Allan MacMaster is MLA for Inverness and justice critic for the Progressive Conservatives.

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One of the core responsibilities of government is to ensure the safety and security of all citizens. The citizens in our correctional facilities, staff and residents, are no exception.

Over the past 18 months, a string of serious incidents and injuries at the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility, known as “Burnside,” have led to many questioning the safety and security of those who reside and work there. 

Earlier this month, a 19-year-old man suffered life-threatening injuries after an assault at the jail. Last June, two more inmates were taken to hospital amid reports the incident involved one inmate being stabbed repeatedly with a sharp object. Last November, an inmate was taken to hospital after being assaulted by two others. His injuries required surgery.

These are just some of the recent acts of violence at Burnside. The staff there is doing our province a service. They deserve to be treated with respect and, crucially, to go to work knowing they will be safe and protected. It’s hard to imagine the staff can maintain that necessary confidence in the current work
environment.

Moreover, the inmates at Burnside are there for three reasons: to be punished for their crimes; to be rehabilitated so they become productive members of society; and to ensure law-abiding citizens are protected from them.

No matter the severity of their crimes, they do not deserve to continue in an unending cycle of violence. Additionally, allowing this kind of brutality to continue at Burnside poses a further risk to public safety. How can we law-abiding taxpayers expect proper rehabilitation to occur when, in many cases, the violence that lead to their initial incarceration is repeated during their stay at the facility?

Of course, there are problems at Burnside aside from the ongoing violence.

In November 2014, prison officials mistakenly allowed an inmate to escape while he was awaiting trial on several charges, including attempted murder. Again, public safety was put at risk that day. There is no excuse for this kind of incompetence from those charged with keeping us safe.

Our Liberal justice minister, Lena Diab, tried to assure Nova Scotians by pledging to get to the bottom of incidents at Burnside. Her response left me wanting.
To date, all the minister has produced have been one-page reports that do nothing to reassure citizens their prison system is being managed competently.
That’s not good enough.

The staff at Burnside deserve to know what’s wrong with their workplace and we deserve to see a real plan to fix it. The same is true for the inmates and their families.

I’ve asked the justice minister to order an independent review of the jail. At this point, the only way to get the bottom of the situation and to identify real solutions is for this review to begin immediately, and for it, be conducted independently of government. The minister disagrees. So far, she has refused my request.

The problems at Burnside didn’t start with minister Diab and the Liberals, but right now they have the power to fix them. An honest, independent, assessment of the problem would be a good start.

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2 Comments

  1. Well then, our progressive conservative hero, how do you suggest we proceed? More super prisons? Stiffer ‘mandatory minimum sentences’? Taking away the pardon system for citizens who have paid their debt to society, all but eliminating the “second chance” for those who made their mistake and were rehabilitated? **slow clap** I will admit that those are more directed to the federal Conservatives and, no matter how misguided their philosophy on crime and punishment is, at least they have the balls to be wrong and proud of it.

    You, all you bring to the table is the same, tired “we nee another independent… blah, blah, blah, study”. What that shit really means is “We don’t have a sweet fucking clue as to how to proceed,”, queue the political posturing, ” but we can find out better than you.” Way to lead, Fucko!!! Another tired, dime store politician.

    Perhaps if we could somehow come to the conclusion that most repeat criminal activity has a root cause, starting with addiction/mental illness and finishing with the growing socio-economic gap in our society, which is really a social problem not a criminal one. This is why crime and punishment don’t work as intended, it’s the wrong prescription. The real work comes before people end up in jail.

  2. We don’t send people to jail because they want to go. We force them. With that comes full scale social responsibility. Allan MacMaster is dead on. Burnside has festered for more than just a few years and an independent review — the sooner the better– is exactly what’s needed. With what has happened to date, who knows what it might find.

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