Pubdate: Thu, 12 Nov 2009 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Tom Brodbeck Note: Tom Brodbeck is a Winnipeg Sun columnist. SAVING KIDS FROM DRUGS, BOOZE, WEAPONS AND CRIME I love the idea of wilderness camps for punk criminals who repeatedly flout the law and thumb their noses at the courts. The idea, which is long overdue, was approved as policy by the Manitoba Tories at their annual general meeting last weekend. The resolution calls for the use of wilderness camps for young offenders as an alternative to conventional youth jails. It's a great idea that would go a long way towards ensuring young criminals are held accountable for their actions while providing them with the best chance possible at rehabilitation. One of the fatal flaws of Canada's Youth Criminal Justice Act is its over-reliance on community sentences. The official argument from the pointy-headed social workers who have hijacked our criminal justice system is that jail doesn't work and community sentences are the preferred choice for rehabilitating little Johnny. The real reason community sentences are used is to cut costs. Incarcerating offenders is expensive. So in order to control expenditures, governments have happily bought into the drivel that locking up dangerous young offenders is inappropriate and does nothing to reduce reoffending. The only problem is that the evidence shows this approach is not working. We see the same repeat, violent offenders break the law over and over again. The major flaw in the community sentence approach is that offenders find themselves back in the same poisonous environment that led to their life of crime in the first place. Probation restrictions are repeatedly violated -- laughed at, mostly - -- and offenders are returned to the same drug-addicted, criminal environment they came from. It's not that complicated. Stick young offenders back into the poisonous petri dishes from which they were spawned and you can expect them to carry on with their violent, criminal ways. Put GPS ankle bracelets on them to track their whereabouts and they take them off. Wilderness camps, or boot camps, would take an entirely different approach. First of all, offenders would be removed from society for public safety reasons. Somehow, public safety has taken a back seat to the warm-and-fuzzy objectives of restorative justice and community sentencing. That has to change. The overriding objective in sentencing should be to segregate dangerous, repeat offenders from society. Wilderness camps would meet that objective. But they would also have rehabilitative benefits. Removing young offenders from their harmful environments would immediately unplug them from a life of drugs, alcohol, weapons, gangs and crime. From there, teachers, counsellors and therapists could take their best shot -- through school, work and sports settings -- at providing them with the moral foundation their parents failed to. If dangerous, repeat offenders have any chance at all at changing their ways, it would be in this kind of setting. Naturally it would be expensive. Very expensive. Which means governments would have to shift wasteful spending away from bloated bureaucracies, corporate welfare and useless programs such as the long-gun registry and devote those resources to wilderness camps instead. It wouldn't cure all the ills of the youth criminal justice system. But it would at least help change some lives and most importantly, keep dangerous offenders off the street for as long as possible. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart