Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2022 03:45 PM
  • Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications

OTTAWA - The Liberal government will give community organizations $18 million over the next four years to help people navigate the process of applying for a criminal pardon.

The newly announced move is the latest step in a federal plan to make pardons, formally known as record suspensions, less expensive and more accessible.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino says the money will go to organizations active in corrections, conditional release and community reintegration.

The funding is intended to help ensure applicants have access to the right information and resources, as well as reduce reliance on private, for-profit companies that charge fees.

The money will flow through the Grants and Contributions Program to National Voluntary Organizations, with a call for groups to seek funding until March 18.

The government acknowledges there are many Canadians who have served their sentences and are living law-abiding lives, but face stigma and barriers because they have a criminal record.

"Furthermore, lingering criminal records have led to the over-representation of Indigenous, Black and other racialized individuals in our criminal justice system," Public Safety Canada says.

A record suspension can open the door to meaningful work, housing, education and volunteer opportunities, helping people become productive members of society, it adds.

However, critics have long said the process of obtaining a suspension is too expensive, lengthy and complex.

In December, the government announced the federal fee to apply for a record suspension would drop to $50 from almost $658 as of the new year.

A bill that was introduced in June, but died with the dissolution of Parliament at the summer election call, proposed to undo measures brought in by Stephen Harper's Conservatives that made people wait longer for a record suspension.

Dozens of civil society groups are urging the federal Liberals to go even further and fundamentally revamp the system by automatically sealing a person's criminal record once they have completed their sentence and lived in the community without new convictions.

The government says it is exploring the automated sequestering of some criminal records for those living crime-free, through consultations with provinces, territories, municipalities and other parties.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares
West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. says it plans to buy back up to $1 billion worth of its shares. The forestry company says it is conducting a "modified Dutch auction" with a tender price range of $85 to $98 per share.

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced
Gabriel Klein will serve a life sentence for the second-degree murder of Letisha Reimer and the aggravated assault of her friend in November 2016.

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced

CP resumes rail service through Lytton, B.C., area

CP resumes rail service through Lytton, B.C., area
Canadian Pacific Railway says in a statement that mainline operations resumed Monday after safety inspections were completed of the tracks and infrastructure.

CP resumes rail service through Lytton, B.C., area

B.C. first province to introduce hydrogen strategy

B.C. first province to introduce hydrogen strategy
British Columbia is Canada's first province to introduce a business and environmental strategy on how renewable and low-carbon hydrogen can reduce emissions and create jobs in the clean technology sector.

B.C. first province to introduce hydrogen strategy

46 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

46 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
 78.1% (3,618,865) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine, and 37% (1,714,394) received their second dose.

46 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Abbotsford Police Department investigating possible luring incident

Abbotsford Police Department investigating possible luring incident
The Abbotsford Police Department is investigating a suspicious occurrence involving three children in East Abbotsford. During the conversation, one male invited the children to get into his car to drive to his house, where there would be other children to play with. The eldest child was uncomfortable with the conversation, grabbed her siblings and ran home to tell their parents. 

Abbotsford Police Department investigating possible luring incident