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Johannes Wheeldon, Ph.D

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Why Making Prisoners "Pay" Won't Work

Posted: 05/11/2012 5:11 pm

Mere months after passing Bill C-10, legislation that combined a stupefying number of failed crime policies together in one place, the Federal government is at it again. Time for prisoners to start paying their own way, says the Minister for Public Safety, Vic Toews.

As usual, the language used is instructive. Couched in terms of cost savings, Toews couldn't resist adding the non sequitur that these changes are designed to show victims of crime that prisoners don't get all the rights. As if there were a limited number. Sigh.

As the Globe and Mail reports, these new measures include:

Charging more to stay in prisons, getting rid of incentive pay tied to certain inmate work and ensuring offenders are charged for their phone calls. Theses are among the changes the minister says will save a total of $10 million each year.

As anyone who has been paying attention to this issue knows, Canada is in the process of importing tough-on-crime policies from the U.S. While even conservative Texan policymakers agree these have been disastrous in financial and human terms, Canada will embrace mandatory minimums and harsher sentencing. This will invariably lead to the reduction of community corrections programs that have been shown to best promote successful rehabilitation and reintegration.

Announcing that the measures will save $10 million a year at a time when the costs of the C-10 will amount to hundreds of millions of dollars, Toews is clapping himself on the back for blowing out a match while his house burns down.

Those of us who work in corrections know that most incarcerated individuals are from financially insecure backgrounds. They have little formal education and few job prospects. The idea that we should take more from those who have the least, to help pay for failed get-tough policies is abhorrent. It is also a sign of the times. So where does this all lead?

There are two worrying possibilities. While both would be a profound departure from our policies of the past, neither should be discounted. Progressives ought to start carefully considering how far the Tories will go to change the way Canadians think about justice. When policy is not based on what works to promote rehabilitation but instead craven appeals to base-emotions, cynicism starts to look like good common sense.

The first possibility is based on the underlying idea that prisoners should pay ever-increasing amounts for the privilege of being incarcerated. In some American states, this has led to the advent of Legal Financial Obligations (LFOs) or fees, fines and restitution orders that are assessed at the time of a criminal conviction.

Interest accrues and yearly collection fees are added onto the bill. The Seattle University School of Law argues LFOs represent a significant additional obstacle for those attempting to secure stable employment and housing post-incarceration. By placing financial hardships on those with the least ability to pay, an individuals' sentence is never over.

Paying your debt to society takes on a new and worrying meaning.

The second possibility flows from the first. While Canada has largely avoided the private prison industry -- sometimes known as the prison industrial complex -- past approaches are clearly no guarantee for the future. In the U.S., private prisons are common, despite the high costs for taxpayers, and poor record of private prisons in protecting and respecting the civil and human rights of those incarcerated. But what if prisoners and their families were forced to fund private prisons? What if instead of trying to break the cycle of poverty-to-prison-to-poverty, we actively embraced it?

There are some in Canada who seek to play politics with the lives of our incarcerated citizens. Instead of taking responsibility for supporting these folks to make better choices, funding education and treatment and modelling pro-social interactions, they seek to punish people -- hour by hour, day by day and year after year. These new policies are both more of the same old Tory talking points, and a worrying new front in the battle to forgo Canada's reputation as a global leader in justice policy.

 
 
 

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Mere months after passing Bill C-10, legislation that combined a stupefying number of failed crime policies together in one place, the Federal government is at it again. Time for prisoners to start pa...
Mere months after passing Bill C-10, legislation that combined a stupefying number of failed crime policies together in one place, the Federal government is at it again. Time for prisoners to start pa...
 
 
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10:55 PM on 05/13/2012
More of the systematic dismemberment of the things that keep us safe, and make us a more progressive society. Is it just me, or is Harper actually trying to mess up this country?
Why would you want to do that? Oh wait...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Juqm94sUV_E
10:47 PM on 05/13/2012
Oh no! whats that in the distance?!?!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Juqm94sUV_E

God help us all...
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Watson Richardson
12:09 PM on 05/13/2012
Who cares if it rehabs them, nothing will. Make them pay.
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06:27 AM on 05/13/2012
The tories want to raise Canadian crime rates to US levels by importing the US policies that got them there.
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Mike Keohane
11:37 PM on 05/12/2012
The focus of the government's agenda is to promote victims rights, however for some strange reason that escapes me, the government has no intention whatsoever of developing any programs or directing any financial resources to anything relating to victims rights. Apparantly the government believes victims feel much better if the government is petty and mean with criminals. The government is very immature. Almost childlike in their perception of the world.
01:21 PM on 05/12/2012
In theory, I think it's a good idea that prisoners pay for what they use in prison. After all, as a non-criminal tax-paying citizen, I have to work and pay my taxes, utilities, health care, for food, personal items, clothes, and post-secondary education, etc.
However, in practice, it would not work to our society's benefit. Prisoners who can be rehabilitated and eventually be released need to work and learn skills and how to manage money, and if they think they are working for nothing, there is no incentive.
Just my thoughts.
09:22 AM on 05/13/2012
The prison farm system, which from all reports, was very successful in instilling a work ethic and gave structure to the lives of participants. is being phased out by this gov't.

The reason given is that the skills the prisoners learn are not applicable to the current job market.

Most unskilled jobs only require minimal dexterity, and training is usually minimal, but having a proper attitude and higher self-esteem is what gave those released an increased chance to break the cycle of recidivism.
01:21 PM on 05/20/2012
Yep, I agree. 
12:16 PM on 05/15/2012
ferret you aren't thinking clearly. A largee portion of our prisoners are insane. Another large number are addicts - take ocycontin - prescribed and they say the so clalled substitute is worse. Then there are those who grew up in poverty and abusive homes or those who grew up in an endles number of foster homes. Some are beyond hope of anything but a clean jail cell.
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09:05 AM on 05/12/2012
The industrial prison complex needs inmates to prosper. To accomplish this they lobby politicians to pass mandatory minimums for non violent offences. Once incarcerated it is important to make sure that the inmates receive no skills or money so when released they will offend again.
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
01:39 PM on 05/12/2012
Reminds me of the way a cat will play with a mouse....letting it go only to be caught again.
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02:44 PM on 05/12/2012
That is a perfect way to characterize how our prison system is being designed to operate.
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Shandra Brown Valyear
Political Addict
07:31 AM on 05/12/2012
Most inmates will be released at one point. Do we really want them released after being caged up with no programming, no future, no hope and in debt? I can't imagine not being more angry leaving than when they arrived.
11:43 PM on 05/11/2012
Confronted with the cynical Harperite view of prisoner ‘rehabilitation’ etc., I am reminded of a quote from Michael Smith, in 'Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger', writing of ‘realism’, but it could be about cynical right-wing psychology in general: "the realist picture of the world begins with a pessimistic view of human nature. Evil is inevitably a part of us all which no social arrangement can eradicate." And as a logical ideological result of this 'pessimistic view of human nature': "The struggle for power—which defines politics—is a permanent feature of social life." I call it the 'jungle paradigm' in which everyone not on your side is your enemy -- to be destroyed or always punished.
10:23 PM on 05/11/2012
Private prisons use an approach that ensures that inmates will re-offend once they are released. This makes sense since they make money per inmate. They are in the business to make money not to rehabilitate.
Rehabilitation saves the taxpayer money.
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09:46 PM on 05/12/2012
To say nothing of the value rehabilitated individuals add to our society.
07:08 PM on 05/11/2012
The Harper government is sooo out of touch with reality. They govern with only 40% of the popular vote
which is declining with every wrong headed piece of legislation.
This tough on crime nonesense already proven to be ineffectual and outrageously expensive in that liberal hotbed Texas appeals only to the farthest right wing of Conservative supporters.
And they, Mr. Harper, are a minority of even conservatives. The rest of the voters notice that social, environmental and health programs are being cut while new fighter jets that we don't even need cost ever increasing billions.
This is a petty and mean spirited initiative from a petty and mean spirited government fronted by a petty man with a penchant for young girls.
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06:20 PM on 05/11/2012
An article I read this week about recidivism in prisons begins as follows:
“Can a prison possibly justify treating its inmates with saunas, sunbeds and deckchairs if that prison has the lowest reoffending rate in Europe? Live reports from Norway on the penal system that runs contrary to all our instincts - but achieves everything we could wish for.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-1384308/Norways-controversial-cushy-prison-experiment--catch-UK.html#ixzz1ubOYpxdG
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Jack Hope
Occasionally quoted by Mainstream Media
05:36 PM on 05/11/2012
Conservative policies are designed to create a permanent criminal underclass in order to justify ever more tough on crime measures that they can use to troll for votes from their somnolent suburban base.

It's not going to work fortunately.