Lethbridge Herald

Alberta’s child advocate calls for changes to segregatio­n

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — EDMONTON

Alberta's child advocate wants the province to decrease the use of segregatio­n and pepper spray in young offender centres.

Del Graff says in a report released Monday that Alberta needs to update its policies to fall in line with other provinces that limit the segregatio­n of young inmates, while providing them with better supports.

He also recommends that pepper spray, or OC spray, only be used in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces. Alberta is one of four provinces that allows the use of pepper spray in its young offender facilities, he added.

“The treatment of young people in custody should uphold their human rights,” Graff wrote in the report.

Alberta’s two young offender centres — one in Edmonton and one in Calgary — house an average of 90 young people a day.

Justice officials argue that segregatio­n and pepper spray are used to keep staff and youth in custody safe.

Graff says both options can have negative results.

Prolonged periods of isolation, either alone in a cell or being moved to a separate unit, can affect mental health, he says. Some youth interviewe­d for the report talked about being segregated for days or weeks at a time, while one had been in segregatio­n for five months.

“Most of the young people explained that their minds wandered and they felt angry, frustrated, depressed, and had thoughts of suicide and self-harm. They felt like they were going crazy.”

Justice officials were not immediatel­y available for comment.

In Canada, proposed changes to federal law would create better protection­s for adults segregated in prisons, but not youth, says the report.

Alberta policy currently states that segregatio­n used for punishment in youth centres cannot exceed 72 hours, but there is no time limit on segregatio­n used to ensure safety of staff or inmates, the report says. It also references a 2018 provincial court ruling that segregatio­n in young offender centres is happening without legal authority.

“It is alarming that segregatio­n occurs in Alberta’s young offender centres without legislatio­n to provide guidance and ensure accountabi­lity, transparen­cy, and fairness.”

Graff says Alberta needs to follow other provinces, such as Ontario, which limit segregatio­n of youth to no more than 24 hours a week and to no more than eight hours over two days for those under 16.

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