Close X
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Space-squeezed Border Agency Pondered Putting Immigrants In Federal Prisons

The Canadian Press , 13 Oct, 2014 04:32 PM
  • Space-squeezed Border Agency Pondered Putting Immigrants In Federal Prisons
OTTAWA - Canada's border agency pursued the idea of putting immigrant detainees in federal prison despite concerns about locking up newcomers with violent offenders.
 
Canada Border Services Agency president Luc Portelance raised the possibility with the federal Correctional Service because the border agency feared running out of space to hold people, newly disclosed documents show.
 
The proposal provides an inside glimpse of a federal organization straining to find accommodation for the immigrants it puts behind bars as the government was bolstering its powers to detain more newcomers.
 
In a letter to Correctional Service commissioner Don Head, Portelance noted the border agency was assessing options for "increasing its capacity" and wanted to explore the prison service's "expertise and facilities to hold immigration detainees."
 
The border agency holds people who are considered a flight risk or a danger to the public, and those whose identities cannot be confirmed.
 
It has also become easier to detain newcomers. Federal changes to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act allow officials to hold people 16 or older who enter Canada as part of an "irregular arrival" — a group whose origins are unclear or a case where criminal human smuggling is suspected.  
 
An internal border agency background memo notes the organization has three immigration holding centres across Canada, but relies on provincial jails in other locations to house higher-risk detainees.
 
"In some cases, the provinces have indicated their intention to cease holding detainees in the long term or limit how many individuals can be held within their facilities," the memo says.
 
It adds that the federal government's "current legislative agenda concerning immigration matters and the potential for an increase in the daily detained population" make discussions with the prison service necessary.
 
The documents, prepared in early 2012, were recently released under the Access to Information Act.
 
Neither the border agency nor the prison service would make anyone available for an interview. However, in emailed answers to questions, the agencies confirmed that discussions about use of federal prisons took place.
 
The border agency did an internal review of options for the detention program that was presented to the organization's executive for approval early this year, said agency spokeswoman Line Guibert-Wolff.
 
"As a result of this process, in February 2014, the CBSA decided that federal correctional facilities would not be used to hold immigration detainees."
 
Guibert-Wolff refused to say why the decision was taken.
 
The Canadian Red Cross Society, which monitors conditions for immigrants held by the border agency, warned as early as its 2008-09 report about the problems involved with keeping newcomers locked up alongside violent offenders.
 
The practice can be "extremely stressful" for some newcomers, the society's report for 2012-13 says, especially for refugee claimants who have experienced armed conflict, torture or other traumatic experiences.
 
The border agency is examining increased use of alternatives to detention, including electronic ankle bracelets and special telephone reporting systems to keep track of immigrants it considers a risk.
 
Still, the government is moving towards reliance on detaining immigrants as an everyday measure as opposed to "something that would be used as a last resort," said Stephanie Silverman, a research associate on detention and asylum with a network that brings together scholars and policy-makers.
 
"You're beginning this move that almost normalizes detention into the fabric of immigration control," Silverman said.
 
"We should be talking about detention itself as the alternative to the norm, which should be release — which is how it was for many years."

MORE National ARTICLES

#AmINext Campaign Aims To Raise Awareness About Murdered Aboriginal Women

#AmINext Campaign Aims To Raise Awareness About Murdered Aboriginal Women
HALIFAX - A woman spearheading a social media campaign about missing and murdered aboriginal women says she isn't worried about the initiative fading from the public consciousness like other online campaigns have done in the past.

#AmINext Campaign Aims To Raise Awareness About Murdered Aboriginal Women

Toronto: Low Key Start To Doug Ford Mayoral Campaign

Toronto: Low Key Start To Doug Ford Mayoral Campaign
TORONTO - The Ford who is now in Toronto's mayoralty race is not expected to be out stumping for votes this weekend.

Toronto: Low Key Start To Doug Ford Mayoral Campaign

Newfoundland And Labrador Tories To Vote For New Leader, Premier

Newfoundland And Labrador Tories To Vote For New Leader, Premier
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Newfoundland and Labrador's governing Progressive Conservative party is poised to pick a new leader Saturday.

Newfoundland And Labrador Tories To Vote For New Leader, Premier

Indian descent man loses bid for Canadian citizenship

Indian descent man loses bid for Canadian citizenship
Justice Michael Phelan Wednesday ruled that Deepan Budlakoti, 24, born to employees of the Indian embassy in October 1989, does not have a claim...

Indian descent man loses bid for Canadian citizenship

Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court

Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court
VANCOUVER - A Vancouver woman convicted of killing her two infant sons issued a statement of remorse and regret in B.C. Supreme Court, saying every time she sees people with their children she thinks of what her family may have been like.

Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court

Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds

Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds
TORONTO - A new study shows prescriptions for high-dose formulations of opioids like oxycodone and morphine jumped by 23 per cent in Canada between 2006 and 2011, despite guidelines advising doctors against giving most patients such elevated doses.

Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds