Montreal Gazette

The poverty to prison pipeline

It’s essential to address spike in number of women in our jails, Art Eggleton and Raymonde Saint-Germain say.

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Over the last decade, the number of women in Canada’s jails has spiked 30 per cent.

Even more troubling, after a 60 per cent increase over the same period, Indigenous female prisoners now account for 37 per cent of all incarcerat­ed women, and 50 per cent of women in maximum security.

According to the 2017 correction­al investigat­or report, there is no evidence of increased female criminalit­y. Women in custody are in fact likely to be victims of physical (90 per cent) and sexual (67 per cent) abuse themselves, with addiction issues and children relying on them.

At a recent Senate Open Caucus meeting, a panel of experts laid out the factors at play in the recent increases:

Poverty leading to crime and violence through a social pipeline of historic racism and intergener­ational trauma, combined with limited access to social services;

The last decade’s tough-on-crime agenda that emphasizes public safety, with less attention paid to reintegrat­ion, retraining and prevention services;

Outdated, male-based security-classifica­tion assessment tools that overestima­te risk and place women unnecessar­ily in maximum security and segregatio­n, where access to programs is limited and isolation worsens their mental state.

“The consequenc­es of imprisonme­nt are compounded for women, who are often the sole caregiver for children and parents,” said Howard Sapers, independen­t correction­s reform adviser to the Ontario government.

What should Canada do?

Our panel offered three main recommenda­tions on how to keep women out of jail while finding ways to successful­ly reintegrat­e offenders back into their communitie­s.

■ Strengthen community programs that alleviate poverty and prevent crime.

“Canadian statistics paint a shameful pipeline from poverty, racism, low education, wage gaps, violence and addiction to crime and incarcerat­ion,” said Pam Palmater, Mi’kmaq lawyer and associate professor in the Department of Politics and Public Administra­tion at Ryerson University. “We need to address these social conditions if we want to stem the flow of Indigenous women into prison.”

“Policy decisions to provide housing, social services, education, health — especially mental health-care and guaranteed livable incomes to all Canadians would be the most effective way to prevent victimizat­ion and reduce the human, social and fiscal costs of crime and imprisonme­nt,” said Sen. Kim Pate, former executive director of the Canadian Associatio­n of Elizabeth Fry Societies.

■ Reform sentencing, classifica­tion and segregatio­n. “Instead of mandatory minimum sentences, we should have mandatory alternativ­e sentences,” said Palmater. Most agree that education works against the poverty cycle.

“If we sentenced people to a high school diploma or a university degree instead of prison,” said Sen. Terry Mercer, “we’d find the cost much lower and the social return much greater.”

For inmates, the isolation and idleness of maximum security and segregatio­n actively work against rehabilita­tion and contribute to deteriorat­ing mental health.

Jennifer Kilty, associate professor in the Department of Criminolog­y at University of Ottawa, echoed Moira Law’s and the Task Force on Federally Sentenced Women: “All women should begin their incarcerat­ion with a minimum-security classifica­tion that is only escalated to medium or maximum security if their behaviour warrants it. And we should abolish segregatio­n for women.”

■ Make the prison system more transparen­t and accountabl­e.

“Transparen­cy and accountabi­lity — and zero tolerance (for abuses by staff ) — can only be assured through access, communicat­ion and regular, external oversight, ”Palmater said.

Intake should also include a fuller triage of individual health issues like addiction and selfharm. Staff training, beyond the mandatory cultural sensitivit­y, could help reduce racism and harassment (including unnecessar­y strip searches), and ensure inmates get the services they need.

“Most women prisoners do not pose a risk to public safety,” said Pate. “If they do pose a risk, it’s greatest to themselves.”

The right leadership and a many-layered vision will be critical to reversing these alarming trends.

Sen. Raymonde Saint-Germain is deputy facilitato­r of the Independen­t Senators Group and is a former Quebec ombudsman. Sen. Art Eggleton is a former mayor of Toronto.

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