Times Colonist

Feds to ban prisoner segregatio­n

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OTTAWA — Eleven years after a teenager killed herself after spending more than three years in segregatio­n in prison, the federal government is moving to ban the practice of isolating prisoners who pose risks to security or themselves.

Legislatio­n introduced Tuesday by Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale will eliminate the practice of separating inmates from others in isolated cells for either administra­tive or disciplina­ry reasons.

Inmates who do pose risks, will instead be moved to new “structured interventi­on units,” where they can be removed from the general inmate population while maintainin­g their access to rehabilita­tive programmin­g, interventi­ons and mental-health care.

Goodale said the changes are a direct result of recommenda­tions from a coroner’s inquest into the 2007 death of 19-year-old Ashley Smith. The young woman from Moncton, N.B., choked to death from self-strangulat­ion in a segregatio­n cell as prison guards looked on at Grand Valley Institutio­n in Kitchener, Ont.

Smith spent more than 1,000 days in segregatio­n in various correction­al facilities before her death.

An Ontario coroner’s inquest in 2013 ruled her death a homicide, and made 104 recommenda­tions, including the banning of indefinite solitary confinemen­t.

“The approach that we’re taking now is entirely different,” Goodale said Tuesday.

“Using the structured interventi­on units, it will allow us to maintain separation where separation is necessary, but at the same time the programmin­g will continue.”

Currently, inmates in segregatio­n are restricted to two hours a day outside their cells and do not have access to meaningful interactio­ns with others, nor do they benefit from programmin­g or mental health supports.

Under Bill C-83, prisoners transferre­d to structured interventi­on units will be offered the opportunit­y to spend four hours a day outside their cells, during which time they would be guaranteed a minimum of two hours to interact with others.

Inmates in these units will also be visited daily by a registered health-care profession­al and be provided with access to patient advocates — a measure that was also recommende­d as part of the Ashley Smith inquest.

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