'Not much has changed': Sudbury, Ont. advocates decry lack of support services in northern Ontario jails
CBC
Sara-Jane Berghammer, CEO of the John Howard Society of Sudbury, Ont., said going to jail shouldn't be a death sentence.
"It's an opportunity to be rehabilitated," she said.
She added one of the most frustrating parts of organizing its annual Prisoner Justice Day Commemoration is repeating the same calls for improvement to life for inmates across northern Ontario.
"Many of them will be released into the community and we want them to do better and be better," she said.
"Not much has changed."
August 10th marks Prisoners' Justice Day worldwide, which the John Howard Society says is a way of remembering inmates who died of unnatural or violent causes across northern Ontario.
According to the society, prison deaths and self-harm are still major concerns in the correctional system.
"We're starting to see people with mental health issues that are being held in custody, when really they should be hospitalised," Berghammer said.
In May, the province's chief coroner, Dr. Dirk Huyer, published a review of fatalities in correctional facilities dating back to 2015 as numbers spiked.
It read that 192 people died in custody at Ontario facilities from 2014 to 2021.
The John Howard Society and The Elizabeth Fry Society were among the groups who found the results "unnerving" as they gathered on the front lawn of the Sudbury Jail to mark the day.
"We have lost many people along the way, both inside the bars and outside of the bar," said Cory Roslyn, executive director of the Elizabeth Fry Society in Sudbury.
She added that many facilities, including the Sudbury Jail, are also seeing a significant portion of unnatural deaths related to overdose and self-harm.
"If you're looking at a definition of an unnatural death, both of those would fit into that, along with any sort of violence behind the bars, whether that be perpetrated by people who are incarcerated or by staff at the institution."
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