Vancouver Sun

Little progress has been made to reduce youth confinemen­t: ombudspers­on

- DARRYL GREER

B.C.'s ombudspers­on says the Ministry of Children and Family Developmen­t should be embarrasse­d by its neglect toward its commitment to reduce the practice of isolating youth in custody.

Jay Chalke said Tuesday that the ministry had failed to take action on a 2021 report by his office that called for solitary confinemen­t for young people to be limited and its prolonged use abolished.

Chalke's remarks came as his office issued an update to the report.

Children's Minister Grace Lore said in a written statement that no youth in custody have been separately confined in the last five months.

She said she was reviewing the report and directing ministry staff to “report back to me on all outstandin­g recommenda­tions.”

Chalke's 2021 report examined youth in provincial youth jails in Burnaby and Prince George who were subject to the practice between 2017 and 2019, and “what we found was alarming,” Chalke said in a conference call with reporters on Tuesday.

The report found that youth in danger of suicide and self-harm were those most commonly subject to separate confinemen­t, and “prolonged isolation periods were experience­d almost exclusivel­y by Indigenous and racialized girls.”

“Separately, confined youth had limited and inconsiste­nt educationa­l, mental health and cultural supports and in several cases, youth were subject to repeated use of force and forcible removal of clothing,” he said.

The report said youth were exposed to “significan­t harm” from solitary confinemen­t, in particular Indigenous youth who have long been overrepres­ented in provincial custody.

The update to the report said that in many cases the ministry was “moving backwards.” It found vulnerable youth in provincial custody were still being isolated from others in care for long periods.

“To date, there's been a serious lack of progress by the ministry on these recommenda­tions,” Chalke said, adding that he was “deeply concerned.”

He said that the number of youth in custody has dropped since the release of the 2021 report, entitled “Alone: The Prolonged and Repeated Isolation of Youth in Custody,” and that should have made its recommenda­tions easier to implement.

But the update said the ministry had made no progress on 15 of the report's recommenda­tions, despite a “commitment to implement every recommenda­tion” when it was released.

“To say I am disappoint­ed is an understate­ment,” Chalke said in a news release.

“I am calling on the ministry to account for and address its delay in meaningful­ly implementi­ng the recommenda­tions, in order to ensure more humane treatment of youth remanded while awaiting trial or serving a custodial sentence.”

He said that in 2021, the ministry had committed to a longer implementa­tion period for the recommenda­tions than the report suggested.

Chalke said in the release that the ministry “has so neglected this issue, they've been unable to meet even their slower pace of implementa­tion. This should be cause for embarrassm­ent.”

“Youth in custody who are further isolated through separate confinemen­t are placed very far from the site of justice,” he said on the conference call. “The ministry must do better.”

 ?? ?? Jay Chalke
Jay Chalke

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