Toronto Star

Canada’s Alcatraz to open this summer

Visitors will be able to tour notorious Kingston Pen, proceeds will go to charity

- PAOLA LORIGGIO THE CANADIAN PRESS

“This is an amazing opportunit­y for our city, the region and the country.” BRYAN PATERSON KINGSTON MAYOR

KINGSTON, ONT.— Canada’s most notorious prison will once again open its doors to the public this summer, almost three years after it formally closed.

Visitors will be able to tour the historic Kingston Penitentia­ry — which has held serial killers, rapists and bank robbers — from June 14 to Oct. 29 as part of a new arrangemen­t between the eastern Ontario city and the provincial and federal government­s.

Proceeds from the tours will be split between the United Way charity and local tourism marketing efforts.

The Pen, as it is often called, ceased to operate as a federal prison in the fall of 2013.

It opened for public tours for a few weeks the following year, also as a fundraiser for United Way. Tickets were snapped up quickly.

Kingston municipal staff say there has been a push for more tours while officials and consultant­s work out more permanent plans for the facility.

“This is an amazing opportunit­y for our city, the region and the country,” Kingston’s mayor, Bryan Paterson, said in a statement.

“We know there is tremendous in- terest in this site and our hope is to get even more people from across the country and internatio­nally to come to Kingston to see this historic site.”

The tours will be run by the St. Lawrence Parks Commission, which has hired a public safety engineerin­g firm to review the site.

Tours will be conducted in English, though the city says “as many tour guides as possible” will be bilingual.

The facility is partially accessible for everyone and reasonable steps will be taken to ensure full accessibil­ity along the route.

Since its opening in June 1835, the prison some have dubbed Canada’s Alcatraz has been home to an ongoing roster of the country’s worst criminals.

In recent times, the list includes serial child killer Clifford Olson; Paul Bernardo, who raped and killed two schoolgirl­s; and Mohammad Shafia, who helped drown his three teenage daughters.

The facility was shuttered because the federal government said it was outdated and too expensive to run.

Last year, the city announced it would partner with Correction­al Service Canada and other department­s to overhaul the former prison as well as the Portsmouth Olympic Harbour.

The process is set to begin before the summer.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Kingston Penitentia­ry, in Kingston Ont., will offer tours this summer with proceeds split between the United Way charity and local tourism marketing efforts.
LARS HAGBERG/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Kingston Penitentia­ry, in Kingston Ont., will offer tours this summer with proceeds split between the United Way charity and local tourism marketing efforts.
 ?? QUEEN’S ARCHIVES ?? Maximum security jail, the Kingston Penitentia­ry, seen here in the 1890s, opened in 1835.
QUEEN’S ARCHIVES Maximum security jail, the Kingston Penitentia­ry, seen here in the 1890s, opened in 1835.

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