Pubdate: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Janice Tibbetts, Postmedia News WITH INMATE TIDE LOOMING, HALF OF PRISONS TO EXPAND 29 penitentiaries to be revamped: official About half of Canada's 57 federal penitentiaries will be renovated and expanded in the next four years to cope with an influx of new prisoners expected as a result of the Harper government's sentencing laws, says the commissioner of the Correctional Service of Canada. Don Head told Postmedia News that although the list is not finalized, in the "ballpark" of 29 prisons will be revamped nationwide. The Harper government is expected to spend an additional $2.1 billion by 2014 to accommodate almost 4,500 new inmates expected in federal prisons. However, it has never confirmed how many prisons will be revamped, although senior Conservatives in recent months have announced $261 million in spending to build 1,100 new beds at 10 penitentiaries in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia. Head spoke to Postmedia News after a House of Commons committee meeting Tuesday, where he outlined a blueprint for prison expansion, which he said will involve a "multifaceted" approach of building cells and double-bunking more inmates, a practice critics say breeds prison violence. Head reiterated to the government operations committee that he expects two new prison-sentencing laws will add 3,700 new inmates to the system by 2014, bringing the total of federal prisoners to almost 19,000, once normal growth is taken into account. "The primary impact of the legislation will be a significant and sustained increase in the federal offender population over time," he told the committee. The Truth in Sentencing Act, which eliminates a two-for-one credit that judges impose to take into account pre-trial custody, is expected to account for 3,500 new offenders in the federal system, who would have previously spent time in provincial jails, which handle inmates who are serving sentences of less than two years. Head said the prison system will hire more than 4,000 new staffers to handle the extra strain. The federal government's $2-billion spending estimate, released earlier this year by Public Safety Minister Vic Toews, is significantly less than the additional $5 billion that parliamentary budget watchdog Kevin Page predicts it will cost the prison system to cope with one new piece of legislation alone. Head told the committee Tuesday that Page did not have access to the necessary government documents to draw accurate conclusions because many of them fall under the excluded category of "cabinet confidences," and were therefore blocked from release. Page, appointed by the Harper government as an independent analyst of government spending, has said he was stonewalled in his probe of prison spending. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt