Pubdate: Fri, 06 May 2016 Source: Kingston Whig-Standard (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Sun Media Contact: http://www.thewhig.com/letters Website: http://www.thewhig.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/224 Author: Ian MacAlpine Page: A1 CORRECTIONS OFFICERS WELCOME FULL-BODY SCANNERS The president for the union representing correctional service officers at Quinte Detention Centre in Napanee applauds the provincial government's commitment to install full-body scanners at all of its 26 correctional facilities across the province. "We've been lobbying for this for a very long time," said Tom O'Neill, president of Local 467 of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, in a telephone interview Thursday. Earlier this week, Yasir Naqvi, the Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services, announced that the scanners, at a cost of $9.5 million, will all be installed by the end of 2018. The cost includes 10-year maintenance on all of the units. The scanners are designed to detect items, such as ceramic knives, tobacco and drugs, that are carried into the facility within a person's body that normal metal detectors and other search techniques can't find. "The inmates have been bringing in contraband internally and there's really no way for us to monitor that," O'Neill said. Full-body X-ray scanners are already used in the United States and many other countries, said the news release. Ontario will be the first jurisdiction in Canada to utilize this additional security measure. Correctional Service Canada institutions are not yet using the technology. The scanners are being approved for all facilities after the province conducted a pilot project using the scanner at the Toronto South Detention Centre. From Aug. 31 of last year to the end of February, 16,427 scans were completed, said the release. Of these, 86 inmates were identified as possessing contraband, which included ceramic blades, marijuana and pills. The news release from the government also said the scanners are being installed to "better identify and prevent contraband from entering institutions, thus making facilities safer for staff and inmates." Adult correctional facilities in Ontario currently use a variety of other methods to prevent, detect, intercept, confiscate and reduce contraband within their institutions, including the body orifice security scanner ( BOSS) chair, hand-held and walk-through metal detectors, strip searches and canine units. Eleven facilities in the province, including the Ottawa- Carleton Detention Centre, HamiltonWentworth Detention Centre and the Toronto-area jails will receive their scanners starting later this year through 2017. Quinte Detention Centre, Brockville's St. Lawrence Valley Correctional and Treatment Centre, and Brockville Jail will get their scanners in the second wave of facilities some time in 2017 or 2018. "Moving forward with the installation of full-body scanners in all of Ontario's adult correctional facilities will further improve staff and inmate safety, reduce contraband, and build safer communities for everyone," said Naqvi in a statement. "I am proud to have worked closely with our correctional officers on this important safety improvement and look forward to continuing to transform Ontario's correctional system by increasing access to rehabilitation programs, enhancing mental health supports, and improving community-based reintegration partnerships" O'Neill said the body scanners will improve the health and safety of staff and inmates. He said the scanners will solve some of the issues staff at Quinte are experiencing. "The types of problems we're having of late are things like ceramic knives that are being smuggled in," said O'Neill, who called the smuggling of drugs a "huge problem." "Drugs and contraband tobacco. The tobacco means money and the drugs mean money and they both mean trouble for us." O'Neill said some criminals get arrested on purpose and bring the contraband in their body internally to sell at the facility. "That's how they make money," O'Neill said. Staff members are also exposed to the smoke from tobacco and drugs like crystal methamphetamine "We don't know what's in this stuff," he said. "We're ingesting the stuff, too, when we're at work." Smoking is banned in all provincial institutions, but O'Neill said inmates can find lots of places to hide while they smoke tobacco and/or drugs. "They go just about anywhere," he said with a chuckle. O'Neill said the scanners will be set up in the inmate admitting area. "It's just a better tool for our folks to identify that [contraband]." The scanners will also cut down on inmate deaths from smuggling drugs inside their body and having something go awry. "Sometimes packages blow up inside them and generally when that happens they don't survive." O'Neill said the union has been lobbying for the scanners for many years and credits union committees and the provincial government, led by Naqvi, for working together to get them in the facilities. "I give huge credit to our provincial health and safety committee and our provincial employee relations committee in really pushing this issue," he said. "This is a great step in the right direction, but there's still work to be done." Despite this announcement, O'Neill said there's still a crisis in provincial corrections when it comes to overcrowding and other issues. He said Quinte is getting 10 new correctional officers next week, as well as another 10 in the fall. "We haven't hired in a number of years and they [new officers] are in demand everywhere." Some units at other provincial facilities are not open yet, causing overcrowding in other places because they're waiting for staff to be hired to run the units. Back in January, 6,000 correctional and probation officers, settled on a contract at the last minute, avoiding a strike or lockout. Part of the agreement included the hiring of about 800 officers across the province. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt