Nova Scotia Must Protect Human Rights and Reduce Risks of COVID-19 in Provincial Jails

“There is no privacy to have video conferences or talk to your lawyer in private. There is no programming. They don’t give you any airing court time on the West Unit - you have to beg and plead. They’re perpetually short staffed so we are locked down more often than not. It’s horrible conditions. We don’t even have masks but then they won’t let us even have classes or programming. There is no rehabilitation happening here at all. All that’s happening is they lock and open doors.”

- Person detained at Central NS Correctional Facility

“For many months, conditions in Nova Scotia’s provincial jails have met, or come perilously close to, the definition of torture recognized in international and domestic law. That is, isolation for 22 hours or more per day, without meaningful human interaction, for 15 days or more. If this were your brother, mother or son, you would not stand for one more day of the conditions people are enduring. We can respect prisoners’ basic human rights while continuing the fight against COVID-19 – not simply through priority access to vaccinations but by supporting people in the community.”

- Sheila Wildeman, Co-Chair, East Coast Prison Justice Society

In mid-March, in response to the pandemic, Nova Scotia was successful in reducing provincial jail populations by nearly 50%. However, these lessons appear to have been lost as the health and human rights of persons in Nova Scotia’s provincial jails are again in jeopardy. In particular:

  1. Government has been silent on the need to prioritize incarcerated populations and correctional staff for COVID-19 vaccination;

  2. In-custody numbers have been allowed to rise to pre-pandemic levels (approximately 70-75% of whom are remanded to custody pre-trial at this time); and

  3. Through no fault of their own, prisoners have been subjected to ongoing, indefinite lockdowns and solitary confinement.

Further information, including a list of government responses urged by East Coast Prison Justice in consultation with other NS prison justice organizations, are attached.

ANALYSIS & CALLS TO ACTION

In mid-March, in response to the pandemic, Nova Scotia was successful in reducing provincial jail populations by nearly 50%. However, these lessons appear to have been lost as the health and human rights of persons in Nova Scotia’s provincial jails are again in jeopardy. In particular:

1. COVID-19 Vaccinations

The NS government has been silent on the need to apply the same science-based public health analysis to people in custody as to other vulnerable populations, with above average rates of illness and disease, cramped living quarters where infection can spread easily and quickly and frequent movement by staff and inmates in and out of the institutions. Public health priorities demand rapid access to vaccines in this context.

2. In-custody numbers

In-custody numbers show an upward trend, from a low of 251 following efforts to protect against COVID-19 outbreaks in the spring, to a high of 365 on Nov 15 – an increase of nearly 50%. The in-custody count on Jan 10 was 334. Approximately 75% of those in provincial custody have not been convicted and are awaiting trial on remand. Numbers routinely spike over the weekends as police drop prisoners at the jails to await weekday bail proceedings.

The unnecessary increase in the jail population since the province’s early adoption of responsible protective measures is inconsistent with COVID-19 risk mitigation and with protecting basic liberties.

3. Prolonged, indeterminate lockdowns and other extraordinary restrictions

Corrections has imposed a 14 day quarantine on new arrivals in provincial prisons in conditions that approach or exceed the definition of solitary confinement (isolation for 22 hours or more per day without meaningful human interaction). The conditions prisoners are forced to endure during this prolonged segregation are excessive, unnecessary and a violation of Canada’s commitment to human rights while mitigating the risks of transmission and facility-wide outbreaks.

Post-quarantine, prisoners continue to experience prolonged, indefinite lockdowns, for no fault of their own, which result in conditions that approach or exceed the definition of solitary confinement, and even torture (solitary confinement for 15 days or more).

Moreover, provincial prisoners

  • have been prohibited from receiving visits since March;

  • are highly constrained in their ability to communicate with family, friends or lawyers by telephone or video link, given limited periods out of cell;

  • report associated problems, including persistent hunger resulting in part from long delays between meals.

CALLS TO ACTION

The current conditions in provincial jails are unconscionable and contrary to Canada’s human rights obligations. We call on the NS government, including Justice, Community Services and the NSHA to implement the following measures:

  1. Ensure staff and prisoners have priority access to COVID-19 vaccinations. This will not only mitigate risk of transmission, it may help resolve staff shortages which contribute to lockdowns;

  2. Re-institute expedited bail hearings and bail reviews, including pre-trial release proceedings on weekends;

  3. Reduce reliance on custodial options including police lock-ups, through policies to structure police discretion and investing in community release options;

  4. Resume the use of statutory powers to effect conditional release of sentenced persons, starting with persons serving short sentences who do not pose an immediate threat of violence;

  5. Reinstitute the interdepartmental, community-partnered Collaborative Release Planning Committee to ensure timely access to necessary health care and other community supports and services upon release;

  6. Collaborate with the non-profit sector (including Elizabeth Fry Societies, Coverdale Courtwork Society and John Howard Society) to increase capacity for short- and longterm supports for persons released from detention and alternatives to pre-trial detention (“bail beds”);

  7. Ensure that all East Coast Forensic Hospital patients with conditional discharges are provided with meaningful access community-based supports and services immediately and on an urgent basis.

CONTACTS

El Jones, Member, ECPJS, Advocate & Scholar

El.jones@msvu.ca, 902-402-1000;

Sheila Wildeman, Co-Chair, ECPJS & Professor (Schulich School of Law)

sheila.wildeman@dal.ca / 902-476-2121;

Claire McNeil, Member, ECPJS & Lawyer, Dalhousie Legal Aid Service

isobelclairemcneil@gmail.com / 902-412-9320;

Adelina Iftene, Member, East Coast Prison Justice & Professor (Schulich School of Law)

aiftene@dal.ca / 902-499-9439;

Martha Paynter, RN, Founder of Wellness Within

martha.paynter@gmail.com / 902-292-7082

Grace Szucs