Showing posts with label Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. Show all posts

Friday, March 23, 2012

Neo-Conservative Crime and Cruelty



The Safe Streets and Communities Act: Neo-Conservative Crime and Cruelty
sheryl jarvis

[People] fight for freedom, then they begin to accumulate laws to take it away from themselves.  ~Author Unknown

Summary
Demonstrates the relationships between the corporate elite, right wing governments and the structuring of public policy designed to support corporate interests, including tactics of criminalisation such as Bill C10. Will explore the riddle between conservative claims that tougher sanctions equal increased public safety, and the research which shows the opposite is more likely to be true. Also considering the reasons that could be behind this brand of dishonesty and our means for seeking out the truth. 

 Law and Order

According to Statistics Canada, 2010 closed with the 33rd consecutive drop in both the rate and the severity of crime across Canada.  Despite this, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's conservative government has reintroduced the much anticipated law and order agenda in the form of one enormous crime Bill.  Bill C10, the “Safe Streets and Communities Act” combines nine of the former Bills which had failed to pass into law previously due to opposition and repeated prorogues of parliament. 

Safe Streets and Communities: Who Wouldn’t Want That?

If locking more people up for longer periods of time made us safer this Bill would be great.  However legislating changes to behaviour has never been a successful tactic.  Despite these facts and despite how widespread resistance to Bill C10 has been, it has thus far been futile.  Sandra Chu, Senior Policy Analyst for the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network spoke with me recently about the problem with trying to legislate behaviour changes.  She said “...we know many aspects of Bill C-10 will not work to “fight crime”, and in fact, [will] worsen prison conditions, violate prisoners’ human rights (including their right to health), destroy families and communities, and cost significant money without actually achieving public safety.”  It seems that there is no bridging the gap between conservative ideology and the truth behind community harm.  The truth is that most lawbreaking has its creation in poverty, unemployment, inequality, and trauma.  Addressing these issues requires thoughtfulness and a commitment to evidence-based practices which reflect a human rights framework.    

Precisely because Bill C10 ignores evidence and human rights, all manner of people have resisted it.  Including opposition parties, the 37,000 members of the Canadian Bar Association, 563 doctors who signed the Urban Health Research Initiative’s letter opposing Bill S10 (an earlier version of and now a portion of C10 making changes to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act), the union representing prison guards, NUPGE, the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy, the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, NORML Canada, the Toronto Harm Reduction Task Force, Pivot Legal Society, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, and the list goes on.  Represented are thousands of social workers, healthcare providers, teachers, law enforcement, and clergy who recognize the hyperbole for what it is, partisan ideology, greed, and fear. 

Neo-Conservative Ideology and Greed

Harper's political base doesn’t care much about sound statistics and proven best practices.  Especially not if these are competing with the satisfaction obtained through retribution and high profit margins.  The hang ‘em high approach has been used successfully in the past by the Harris government in Ontario.  During the 90’s they made “war on the poor”, demonizing us (as in no more free rides for lazy, drug addicted, criminals) while simultaneously cutting the services and welfare rates that could have prevented many from becoming addicted and criminalised in the first place.  Ms. Chu spoke to me about the outcome of such attitudes.  She said “[they]lead to increasing numbers of people without access to crucial care, treatment and support, increasing numbers of people feeling marginalized by society, and increasing numbers of people who will be incarcerated as a result.”

Harris’ tactics were successful because he was seen by many to be demanding nothing more than the revered traits of self-sufficiency and hard work, held dear by many Canadians.  However its important to remember that the majority of the poor, including those on social assistance would rather not be in that situation.  The same holds true for those with problematic substance use issues and those cycling in and out of our jails.  Ms. Chu suggests that in order to resist tactics that demonize the vulnerable we need to hear from the vulnerable directly. “I think it’s important to create a space for the vulnerable to speak, so they are not dehumanized.  Support them in doing so, by ensuring people who use drugs and other marginalized communities are telling their stories at media events, conferences... etc.”

Neo-Conservative Agenda Equals Increased Crime and Less Safety

Stephen Harper has claimed that Canadians are unsafe and that only by restricting our freedoms further will we achieve safety.  In fact what the Harper conservatives will likely achieve is not increased safety but an increase in that which we refer to as crime.  As our freedoms are increasingly made illegal, and social programs which stave off desperation are defunded, our “crime” rates will soar, thus justifying the prison building boom and tough on crime rhetoric.  The people of the USA have learned these lessons the hard way. 

Decades of tough on crime, war on drugs ideology translated into programs of mass incarceration.  Studies found that those communities who are most impacted, suffer increasing, as opposed to decreasing rates of “crime”.  Those left behind are forced more often to make choices between seeing their children do without necessities or engaging in “crime” in order to provide for them.  The US Drug Policy Alliance, which promotes alternatives to drug prohibition explains the US situation, "Mass arrests and incarceration of people of color, largely due to drug law violations have hobbled families and communities by stigmatizing and removing substantial numbers of men and women.”  If criminalizing and incarcerating people are known to make us less safe then why is the conservative government doing it?

Privatized Prisons

Those warehoused under the new regime will become the raw material for a profitable industry popular in the U.S., privatized, for profit prisons.  “Crime” must be increased to keep the bodies flowing on a pay per capita basis.  One of the largest prison privatization companies in the USA, the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) noted this last point as a problem of concern in their 2010 annual report. ‘The demand for our facilities and services could be adversely affected by leniency in conviction or parole standards and sentencing practices…” CCA is the same US corporation which lobbied our Canadian government in support of Bill C10.  
Once locked up, prisoner bodies can be transformed into even more profit in the form of prisoner labour, a common practice in the US, but not yet widely used in Canada.  Free labour will be sold to 3rd parties at discounted and very profitable rates.  Corporations able to win prison contracts will gain an unfair advantage over the competition while the larger market wages are driven down.  Not to mention the impacts on the mental well being of prisoners who are treated as commodities. 

The History of Privatized Prisons in Canada

For profit prisons were attempted briefly by the Harris government in the form of a comparison experiment between two of the then newly constructed super-jails.  These new jails were devised by the Harris government to warehouse human beings as sparingly as possible.  The contract to run the Penetang jail was awarded to the US based Management and Training Corp.  While they were indeed able to save the province money on the front end, in 2006 the CBC reported that the facility had been transferred back to the state because of “inferior security”, “health care”, and an increase in rates of repeat lawbreaking.  The idea of prison privatization in Ontario has remained quite ever since.

British Columbia's P3 (Public/Private Partnerships) Craze

However BC has picked up the torch and is running with it full steam ahead.  With the creation of Partnerships BC, one of a series of such organizations operated at all levels of government across Canada, the doors to public service privatization have been flung open wide.  In BC everything from public healthcare services and utilities to longterm care facilities and prisons have been privatized or converted to a P3. 

Stephanie Seaton, a British Colombian researcher and the creator of summerlandbc.wordpress, and thieverycorp.wordpress, confirms that there is currently one finalized P3 prison contract  in the works in BC.  It involves the building and operation of a remand centre by Brookfield Properties Corporation in Surrey, BC.  
Contracts awarded to build and run prisons are not the only ones allowing firms to profit from mass criminalisation.  According to Stark Raven News, a prisoner support and education service in British Columbia there are currently P3 contracts within the provincial jail system that focus on service and supply contracts rather than prison building and maintenance.  These include for profit contracts to supply inmate canteens, food, and telephone services, healthcare, and even substance abuse programs. 
Additional prison building and maintenance P3's are being considered in Summerland and Peniticton, BC.  Both have been met with substantial opposition from the local communities, who are mainly specifying safety concerns.  Ms. Seaton is herself a Summerland, BC resident and she spoke with me by phone recently.  She raised a number of potential concerns with these kinds of partnerships including:

ñ Profit to shareholders their top priority
ñ Cost cutting to increase profits (ex: hiring fewer and less experienced staff)
ñ   For-profit facilities have a financial stake to ensure facilities operate at capacity

The problem raised here of course is that prison privatization creates an entire industry which benefits directly from the increased criminalisation and incarceration of ever expanding populations.  In the US these industries have produced powerful lobby groups which advocate for and in some cases even assist in drafting tougher crime legislation.  It has become a runaway train and very difficult to stop.

Exploitative Discrimination in Canada: Then and Now

The 21st century effort to privatize public services is not the first time we have seen a push to put public responsibilities into the hands of private institutions.  Historic policies of capitalism and colonisation resulted in the long term, mass criminalisation and marginalisation of vulnerable, aboriginal populations in Canada. 

I asked Doug King, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society in BC what he thought about the following quote:
“Giving corporations powers over prisoners is a different matter, I would argue, much like giving churches power over residential schools” (as quoted by Keith Reynolds in a blog for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives)

Mr. King feels that there are “parallels” between what church and state did to aboriginal families (and continue to do to this day) and what state and corporation conspire to do to vulnerable populations today.  King stated that with residential schools, the government had contracted out its policies to non-governmental institutions for the purpose of “changing behaviours.”  And that in the residential school system it had “resulted in the physical and sexual abuse of children.  He went on to say that “Prison privatization may not manifest in that form specifically, but it may show up in other forms” [of abuse].  Such as conditions related to“overcrowding”

Stephanie Seaton has a theory around the politics that can lead to these kinds of policies in the first place, “A capitalist society is based on the idolization of people, power, and things that represent money. The marginalised represent the opposite, which is perhaps why society condemns them. They are deemed to be unimportant by those in power....”

Neo-Conservative Fear

Privatization of prisons and expansion of Harper's law and order agenda is but one small piece of a larger picture.  The neo-conservative agenda has long been to privatize public resources, slash social services, and provide complete freedom for corporations while simultaneously increasing social control over individuals.  Because there are substantial disadvantages to most of us in these methods and because of the potential for resistance on the grandest of scales, the neo-conservatives fear us – that is we the 99%.  Because of this we are seeing greater restrictions to civil freedoms including our right to dissent, the erosion of worker rights, a focus on law and order, and prison expansion on a scale unprecedented in Canadian history. 



More Canadians Criminalized

One in ten Canadians currently has a criminal record (Canadian Criminal Justice Association, 2010).  The majority of whom suffer the consequent and ongoing emotional, social, familial, and financial impacts related to criminalisation.  As more Canadians are criminalised and experience encroachments on freedoms, expanded cuts to social services, and diminished hope for the future, the more desperate and angry people will become and consequently, the more ready to resist.  There is no reason why this government should feel a need to push people to such a brink of desperation.  Far more effective means exist, such as ensuring basic needs are met first and foremost.  Ms. Chu agrees, “Wouldn’t resources be better spent on education, health and social supports that have been proven to actually address the root causes of crime?” 

To ensure conservative plans for fortune and greed are not thwarted, social control must be continuously ramped up.  Judicial and prison expansion agendas, accompanied by deregulation ensure that profits through prison privatization are freer to flow.  Prison privatization is attractive to corporations because they are able to attain certain freedoms they could only dream of elsewhere in “free” society.  Prisoners often don’t have to be paid, nor are they permitted to form unions, and further many are restricted politically, forbidden to vote.  These are gifts to those who wish to see capitalism entirely unrestrained by “irritating” controls like progressive taxation, good wages, and human rights.


Capitalism, Government, and the News Media in Canada  

The major media outlets are owned and operated by just a few large corporations in Canada, which greatly restricts the diversity of news we receive.  These news conglomerates are often but one piece of a much larger pie. They are mostly owned by huge multinationals and used by their owners to influence public opinion in their own favour.  Ish Theilheimer, Publisher of the “Straight Goods”, an independent Canadian news provider, talked with me about these issues.  He said,“Traditional media tends to be dominated in their perspective by the corporations that own the outlets and conservative orthodoxy. ...too often Big Media offers the spin and lies of the wealthy interests that run the world.”  Our government like most governments is also adept in the art of spin.  Members of parliament often attend the same functions and benefits, and run in the same business circles as multinational and corporate media owners.  Their interests are the same and one supports the other.
As democratic populace we are wise to question and monitor our governments through independent news sources.  Whether they are selling off public assets, locking up those with addictions, or allowing warrant-less searches into our online activities.  We are wise to ask ourselves who stands to benefit and who stands to lose.

Taking Freedom Away from Ourselves?

Is it wise to assume that new laws or greater restrictions (regarding online privacy for example) won’t affect us personally?  Insisting that intrusions into our personal sphere are OK because as law abiding citizens we have “nothing to hide” is rather short sighted.  Where do these encroachments end?  How far can we allow our government and police forces to expand into the private realms of others before we too are affected?  The rights we now enjoy freely could suddenly be removed and made illegal.  New invasions on our freedoms when not challenged have a way of gradually intensifying until it becomes clear that we are no longer free. 

Update on Bill C10

Though the conservatives insisted they would have Bill C10 passed into law within the first 100 sitting days of parliament, it seems suddenly to have become less of a priority.  The Bill passed the final of three readings in the house of commons this past December.  Despite pressure from the Tories to have it also sail through the Senate, our Senators have insisted the Bill be given more time for research and investigation.  This may have had as much to do with political pressure from voters as with stated democratic and moral obligation.  The Safe Streets and Communities Act (C10) has passed second reading in Senate and is expected to pass into law sometime in February 2012.
There have been many campaigns, rallies, and petitions against Bill C10 and all of its earlier incarnations.  Current initiatives at  Lead Now (http://leadnow.ca/keep-canada-safe) involved rally's at offices of MP's across the country, and a letter writing campaign directed at Senators and asking them to give appropriate and fair consideration to the Bill.  Check out what others are doing to oppose C10 and other anti-prison expansion work at the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, www.itcouldgetworse.com, and www.avaaz.org/en/stop_harpers_cruel_crime_bill/.

More Bill C10 Information


Alternatives to Law and Order Approaches

Tracking the Politics of Crime and Punishment

Rittenhouse – A prison education organization for the public

Urban Health Research Initiative – Drug Policy in Canada
http://uhri.cfenet.ubc.ca/content/view/68/82/

Author's Biography
Sheryl Jarvis is a white, single parent, woman with a history entrenched in poverty and violence.  She has first hand knowledge of the issues surrounding problematic drug use and imprisonment, having survived both.  She is a recent college graduate, and studied social work within a philosophy of critical feminist theory and anti-oppression.  Issues important to her are harm reduction and prisoner rights for which she advocates through community organizing, committee work, and critical writing.
http://prisonstatecanada.blogspot.com/

“Locking people in cages can never make a healthier, nor safer place for any of us. Thankfully there are many smarter alternatives” sheryl jarvis, 2011




Sunday, March 11, 2012

Prison Needle Exchange Advocacy Project


Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network (CHALN) Video 

As per their usual standard of high quality, thoughtful, prisoner rights advocacy in Canada and internationally, the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network (CHALN) have been working on an informational advocacy video which demonstrates the need for needle exchange in our jails and prisons.  The video project is part of CHALN's mandate to reduce harm for prisoners living with HIV/AIDS and for those at risk of contracting the infection.

Participating in the Project
 
I was lucky enough to be invited to participate in this project and did a filmed interview here in my home last Wednesday.  The fact that everyone was flexible and able to come to my apartment made things much more comfortable for me.  It also provided a backdrop of "normalcy" to the filming.  In other words, yes drug users also have families, homes, furniture, and photos of our loved ones!

Video Advocacy Team
 
CHALN has hired an exceptionally professional team with experience in social justice issues.  In fact they recently put together a video project for PASAN - the Prisoner AIDS Support Action Network, around the work PASAN does in advocating for prisoners who are HIV and/or HCV (hep C) positive.

Unsafe Drug Injection in Prison
 
The criteria for the video was that participants had injected drugs in prison.  What we talked about was my experiences of injecting in prison and how my family and I have been affected by the lack of sterile injection equipment.  Yes I have injected in jail, yes I used equipment that had been used by others (many others) and yes I was lucky, I did not contract HIV or HCV from those experiences.  Though I am HCV positive and I did contract HCV the very same way many women contract it... from sharing equipment with a trusted partner.  I naively believed that he would disclose to me (out of respect and care) if he were HIV or HCV positive. Silly me!  He was Hep C positive, he knew it, and he didn't tell me about it.  

What an asshole right?

Yes and No.  If there were not such a severe stigma associated with HCV and hence with disclosing, maybe he would'nt have been so scared to tell me.  Is fear of stigma and judgment a good enough excuse?  Not in my books, but it happens - alot.  
He, himself contracted HCV from injecting and sharing needles in prison.  If sterile equipment had been available to him and to others in his shoes maybe there wouldn't have been anything for him to disclose to me in the first place!


Rates of HIV and HCV Among Canadian Prisoners

Approximately 70% of those imprisoned in Canada have problematic drug use issues.  Injection drug users in general have higher incidents of HIV, HCV infection than the rest of the Canadian population.  This coupled with the lack of sterile injection equipment in prison ensures staggering rates of HIV, HCV infection rates among Canadian prisoners.  The HIV prevalence rate among prisoners is 10-19 times higher than the general population.  The HCV prevalence rate is between 19% and 40% higher than the general Canadian population.  
Studies conducted in 2005 at the provincial level throughout Canada found that between 33% and 67% of incarcerated injection drug users had shared equipment with other prisoners.  One Vancouver study found that as many as 21% of injection drug users had contracted HIV while in prison.


Human Rights Abuse

Is this a human rights issue?  You bet!  Does the government of Canada see it as such?  Not so much.  Particularly not the current conservative devils!  This fact should not prevent us from continuing to push and fight for drug abuse/drug use to be treated as what it is, a health issue, a coping mechanism, a reflection of mental health troubles, and not the individual moral corruption those without expertise or experience like to pretend it to be.  


Personal Experience with HCV Treatment

I was diagnosed with HCV about 10-12 years ago.  I have done little else by way of monitoring and/or treating it since then  I have however recently initiated HCV genotype testing and will be writing about my experiences with this process and the subsequent process of treatment if it is deemed necessary.  I will be participating in a program run by a community health centre in Toronto.  I chose this particular program because it offers a somewhat holistic approach to treatment.  What I mean by somewhat holistic is that the treatment is based pretty heavily on the medical model, but also offers individual and group counselling/support.  My first appointment is later this month.  I have already cancelled once and played phone tag with the program nurse for about a month after that.  Not sure if this was nerves or simply that other thing which causes me to cancel appointments and avoid people...depression.  In either case, I'm committed to attending the next appointment.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Video - Speakers Forum: At Least Harper Got One Thing Right, Locking Up Sex Offenders?....

For those of you who may have been unable to make it to the anti-bill C10 speakers forum, "Thrown Under the omniBUS" in November a video has been put together of the entire speaking portion of the eventThere were a range of viewpoints from 6 panelists who are mostly against the Bill.  Remember the omnibus crime Bill contains 9 individual portions with suggested changes to many areas of law.  
As with many Canadians at least one of our panelists could not say he was opposed to tougher sentences for child sex offenders.  I get where he was coming from, however as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of multiple male assailents, I have to disagree with the "lock em up approach" even to this most heinous of abuses.
Proponents of the Bill often focus on the portion which increases the time child sex offenders and other violent people will spend in jail.  The claim is that our kids will be safer with predators locked up longer.  Lets take a closer look at the facts!  Right now as the law stands, a first time sexual abuser of children receives 15 days in jail.  Bill C10 will extend that time to 45 days.  Is this really going to increase our children's safety?  
Its not.  If anything the time spent in jail may connect this person with other predators, and at the very least he or she is likely to experience the same sense of anger, resentment and disgust with the system that the rest of us do when subjected to the total uselessness that is prison.  Will this make him/her less dangerous?  I don't think so.
What will make our kids safer is prevention strategies which take a broad look at what it is in society that allows child sexual abuse to be so prevalent.  We can begin by looking at whether children are truly valued or not socially.  Some measures of this might be how may children are living in poverty, how mush assistance is provided to low income families, existence of a national childcare program, and how or whether we encourage kids who have suffered abuse to come forward.  
As a child I was certainly told about "stranger danger" and what to do if someone "touched" me - to tell another adult like my mom or dad.  Unfortunately the men who began abusing me at age 6 were not strangers and I was too frightened and humiliated to tell my mom or dad.
These are the issues we need to look at if the safety and long term mental health of our children are really what our conservative government seeks to address.  Not a crime bill which really equates to nothing more than empty words.



Wednesday, November 30, 2011

World AIDS Day 2011

  
Zero new HIV infections. Zero discrimination. Zero AIDS-related deaths.
December 1st is World AIDS Day.  Its a good time to remind ourselves of the work left to be done with regards to the unnecessarily high risk of contracting HIV/AIDS and HCV for those doing time in Canadian jails.  This of course is directly related to Canada’s propensity for cruelty regarding the treatment of those who use illicit drugs.  We treat drug use as a criminal rather than a health issue.  We criminalize and  incarcerate people who are likely already suffering terribly.

See:
Historical Trauma, Sexual Abuse, and HIV Risk Among Young Aboriginal People Using Injection Drugs
Childhood Trauma and Injection Drug Use Among at Risk Youth
Not only do we remove them from whatever support systems they may have had, and force drug users to abandon their children, their homes and belongings, but we then lock them (known drug users) in places and refuse to provide them the healthcare services they need such as access to harm reduction equipment.
"A 1995 Corrections Canada survey found that prisoners in federal institutions are 30 times more likely than other Canadians to have injected illegal drugs."
                                               
Two Canadian agencies doing amazing and radical work in advocating for prisoners who are at risk of or who are HIV/AIDS, HCV positive, are the Prisoner’s HIV/AIDS Support Action Network (PASAN) and the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.
Some must read documents from them;
Clean Switch: The Case for Prison Needle Exchange in Canada – this 14 page document applies the Canadian Charter to prisoner rights to healthcare including harm reduction information and equipment.
Clean Switch 
A really important project the Legal Network took part in was the work done around including those most affected by drug use policy and criminalization – those who use the drugs.
Nothing About Us Without Us, Greater, Meaningful Involvement of People Who Use Illegal Drugs
 
Commemorating World AIDS Day 2011


For information on HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and testing in Canada try these links:
One Life to Live 

AIDS Service Organizations 411 - Canada 

AIDS Committee of Toronto 

PASAN - AIDS Services for Criminalized People with HIV