Pubdate: Mon, 28 Jan 2008 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Richard Foot, The Ottawa Citizen INMATES CAN'T GET TREATMENT, TRAINING PUBLIC SAFETY BEING PUT AT RISK, REPORTS FIND Social agencies working in the federal prison system say the Conservative government is ignoring the stark warnings in two recent reports -- that public safety is at risk because inmates can't get the treatment or training they need before finishing their sentences. The annual report of the correctional investigator, and a special review of the prison system commissioned by Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, paint an alarming picture of Canada's failure to rehabilitate its convicts before they return to the street. "It's a huge challenge for the Correctional Service of Canada to provide programming," says Hugh Osler, executive director of the Salvation Army's corrections branch in Toronto. "I have no doubt that lack of money and resources are an issue." The Salvation Army is one of several independent agencies providing counselling, rehabilitation and treatment programs to convicts inside federal prisons as well as those on parole. There is deep concern among these groups that the Harper government is turning a blind eye to the fact that convicts, including many mentally ill offenders, are languishing for months or years in jail without any correctional programming at all, and in some cases are leaving prison without being able to complete their prescribed programs. The agencies are also worried that the government plans to put more money into the system, not to solve programming shortages, but to build and renovate jails to house more convicts under the Conservatives' law and order agenda. "Programming is in a crisis situation," says Jane Griffiths, president of the Church Council on Justice and Corrections, which represents 11 churches that provide chaplaincy and counselling services to offenders. "I think the public expects inmates will receive treatment or counselling, but it's just not there. "Our major concern is that any new money will be going into buildings and not programming. There's very little programming now and this means there'll be even less." "My anxiety," adds Craig Jones, of the John Howard Society, "is that the government is preparing to build and fill -- to lock more people up, but not to treat them." The government has said little about either the correctional investigator's report or that of the correctional service review panel, since receiving both studies last October. Mr. Day says the government is still studying the reports and "sorting through the recommendations." But he disputes claims that the Correctional Service is failing to deliver programs to inmates. Rather, he says, many inmates are refusing to take available programs because they know that under Canada's statutory release law, all but the most violent offenders will be released from prison, under supervision, after two thirds of their sentences. "There may be a situation or individual case where part of a program may not be immediately accessible," he said in an interview. "The far greater problem is when offenders refuse to take any kind of program because they know they're automatically going to get out (on statutory release), whether they show an interest in education or work or not. That's the larger problem." The report of Correctional Investigator Howard Sapers, the government's independent prisons ombudsman, said programming shortages are now so severe that they've become a threat to public safety: "Too many offenders spend their time in prison without getting the correctional programs they need," the report said. "The result is ongoing violence and despair on the inside and increased risk of individuals reoffending once released." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake