Ottawa Citizen

It’s time to stop planning a new jail

If bail reform is serious, we don’t need more cells, writes Justin Piché.

- Justin Piché, an associate professor of criminolog­y at the University of Ottawa, is a member of the Criminaliz­ation and Punishment Education Project and the No On Prison Expansion (#NOPE Initiative).

As one of many organizati­ons that has called on the Ontario government to enact meaningful reforms to the penal system, The Criminaliz­ation and Punishment Education Project is pleased that Attorney General Yasir Naqvi is proceeding with measures designed to reduce the number of accused awaiting trial in remand centres. We’re also happy with his directives to limit the conditions imposed on those granted bail as a means of reducing breaches that often result in the unnecessar­y placement of people behind bars.

We hope Queen’s Park will continue with the work needed to diminish our province’s reliance on incarcerat­ion — including revisiting whether Ottawa needs a new and bigger jail.

If, as Naqvi himself recognizes, “even a brief period of detention in custody affects the mental, social and physical life of the accused and his family”; and if “jails are not the places you send somebody to get better. The right kinds of supports are in the community”; then why are hundreds of millions of dollars that could otherwise be spent on addressing social inequality, preventing harm and supporting neighbourh­ood conflict resolution capacity being diverted — under the watch of his cabinet colleague, Correction­s Minister Marie-France Lalonde — toward building infrastruc­ture that will sustain the proven failure of imprisonme­nt for generation­s to come?

As more details about the new “multi-purpose” jail emerge in the weeks and months ahead, its proponents will continue to claim that the expansive and expensive facility will benefit our community by meeting the needs of prisoners, contributi­ng to their rehabilita­tion and reintegrat­ion. During this process, new-jail supporters need to face the futility of their pursuit. They need to face the fact that this community has been here before.

For instance, when the decision to build the Innes Road jail was made, Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Allan Grossman — then Ontario’s minister for the department of reform institutio­ns — declared that new regional detention centres would open “broad horizons for the introducti­on of intelligen­t and humane methods of meeting the needs of those who enter this door.” We don’t have to look very far to see how past visions of progressiv­e humanizati­on were run into the ground once implemente­d behind the razor wire.

If a greater emphasis on bail is to translate into less of a reliance on jail, Naqvi, MPP for Ottawa Centre, and Lalonde, MPP for OttawaOrlé­ans, need to get on the same page, and put in place the necessary community infrastruc­ture to support this vision. Plans to build a new and bigger jail need to be thrown into the dustbin of history. There is a lot for us to learn from the past, and a lot we ought not to repeat.

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