Pubdate: Fri, 14 Sep 2012
Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB)
Copyright: 2012 Winnipeg Free Press
Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter
Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502
Author: Jenny Ford
Page: A10

NATIVES HURT MORE BY PRISON CROWDING

Manitoba aboriginals are the hardest hit due to the overcrowding at
federal prisons on the Prairies, Canada's correctional investigator
says.

 From 2010 to 2011, the number of federal inmates jumped by 1,000 --
with 51 per cent of that increase in the Prairie region -- and 43 per
cent of those were aboriginal offenders.

"There's been a very disproportionate increase across the Prairies,"
said Howard Sapers, correctional investigator of Canada. "There is an
impact that has been felt in Manitoba."

At the Stony Mountain Institution, the inmate population increased by
almost 100 -- to 607 in 2012 from 511 in 2009.

At Rockwood Institution, a minimum-security prison, the population
jumped to 146 from 94 during the same period.

Double-bunking also increased 33 per cent last year in the Prairies.
Currently, 27 per cent of inmates in the Prairies are double-bunked,
compared with 18 per cent in the rest of the country.

New laws in the last two years have put aboriginal people at a
disadvantage in the prison system, said John Hutton, executive
director of the John Howard Society of Manitoba.

"Overcrowding in Manitoba jails is going to become much worse," he
said. "It's making people who are already facing charges stay longer,
making it harder to get parole and harder to get out."

Laws resulting in a reduction in the number of conditional sentences
and new mandatory minimum sentences have had a greater effect on those
who are socially disadvantaged, Hutton said.

"When our prisons are overcrowded the difficulty is that affects
corrections to do effective programs and do rehabilitation," Hutton
added.

In provincial correctional centres, there's still a bed crunch. It's
850 beds short for roughly 2,500 inmates, a number that has jumped by
500 inmates in the last two years. That being said, more than 130 beds
have been added since August 2011.

On Tuesday, Manitoba chiefs brought to light policing and jail
concerns in the northern First Nation of Northlands Denesuline in Lac
Brochet, where detainees were chained to the concrete floor of a
hockey arena because they didn't have access to RCMP jail cells.

With the introduction of Bill C-10, the new omnibus crime bill,
mandatory minimum sentences for offences such as drug trafficking will
have a disproportional impact on aboriginal people, further spiking
prison numbers, Hutton said.

Manitoba Justice Minister Andrew Swan said the province is working to
add more beds, including 200 this year.

"The building of additional capacity is something under active
consideration," Swan said in a statement to the Free Press.

"We, along with other provinces, have raised the need for
collaboration with the federal government on the implementation of
Bill C-10 and... as the federal government rolls out the changes they
are mindful of the need for more operational and financial resources."

The federal government said it's working to enhance rehabilitation and
crime prevention for aboriginals.
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