Pubdate: Tue, 11 May 2010 Source: Red Deer Advocate (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Black Press Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/Pb6JxtYG Website: http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2492 Author: Lee Giles Note: Lee Giles is an Advocate editor. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) GET-TOUGH MEASURES WON'T HELP Canada's Conservative federal government is a big improvement over the Liberal one it replaced. After all, the Tories aren't taking taxpayers' money and giving it to their friends as the Grits did during the Sponsorgate scandal. That said, the Tories are far from perfect. And as Prime Minister Stephen Harper gets tougher and tougher on crime, he's likely to set this country back a decade or two when it comes to justice issues. The Elizabeth Fry Society advocacy group is reporting that the number of women starting federal prison sentences in Canada has grown by more than 50 per cent in the past decade even though crime is generally going down. According to the advocacy group, many of those women have mental illness issues and not much education. Plus, the number of aboriginal women serving federal time has jumped 90 per cent since 2001. Not surprisingly, the number of incarcerated women is expected to increase as the Conservatives ratchet up their harsh law-and-order rhetoric. And under a Tory government, you can expect the country's incarceration rate for men to increase, too. Aboriginal men - many of them afflicted with fetal alcohol syndrome - in particular, are overrepresented in the prison population. While other industries stagnate in the current economic downturn, it appears that the prison business - such as it is - is about to really take off in Canada. After all, under a federal drug-sentencing bill revived recently by the Tories, Canadians growing as few as six marijuana plants in their dwellings could face automatic jail terms of at least nine months. The bill - supported by both the Conservatives and the Liberals - has been given new life even though the American war on drugs, which depends on mandatory minimum sentences, has proven to be an utter failure. The drug business is flourishing in the U.S.; yet, there have never been more people jailed in that country. Of course, stiffer penalties for pot growers isn't the only change likely to swell Canada's prison population. The Tories are also putting a stop to giving prisoners two-for-one credit for time served before sentencing (the credit was allowed in recognition of the fact that conditions in remand centres are often particularly unpleasant). That change alone could cost taxpayers about $2 billion over five years, according to Canada's Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page. And if the price of the Liberals' gun registry ballooned from $2 million to $2 billion, one can only guess how much an expense that starts out at $2 billion could increase with government mismanagement. Of course, there are some people who are simply too dangerous to walk free among the rest of society. So, obviously there will always be a need in Canada for prisons. But the move by the Tories to see more and more citizens locked up, with little evidence that doing so rehabilitates any of them, is indeed troubling. The answer to crime is partially prison, but it must involve a whole lot more than that. It must include jobs, addictions treatment, mental health counselling and education. Until it does, locking up more people will merely win the Tories a few more votes from hard-liners at the expense of transforming ordinary criminals into truly depraved and violent individuals who will someday be released into society at large. Harper's get-tough measures will not make Canada safer. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake