Pubdate: Sun, 07 Oct 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Brian Lewis TOUGH JOB AS PRISON GUARD GETTING TOUGHER Union Says Drugs, Weapons, Assaults Are All On The Rise If any occupation qualifies for the "it's a tough job but somebody's gotta do it" description, it has to be a federal prison guard. And these days, working as a corrections officer for Correctional Service Canada (CSC) carries an unnecessarily high level of risk. At least that was the message last week from Gord Robertson, president of the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers (Pacific Region), on behalf of 890 corrections officers who work in eight federal prisons throughout the Fraser Valley. These prisons hold 2,000 to 2,500 inmates serving anywhere from a few years in minimum security to life in maximum security. In the last few weeks alone, there have been three lockdowns within the Valley's prison system due to contraband such as drugs and homemade weapons or assaults. Robertson, a former correctional officer now employed full time by the union, is speaking out because his members here and across Canada are still waiting for the stab-resistant vests promised last June. However, this is only the tip of the iceberg in terms of corrections officer complaints and concerns over Canada's prison system becoming an increasingly dangerous place for both guards and inmates. A 56-page union brief presented last June to an independent federal review panel on the CSC's future paints a disturbing picture of the increasing dangers the men and women who guard federal inmates face daily. It shows that as a percentage, the number of prisoners in maximum security has doubled to 15 per cent over the last decade. More important, this is accompanied by an "alarming rise in violence" behind prison walls. It says in 2005-06, the CSC recorded 933 assaults by inmates, including 376 against correctional staff; that represents a 28-per-cent increase over the preceding year. These assaults caused 764 injuries, including 243 among CSC staff. It also says there's a significant increase in inmate affiliations with gangs and organized crime, more drug abuse, more serious mental-health disorders and higher rates of infection with hepatitis C/HIV. So our prisons are becoming more dangerous for guards and inmates, Robertson notes. "Concealed homemade weapons are a particular concern," he adds. "Inmates are very creative in how they make weapons out of things like plastic chairs, dinner trays, etc., and in a lot of cases they make them to defend themselves against other inmates." And if an inmate is caught with a deadly weapon the consequences are minimal, the report shows. Where the average fine in Canada is $10 to $20, the same inmate in a U.S. prison would have two or three years added to his or her sentence. The report also shows CSC is sometimes reluctant to make changes to make working conditions safer. For example, officers had to fight hard for authorization to carry handcuffs as a restraining/ protective measure in breaking up inmates' fights. "The CSC felt that our carrying handcuffs would intimidate the inmates and interfere with their rehabilitation," Robertson said. "That was absurd." Nor is the battle to acquire stab-resistant vests over. Asked when the vests will arrive, CSC Pacific Region spokeswoman Line Guibert-Wolff said: "We're in the procurement process but no delivery date has been set. But the safety and security of everyone including staff, inmates and the public is paramount with us." The guards don't see it that way. "Correctional officers in our medium- and maximum-security units feel as if they are working in an armed camp," says their brief. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath