Toronto Star

Alarm raised over detainees’ mental health

Use of Ontario jails for CBSA detention faces new scrutiny

- BRENDAN KENNEDY

An “alarming” number of immigratio­n detainees recently locked up in maximum-security Ontario jails had pre-existing mental health problems, a Star analysis has found.

The jailing of these detainees in facilities where they’re subject to punishing conditions such as frequent lockdowns and solitary confinemen­t, has human rights advocates renewing calls for Canada to stop using provincial jails for immigratio­n detention.

The Star reviewed 60 cases of immigratio­n detainees held in Ontario jails since last summer and found that more than half had reported mental health issues, ranging from drug addiction to schizophre­nia.

These detainees are treated the same as inmates serving criminal sentences but they are not locked up because they have committed a crime. They are detained, on an indefinite basis, while the government tries to deport them.

The use of provincial jails for immigratio­n detention by the Canada Border Services Agency is under increased scrutiny, with five provinces vowing to end the controvers­ial practice in the last year. Ontario, which is home to the highest number of immigratio­n detainees in the country, including half of all detainees held in jails, has said only that it is “reviewing” its agreement with the CBSA.

The Star’s findings are “alarming, but unsurprisi­ng,” said Hanna Gros, a researcher with Human Rights Watch and the author of a 2021 report that found immigratio­n detainees with mental health conditions were more likely to be held in jails, rather than less-restrictiv­e facilities.

“I think CBSA has demonstrat­ed clearly through their practice and their policy that they’re incapable or unwilling to provide meaningful care for people in their custody who are experienci­ng deteriorat­ion of mental health.”

The CBSA does not collect healthrela­ted data from detainees so it could not say whether the Star’s analysis was reflective of the broader immigratio­n-detention population.

The CBSA says it is “actively working” to minimize its use of jails, where more than 900 immigratio­n detainees were held across the country last year.

“The health and safety of those in our care is of paramount importance to the CBSA,” the agency said. “We take this responsibi­lity very seriously.”

Several immigratio­n lawyers interviewe­d by the Star said the newspaper’s findings align with their experience.

“Most of my cases have addiction and mental health engaged,” said Jessica Chandrashe­kar, a lawyer who works exclusivel­y on immigratio­n detention cases. “If mental health is not an issue prior to someone being detained, the experience of detention itself has a very negative and profound impact on a detainee’s mental health … Jail compounds everything.”

The CBSA’s website suggests immigratio­n detainees may be sent to jail because of their mental health issues. The agency’s website reads, “Individual­s with mental health issues may be detained in a provincial detention facility that provides access to specialize­d care.”

Gros said this language is “clearly discrimina­tory,” adding that it is “absurd” for the CBSA to justify sending someone to a provincial jail so they could get mental health care. “Jail is obviously not where you go to get help with your mental health.”

The CBSA did not directly answer a question about whether mental illness might be a reason an immigratio­n detainee is sent to jail.

Adjudicato­rs at the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board have raised concerns about the lack of treatment and harsh conditions in provincial jails for immigratio­n detainees with mental health issues.

In one case last year, an adjudicato­r described the CBSA’s relationsh­ip with Ontario as a “tangled mess” and criticized the federal agency for not taking responsibi­lity for a detainee’s treatment.

“I implore the CBSA to start moving away from its reliance on the province and to start developing its own systems and resources to deal with high-risk mental health cases,” the adjudicato­r wrote in August.

“Migration and mental health problems are not going away.”

The decision whether to put a detainee in a provincial jail or the lessrestri­ctive immigratio­n holding centre is made by a single CBSA officer. The officer fills out a form that assigns detainees a “risk factor” score based on the answers to eight questions about their history.

The form also includes one vulnerabil­ity factor question, which lowers the risk score if the detainee is part of a vulnerable group, including if they have “suspected or known” mental illness.

If a detainee’s score is 10 or greater, they are sent to a provincial jail; if it’s less than five, they’re supposed to go to the immigratio­n holding centre; and if it’s between five and nine, the officer filling out the form can decide.

But the CBSA doesn’t always follow its own rules. The Star reviewed two Federal Court cases in which detainees scored less than five on their forms and were still sent to Ontario jails last year.

The agency would not discuss any individual cases, but said the risk score isn’t the only factor in a detainee’s placement.

The risk-assessment forms have been criticized for giving too much discretion to the CBSA and for not affording detainees an opportunit­y to contest or appeal their score.

A spokespers­on for the federal agency described the forms as a “standardiz­ed tool” that “allows the CBSA to determine if there could be risk to the detainee himself, other detainees, or staff at a detention facility.” They added that the CBSA is “constantly updating and refining” the process “to ensure appropriat­e outcomes” and “national consistenc­y.”

Samer Muscati, associate director of Human Rights Watch, which is lobbying provinces to cancel their agreements with the CBSA, said the agency’s approach to risk assessment­s and its inclinatio­n toward more restrictiv­e forms of detention is a reflection of its enforcemen­t at-all-costs perspectiv­e.

“When you’re a hammer, everything you see is a nail.”

The mental health of immigratio­n detainees has been a long-standing concern of human rights activists, immigratio­n lawyers and, occasional­ly, the courts.

In 2017, when an Ontario Superior Court judge ordered the release of Kashif Ali, who spent seven years in immigratio­n detention and was once kept in solitary confinemen­t for more than 100 straight days, the judge said the mental health problems Ali developed during his time at the Central East Correction­al Centre “will not be properly addressed” as long as he remains in jail. It was one of the factors the judge relied upon to conclude Ali’s Charter rights were being violated.

In the dozens of hearings reviewed by the Star, immigratio­n detainees in Ontario jails regularly raised the harshness of the conditions, particular­ly in light of their mental health.

In one example, an Ethiopian man with schizophre­nia said he was locked in his cell for eight of the previous 11 days. Almost every detainee complains of near-constant lockdowns and limited time out of their cells.

 ?? ?? Immigratio­n detainee Kashif Ali was jailed for seven years. In 2017, a judge said the mental health problems Ali developed “will not be properly addressed” as long as he remains in jail. It was one of the factors the judge relied upon to conclude Ali’s Charter rights were being violated.
Immigratio­n detainee Kashif Ali was jailed for seven years. In 2017, a judge said the mental health problems Ali developed “will not be properly addressed” as long as he remains in jail. It was one of the factors the judge relied upon to conclude Ali’s Charter rights were being violated.
 ?? METROLAND FILE PHOTO ?? Central East Correction­al Centre in Lindsay, Ont., where Kashif Ali was jailed. Ontario is home to the highest number of immigratio­n detainees in Canada.
METROLAND FILE PHOTO Central East Correction­al Centre in Lindsay, Ont., where Kashif Ali was jailed. Ontario is home to the highest number of immigratio­n detainees in Canada.

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