quality from prisoners.
This photo of a food tray showing a typical federal prison meal was taken at Kent Institutio­n in Agassiz, B.C. The changeover to a “cook-chill system” has triggered many complaints about food quality from prisoners.

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