Waterloo Region Record

Ottawa wants segregatio­n fight put on ice, say planned law will deal with issues

- Colin Perkel

TORONTO — A constituti­onal challenge to Canada’s segregatio­n laws scheduled to be heard in September should be put on ice in light of proposed legislatio­n and policy changes that will address the issues raised, the federal government argued on Thursday.

In seeking the adjournmen­t in Ontario Superior Court, a government lawyer insisted the courts should defer to Parliament and allow the legislativ­e process to proceed.

“Parliament is now considerin­g improvemen­ts to the statutory framework,” lawyer Peter Southey told Associate Chief Justice Frank Marrocco. “The attorney general asks you to adjourn this applicatio­n, while parliament carries out its legislativ­e responsibi­lities.”

At issue is the practice known as administra­tive segregatio­n that civil liberties groups, who opposed the adjournmen­t request, argue can amount to indefinite solitary confinemen­t. The isolation is frequently used to manage difficult inmates, especially those whose safety may be at risk in the general population.

Two years ago, the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n and the Canadian Associatio­n of Elizabeth Fry Societies launched the constituti­onal challenge. They argue the practice is harmful, amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, and means offenders are effectivel­y punished more than once for the same crime. The associatio­ns want any administra­tive segregatio­n stay beyond 15 days outlawed.

In response to the challenge, and a similar one pending in British Columbia, the Liberal government introduced Bill C-56 earlier this month. Among other things, the bill would limit administra­tive segregatio­n to 21 days — a limit that would fall to 15 days 18 months after the legislatio­n took effect. The bill also seeks to set up a quick, independen­t review process.

In addition, court heard that policy changes set for Aug. 1 would divert some vulnerable inmates — those with significan­t mentalheal­th disorders, the selfharmin­g or suicidal — from segregatio­n to medical observatio­n and care.

But CCLA lawyers argued the government’s “late-breaking initiative­s,” even if they came to fruition, would still allow a prison warden to ignore recommenda­tions to the contrary and keep someone in segregatio­n beyond the presumptiv­e limits. The proposed legislatio­n also doesn’t specifical­ly address keeping adults aged 18 to 21 in segregatio­n, court heard.

“There is no end to indefinite administra­tive segregatio­n in this bill, even if it becomes law,” CCLA lawyer Michael Rosenberg told Marrocco. “When the rubber hits the road, there’s no difference.”

Rosenberg called it an affront to the Constituti­on to punish people with 23hour-a-day isolation just because other inmates may do them harm. But Southey maintained that administra­tive segregatio­n is a last resort used in an “extremely complicate­d” prison environmen­t. Hard caps on how much time someone could be kept in solitary could end up costing prisoners’ their lives, he said.

This week, British Columbia’s top court rejected Ottawa’s request for an expedited appeal of a decision refusing an adjournmen­t of a similar but unrelated segregatio­n challenge launched by the B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n and John Howard Society of Canada. That case is scheduled to start July 4.

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