Springhill -- Twisting and Torquing the Spirit and the
Law
At Springhill the Task Force met with both the Inmate Committee and
the Native Brotherhood. The primary complaint of the Inmate Committee
was the way in which the CSC Drug Strategy was being implemented at Springhill.
The Task Force was told that where a prisoner gave a "hot" urine sample
he would immediately have his open visits or private family visits suspended
and be placed on screened visits. This was a general policy and occurred
without any personal hearing before the Visit Review Board. I advised
the Committee that this was not authorised by law in so far as the suspension
of visiting rights has to be related to a security or safety concern which
has a rational connection to the visiting rights. Only if the institution
can reasonably believe that the prisoner’s drug use relates to his getting
access to drugs through his visitor can a suspension of his visiting rights
be justified. (The relationship between the drug strategy and visiting
rights is the subject of a more detailed examination in Sector 5, Chapter 3). The
zero tolerance practises at Springhill also had an impact on segregation
policies. Prisoners charged with being under the influence of an intoxicant,
as the result of a hot test, were often segregated. Since loss of a single
cell was the normal result of being placed in segregation, this meant
that a prisoner charged with an offence and segregated, even if found
not guilty at the court hearing, would still be prejudiced as a result
of his initial segregation, because when released back to the population
he would be required to double-bunk.
After meeting with the Inmate Committee the Task Force met with the
Native Brotherhood. The clear message the Brotherhood gave was that at
Springhill Institution Aboriginal prisoners were treated as second or
third class citizens and that there was no respect for Aboriginal spirituality
or Aboriginal Elders. One Brotherhood member reported that he has been
in segregation three times in the last year, the longest period being
eight months. He was not allowed to have his medicine bundle nor have
access to sweetgrass and did not see the Elder in all that time. Not having
access to an Elder had been particularly difficult for him.
We look on the Elder differently from the way a non-Aboriginal
prisoner looks on the chaplain. For us the Elder is not just a priest,
he is more like our brother. For a native person not to have access to
and guidance from the Elder, particularly when you are in segregation,
is a greater deprivation because the Elder is of such significance in
our lives.
Earlier in the day Dan Kane, when giving his initial briefing to the
warden and staff, he had made the point that the accusation directed against
the CSC by Madam Justice Arbour that the CSC did not respect the law was
one that "twists and torques the spirit." The Inmate Committee and the
Native Brotherhood left the Task Force in little doubt that the way in
which the CSC had implemented the Drug Strategy at Springhill and interpreted
the provisions of the CCRA regarding Aboriginal
spirituality, in their view, "twisted and torqued both the spirit and
the letter of the law." Page 1 of 1
|