Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jan 2015 Source: Muse, The (CN NF Edu) Copyright: 2015 The Muse Contact: http://www.themuse.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2656 Author: Kerri Neil "TOUGH ON CRIME" FAILS CANADA Harper's Approach To Crime Is Tough On Human Lives Despite falling crime rates across the country, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been pushing a "tough on crime" agenda since the last election. This was most poignantly emphasized in his government's omnibus crime bill, the Safe Streets and Communities Act. This sweet-sounding bill packed a lot of punches: minimum and extended sentences for drug convictions, the potential to charge youth with adult sentences, a shift toward prison sentences over house arrest, and the denial of work visas to people considered vulnerable to crime. Harsher, longer sentences are the exact opposite of the trend toward rehabilitation occurring in many progressive countries. Norway, for instance, has rejected the punitive approach to prisons, instead choosing relatively short sentences and institutions that reflect a person's normal life without bars on windows. Germany uses a similar model, and emphasizes fines over incarceration, as well as re-socialization after prison sentences. These models take into account the desperate situations that drive people to commit crimes. In Canada, 80 to 90 per cent of prisoners in some institutions are addicts, and up to 40 per cent have mental illness. Many prisoners are homeless or victims of abuse, and a disproportionate number are Aboriginal. Efforts to expand and extend prison sentences take precious funds from programs creating healthier communities and instead spend them on hiring more court prosecutors or prison guards. Instead of addressing problems in our society, our harsh penal code focuses on punishment and then release offenders blindly, sometimes without even halfway houses to help people readjust to normal society. Mandatory minimum sentences for harmless substances like marijuana make this situation even worse. They overwhelm courts with trivial cases and flood prisons with small-time offenders who then become disillusioned with a system that oppresses them for crimes generally seen as innocuous. Convicts then have a harder time getting legitimate jobs after their sentences, pushing them further away from law-abiding society and reducing their likelihood of turning to government for help. We must also consider the costs of prison sentences. On average, it costs $322 a day to feed, house, and guard a prisoner, and more for higher-security prisons. Instead of trying to rehabilitate offenders into our economy as working citizens with skills that could enrich us all, the "tough on crime" approach sucks out tax money with its long sentences. This oppressive agenda discourages convicts from seeking legitimate jobs, preventing them from potentially ever being able to contribute to the country's wealth. We can see the problems of over-sentencing here in St. John's. Last spring, a young man was charged with chasing his father and stepmother down the road with a chainsaw. Diagnosed as bipolar and schizoaffective, he was sentenced to just 3 months in prison. Once released, he was effectively homeless. His lawyer tried to find him housing with Choices for Youth and the Tommy Sexton Centre, but both were at capacity. This case epitomizes the problems of a system that punishes instead of rehabilitates. This man clearly required professional help, and yet was released to the streets as a convict, scarcely able to lead a normal life. These problems don't have a simple solution; they require us to completely change our perception of the justice system. As the victim of a crime, it is easy to demand punitive action against the perpetrator. However, we must place that perpetrator in the context of bigger social problems. Shifting our focus to root problems and reworking our entire system to promote rehabilitation and re-socialization would build a fairer, more effective criminal justice system. After all, a prison sentence could be an opportunity for government to help, not harm, members of our society. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D