Pubdate: Wed, 23 Jun 2010 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2010 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/regina/leaderpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: James Wood PROVINCES TO SHARE COST OF ACT The Conservative government's tough-on-crime agenda looks like it will be tough on the Saskatchewan government's bottom line, according to a report on the federal Truth in Sentencing Act released Tuesday by Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page. The report estimates the additional cost of the act - which eliminates the practice of inmates receiving double credit for time served before sentencing - will be $5 billion annually by 2015-2016. More than half those costs will be borne by the provinces. Page's report estimates the cost of new facility construction related to the bill for Saskatchewan could be between $340 million and $560 million over that period. Based on modeling done by the Parliamentary Budget Office, annual costs - including construction, lifecycle capital and lifecycle operation and maintenance - could potentially rise to a level between $250 million and $350 million annually for a number of years. The Saskatchewan Party government budgeted $98 million for adult corrections and $13.8 million for major capital projects for the 2010-2011 fiscal year. The Sask. Party has been strongly supportive of the federal legislation and has downplayed the possibility of extra costs. The Opposition NDP said the report raises a serious question about whether the government understood the impact of the legislation when it offered its support. "We should not be making public safety decisions based on cost necessarily but we should be aware of what those costs are because, is the public any safer?" said NDP house leader Kevin Yates in an interview. Other provinces are pushing Ottawa to pick up the associated tab. Yates said Saskatchewan should do the same. "This change in law, which pushed hundreds of millions of dollars of cost on to provinces, should be paid for by the federal government in transfer payments," he said. The report said costs will rise in tandem with inmate counts that will increase on both the federal and provincial levels. Provinces are responsible for remand centres and for housing inmates sentenced to less than two years in jail. Page - an independent officer of Parliament - noted in his report that he had little co-operation from the Conservative government in preparing his report. Conservative Public Safety Minister Vic Toews - who earlier estimated the cost of the legislation at $2 billion - disputed Page's numbers Tuesday. Sask. Party Corrections Minister Yogi Huyghebaert told reporters he's not certain about the budget officer's report either. He said Toews had suggested to him that provincial inmate counts - and costs - may actually decline because more inmates will plead out sooner to avoid remand time and more will serve federal time. Nevertheless, if costs go up for the province, "we'll be there," said Huyghebaert. "Our number one concern is public safety." Saskatchewan's provincial corrections system is already overcrowded, with provincial ombudsman Kevin Fenwick warning this spring that packed conditions, combined with a lack of programming, were a "recipe for disaster." And the Truth in Sentencing law is only one part of a Tory anti-crime agenda which includes plans to eliminate conditional sentences and impose mandatory minimum sentences for certain drug offences that are expected to swell provincial corrections numbers. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D