Pubdate: Tue, 03 Nov 2009 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 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: Janice Tibbetts, Staff Writer 'HARDENED' PRISONS CALLED BAD FOR REHAB System 'Seems To Be Preparing' For Overcrowding, Watchdog Says Canadian prisons are becoming "hardened" places where inmates are increasingly confined to their cells, prohibited from having visitors, restricted in their exercise, subjected to lockdowns, and less likely to secure temporary absences, says a report from Canada's prison watchdog. "Many on-site visits this year confirmed that the physical conditions of confinement have been significantly hardened, especially at the high-security levels" wrote correctional investigator Howard Sapers in his annual report, released Monday. "The problem, of course, is that a more punitive and restrictive environment is not one that is likely to promote rehabilitation of inmates." The prison ombudsman's report also confirms that temporary absences, work releases and day parole grant rates are now at their lowest level this decade, and consequently, offenders are often freed at the end of the their term without the benefit of discretionary releases behind them. The report surmises that the crackdown -- an "us-versus-them mentality" -- is an attempt to control gang affiliation and drug use in prisons. Sapers, however, told Canwest News Service that he believes the prison system is becoming meaner to "brace itself for the storm" of an anticipated influx of inmates who will be captured by the Harper government's tough-on-crime laws that will put more people in prison for longer. "The system seems to be preparing itself for more people," said Sapers, who predicted prison over-crowding and a proliferation of "double bunking." For the last several years, Sapers has highlighted the problem of the prison system warehousing mentally ill offenders and this year's report said that it is getting worse without adequate treatment or workers to cope with people who often should be cared for by the health system rather than in penitentiaries. "Mental health-care delivery and related services and supports in federal corrections are perhaps the most serious and pressing issues facing the service today," he wrote. Sapers issued a report earlier this year that said that the risk of suicide in prisons remains unacceptably high because of the government's focus on security over the needs of mentally ill inmates such as Ashley Smith. A New Brunswick teen with mental-health problems, Smith was 19 when she killed herself in 2007 at the Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener, Ont. The prison ombudsman's latest report notes that there has been a substantial increase in reports of "self-harm" incidents, which more than doubled in the six-month period from April to September 2008, compared to the same period in 2006. Sapers reported that the gap between aboriginal and non-aboriginal offenders continues to grow and that the rate for aboriginal incarceration last year was nine times the national average. There are about 13,000 offenders serving sentences of two years or more in 54 federal penitentiaries. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr