Toronto Star

Top court gives prisoner isolation laws reprieve

Stay allows Ottawa time to consider Senate’s amendments to Bill C-83 Bill C-83 was introduced by Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale in October.

- COLIN PERKEL

Prisoner isolation, declared unconstitu­tional 18 months ago, will remain legal for now after Canada’s top court granted Ottawa’s urgent request to allow the current law to stay in force for the time being.

The reprieve from the Supreme Court, pending a full hearing on the issue, sets aside a lower court order that would have made administra­tive segregatio­n illegal after Monday.

The stay gives the Liberal government yet more time to enact a replacemen­t regime aimed at fixing problems that prompted several courts to declare the current system a violation of the Constituti­on.

“It is disappoint­ing that the attorney general is going to such lengths to perpetuate a practice that has been declared cruel and unusual,” said Michael Rosenberg, lawyer for the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n, which successful­ly fought the law.

In its request to set aside the deadline the Ontario Court of Appeal set in April, the government warned that banning solitary confinemen­t without a practical alternativ­e in place would create a dangerous situation in prisons.

Supreme Court Justice Suzanne Cote agreed the government had solid preliminar­y arguments and granted the stay request on Friday until the legal situation can be thrashed out “on an expedited basis.” That will be sometime after July 2.

Administra­tive segregatio­n, authorized by the Correction­al and Conditiona­l Release Act, entails extreme isolation of inmates prison authoritie­s deem a risk to themselves or others — when no reasonable option exists. Experts say segregatio­n can have mental-health consequenc­es that become more severe the longer a prisoner is isolated.

In December 2017, Ontario Superior Court Justice Frank Marrocco declared parts of the act unconstitu­tional due to a lack of independen­t oversight of inmate placement in solitary. Ottawa did not appeal that ruling.

Marrocco also gave Ottawa a year to fix the problem but the government twice persuaded a reluctant Ontario Court of Appeal to allow it yet more time to remedy the situation through Bill C-83, currently before Parliament.

The government has steadfastl­y maintained the bill would address the court-identified problems by creating “structured interventi­on units” that would, among other things, give prisoners more meaningful contact with other people.

Legal and human-rights activists branded Bill C-83 as window dressing. Last week, the Senate passed the bill with several changes designed to address the criticism. The government is now deciding whether to accept the amendments and it remains unclear when the proposed law might take effect.

Scott Bardsley, a spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, disputed suggestion­s the bill preserves solitary confinemen­t under a different name.

“C-83 allows for the separation of inmates when that’s necessary for safety reasons, while providing programs, interventi­ons, mental health care and meaningful human contact on a daily basis — all subject to binding external review,” Bardsley said. “As the summer recess approaches, it is vital that Parliament be seized with the future of our correction­al system.”

The bill would also scrap disciplina­ry segregatio­n. Punishment instead would involve a loss of privileges, a fine, or the performanc­e of extra duties.

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