Toronto Star

Prisons urged to fix mental health policies

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA— Canada’s prison service must find alternativ­es to locking up inmates, especially women, with serious mental illness, says the federal correction­al ombudsman.

The Correction­al Service of Canada needs to create more agreements with community providers that would allow for the transfer and placement of offenders struggling with severe mental issues in outside psychiatri­c facilities, correction­al investigat­or Ivan Zinger said Tuesday.

Women with mental-health problems are more likely than other prisoners to be placed in maximum security — cells where cramped living conditions can heighten tension, frustratio­n and conflicts, Zinger said in releasing his annual report.

Overall, Zinger painted a grim portrait of federal prison life, citing high rates of mental illness, self-injury and premature death, as well as the long-standing overrepres­entation of Indigenous people.

Currently, there is no stand-alone treatment facility for federal female inmates. As an emergency measure, an acutely mentally ill woman can be transferre­d to an all-male treatment centre where she is kept separately in conditions that are far from therapeuti­c, Zinger said.

The practice is “completely unacceptab­le” and violates internatio­nal human rights standards, Zinger told a news conference.

He recommende­d the prison service fund beds in community facilities to accommodat­e up to 12 federally sentenced women requiring intensive mental-health care.

“The price of not doing so may ultimately be more tragic and (result in) preventabl­e deaths in custody and costly civil settlement­s in wrongful death cases,” the annual report says.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale welcomed the report and said concrete steps — specifical­ly for women offenders with mentalheal­th issues and Indigenous offenders — were being taken.

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