The Province

Alberta hiding Indigenous prisoner rates

Report slams province for withholdin­g info in annual ranking of our police and courts

- GEORDON OMAND

OTTAWA — The government of Alberta is being lambasted in a review of Canada’s justice system as the only province to keep secret the number of Indigenous people it has locked up over the last five years.

The criticism comes as part of an annual report card released Monday by the Macdonald-Laurier Institute that ranks the provinces and territorie­s in terms of access to justice, efficiency, cost, public safety and support for victims.

Alberta is the only province that doesn’t make public its disproport­ionately high Indigenous incarcerat­ion rate, said report co-author Benjamin Perrin.

“It’s unconscion­able to keep secret the number of Indigenous people who are being sent to jail in that province every year,” said Perrin, a law professor at the University of B.C.

“We flagged this as a problem in our first report in the fall of 2016. We expected (Alberta) would start giving this data, but it hasn’t.”

Alberta’s Justice Department did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment, but the Edmonton Journal quoted a government statement saying it missed last year’s Statistics Canada deadline because of a software turnover and would provide the informatio­n

moving forward.

“That’s a bit like ‘the dog ate my homework’ kind of excuse,” Perrin noted, saying it failed to explain why the government has neglected to release the informatio­n since 2012.

“This comes at a time of very serious concern about the treatment of Indigenous people by the justice system. People have a right to know.”

While Indigenous incarcerat­ion rates are disproport­ionately high

everywhere in Canada, they are especially high in Alberta, B.C., Ontario, Saskatchew­an and Manitoba, the report noted.

The overall justice system received a mixed grade in Monday’s assessment, following last year’s inaugural review, which concluded the country suffered from a large and growing “justice deficit.”

The 2017 report card celebrated a notable drop in crime rates and a

boost in legal aid funding relative to the previous year, but those improvemen­ts were overshadow­ed by a spike in costs, lengthier court delays and the persistent over-representa­tion of Indigenous people in prisons.

The Ottawa-based think tank called for more data collection and monitoring by Statistics Canada to better identify and track problems that have, for too long, gone unacknowle­dged or unaddresse­d.

The assessment called for additional research into how Canadians view the police, courts and justice system as well as more informatio­n on victims of crime, including referral rates for victim services.

Perrin also pointed to the need for more analysis of recidivism rates and the number of criminal cases stayed due to unreasonab­le delay.

The 2017 analysis dubbed Ontario the most improved jurisdicti­on after it rose to fourth place from seventh, while Quebec and British Columbia each dropped two rankings.

P.E.I. continued to lead the pack, while Manitoba remained the lowest-ranked province, thanks in part to having one of the lowest victim restitutio­n rates and the highest proportion of accused offenders on remand while awaiting trial.

The report also found a “shockingly high” rate of violent crime in the territorie­s — in some cases 10 times greater than their provincial counterpar­ts.

The assessment highlighte­d some areas of improvemen­t, noting that, between 2016 and 2017, Canada saw a slight drop in crime rates, fewer police officers required per capita and rising support for legal aid.

B.C. earned the distinctio­n of having the lowest rates of resolving both violent and non-violent crimes, at about 52 per cent and 20 per cent respective­ly.

 ??  ?? Benjamin Perrin, a law professor at the University of British Columbia, co-authored a report card for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute ranking the provinces and territorie­s on crime and justice.
Benjamin Perrin, a law professor at the University of British Columbia, co-authored a report card for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute ranking the provinces and territorie­s on crime and justice.

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