Ottawa Citizen

JAIL ‘AN INNOVATION PLATFORM’ TO TRANSFORM CORRECTION­S

- DAVID REEVELY dreevely@postmedia.com twitter.com/davidreeve­ly

The new jail the province is planning for Ottawa will have different levels of security for different inmates, proper health services and open visiting areas, Correction­al Services Minister MarieFranc­e Lalonde says, rather than just being a bigger version of the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre it’ll replace.

The new details are in a letter Lalonde sent Thursday to people who’ve participat­ed in the early planning for the replacemen­t, meant to counter criticism that the government is just building a bigger warehouse for provincial inmates.

So far, Ontario has been guarded about its vision for the new jail Lalonde first promised a year ago, except to say that it’ll have 725 beds instead of the 618 in the current jail on Innes Road near Blackburn Hamlet, which happens to be in Lalonde’s Ottawa- Orléans riding.

“This government will not be rebuilding the jails of the past,” the letter says. “Our expectatio­ns for minimum conditions of confinemen­t, staff and client safety, clinical supports, programmin­g space, family contact and supports, and alternativ­es to segregatio­n will be incorporat­ed into the design of this institutio­n from day one ... We plan on using this facility as an innovation platform to inform the transforma­tion of the entire ( jail) system.”

The new jail needs to be larger because it will have a variety of units — minimum, medium and maximum security, a more capable infirmary and so on — each of which will need a little bit of slack, Lalonde’s letter says.

“Given the diverse and sometimes urgent needs of the inmate population, it has been challengin­g to provide each individual entering OCDC with access to the right bed, with the right supports, at the right time,” she writes. The 725-bed plan also reflects both population growth in Eastern Ontario and efforts to keep people out of jail if they don’t absolutely need to be there, the letter says — a new jail just built to keep pace with the population would need as many as 1,400 beds by 2040, according to a ministry analysis.

“The ministry will monitor the impact that our broader investment­s in the justice sector, health care, housing, and social supports have on projected capacity requiremen­ts. The planned capacity for this facility will be assessed throughout the planning and design process against any observed decreases in the provincial client population,” Lalonde’s letter says.

The Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre is 45 years old and too small for the number of prisoners who’ve been sent to it. Nobody was supposed to be there long: provincial jails take prisoners awaiting trial who can’t get bail (that’s about two-thirds of provincial inmates) and convicts sentenced to less than two years.

Rehabilita­tion didn’t really used to be in provincial jails’ mandate. Nor were they built for inmates with drug addictions or mental-health problems. Correction­s officers have routinely put ill inmates in solitary-confinemen­t cells because there’s simply nowhere else to send them. Mentally ill inmates have died by suicide in segregatio­n, untreated and unwatched. The Ottawa jail has seen three suicide attempts that we know of just this month.

It’s morally disgracefu­l for a civilized society to handle prisoners this way, and practicall­y ineffectiv­e. People go into jail and come out less able to be productive members of society than they were when they went in. Maybe it’s satisfying on some level to kick bad guys in the teeth but it doesn’t reduce crime.

The Liberals have had a lot of pressure to fix the situation, not least from a Supreme Court of Canada decision setting out rules for tossing out criminal charges if they don’t come to trial quickly enough. But to their credit, they’ve moved seriously on improving the way the justice system treats people, accused or convicted, who don’t need to be imprisoned. That’s still a work in progress, but it is at least in progress. The jails, however, remain. Many of them decrepit, high-security only, without rehabilita­tion options, prone to total lockdowns whenever anything goes wrong.

“In terms of physical infrastruc­ture, (the plan) includes the considerat­ion of single cell accommodat­ion based on client risklevel, open visitation spaces, direct supervisio­n, green outdoor spaces, alternativ­e needs-based housing, and medical and mental health services,” Lalonde’s letter says, promising a new jail that looks almost nothing like the old one.

Which all sounds good. Though so did the plans for the Toronto South Detention Centre, which opened four years ago, incorporat­ed much of the same thinking and instantly became a notorious hellhole. It was understaff­ed and its technology malfunctio­ned and days-long lockdowns were at least as common there as in other jails.

For instance, direct supervisio­n means having guards in the same spaces as prisoners, not relying on cameras and secure posts. It’s supposed to lead to better relationsh­ips, more trust and a culture where tensions get nipped early. It also obviously makes correction­s officers more vulnerable. The system breaks down quickly, which is what happened at Toronto South. A jail has to have enough guards and other staff, they have to be managed and trained well, inmates have to be classified correctly and the place still has to be able to be secured quickly if need be.

Building the right space is necessary but not sufficient, and changing a culture is much harder than constructi­ng a building.

This plan is still in its early stages and will be easily cancelled if Lalonde’s Liberals lose the June election, but as it stands the government intends to have the new jail built by 2023.

 ?? WAYNE CUDDINGTON ?? Supporters listen to speakers at a protest held at the corner of Kent and Sparks Streets to voice opposition to a proposal to replace the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre with a new 725-bed jail.
WAYNE CUDDINGTON Supporters listen to speakers at a protest held at the corner of Kent and Sparks Streets to voice opposition to a proposal to replace the Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre with a new 725-bed jail.
 ?? TONY CALDWELL ?? The Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre is 45 years old.
TONY CALDWELL The Ottawa-Carleton Detention Centre is 45 years old.
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