Structured Intervention Unit Implementation Advisory Panel 2021-22 Annual Report

Acronyms Used

CCRA
Corrections and Conditional Release Act
CCRR
Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations
CD
Commissioner’s Directive
CJS
Community and Justice Services (Loyalist College)
CPS
Canadian Penitentiary Service
CSC
Correctional Service of Canada
EIFW
Edmonton Institution for Women
IEDM
Independent External Decision-Maker
ISH
Indigenous Social History
MHCC
Mental Health Commission of Canada
MI
Millhaven Institution
MOMS
Mothers Offering Mutual Support
OMS
Offender Management System
P4W
Prison for Women
PSC
Public Safety Canada
SIU
Structured Intervention Unit
SIU IAP
Structured Intervention Unit Implementation Advisory Panel

Executive Summary

On 30 November 2019, Correctional Service Canada implemented amendments to the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA) that were meant to abolish what was known officially as “Administrative Segregation”, and informally as solitary confinement. The idea was to provide accommodation and a set of services for prisoners who could not be adequately housed in the general penitentiary population. There are only three legislated justifications for transferring a prisoner to one of these Structured Intervention Units: Concerns related to the safety of others, concerns about the safety of the prisoner, or concerns related to the integrity of ongoing investigations.

There were a number of key features to the legislation. First was that these special units, known as Structured Intervention Units, or SIUs, would be used infrequently, and that once a prisoner was transferred into an SIU, their stay would be as short as possible. In order to ensure short stays, programs and services would be provided that would allow the prisoner to return to the general penitentiary population quickly. Among the legislated promises to prisoners was that they would be offered an opportunity to spend at least four hours out of their cells each day, two hours of which would involve meaningful human interaction. Other important amendments enhanced the professional autonomy and independence of healthcare professionals, created patient advocates, and guaranteed reasonable access to non-essential healthcare services (in addition to access to essential care).

The legislation also required that data on the operation of the SIUs would be routinely collected, presumably to ensure that the legislative promises were fulfilled. Finally, a complex, multi-stage set of approvals was necessary to place and keep a prisoner in an SIU. One of the key components of this oversight process is that certain key decisions must be reviewed by Independent External Decision-Makers (IEDMs), a feature that was not in the original legislation as originally tabled but was added after the House of Commons committee reviewing the legislation recommended amendments.

This report builds on this Panel’s “Preliminary Observations of the Operations of Correctional Service Canada’s Structured Intervention Units”Footnote 1,  a document completed in October 2021 but unfortunately not released by Public Safety Canada until April 2022. The Panel’s work is also informed by the experiences of the earlier panel that concluded its term in the summer of 2020 without receiving the information it requested, that was needed to fulfil its oversight mandate. This Panel’s work also builds on the findings of four reports written by independent researchers and released between October 2020 and May 2021.Footnote 2

It would be short-sighted to minimize the importance of SIUs in the context of Canada’s overall penitentiary system. On 13 February 2022 there were “only” 165 prisoners in the SIUs out of a total population of 12,182 prisoners in CSC facilities (1.4% of the total federally incarcerated population that day). But as this Panel pointed out in its October 2021 “Preliminary Observations” document, this “count” ignores the flow of people into and out of the SIUs. In October 2021, the Panel estimated that about 8.4% of those who had been in CSC’s facilities during the first 21 months of the SIU regime spent at least some time in one or more SIUs.

But this, too, ignores important concerns about the use of the SIUs. Transfers to SIUs are much more likely to occur if a prisoner is Indigenous, and placements are dramatically more likely to occur in certain regions than in others. Given that transfers to SIUs are only supposed to occur if “there is no reasonable alternative to the inmate’s confinement in a structured intervention unit…”Footnote 3, it is fair to conclude that this should be the least preferred solution to a problem.

It is well known that Indigenous people are over-represented in Canada’s penitentiaries. Starting with the fact that only about 4.2% of Canadian adults are believed to be of Indigenous origin, we see, in Table A, that Indigenous people are substantially over-represented in our penitentiaries.

TableFootnote 4 A: Indigenous people in Canada’s Penitentiaries and SIUs
Male Female Total
Proportion of adult Canadian population that is Indigenous 4.2% 4.2% 4.2%
% Penitentiary population that was Indigenous on 13 February 2022Footnote 5 31.6% 49.1% 32.4%
Percent of person-staysFootnote 6 in SIUs through 13 February 2022 that involve Indigenous people 39.8% 75.8% 41.1%

Recent concerns have been expressed about the fact that Indigenous people – especially Indigenous women – are over-represented in Canada’s penitentiaries.  But the over-representation of Indigenous people in penitentiaries, generally – especially with respect to women – is dwarfed by the use of SIUs for Indigenous women.

CSC’s own data show that 75.8% of the stays in SIUs by women in Canada involved Indigenous women despite constituting a mere 4.2% of the overall adult female population in Canada. The findings for Indigenous men, while not as dramatic, are similar. Compared to the overall penitentiary population in each of CSC’s five regions, Indigenous people are more likely than others to end up in the SIU.

The Panel fully understands there will be regional and institutional differences. What concerns the Panel, however, is the lack of explanation for the extent of the variation in the use of SIUs across regions. In Table B, we have presented the unexpected significant variation in overall use of the SIUs by region.

Table B: Person Stays in SIUs by Region
Region Total Stays in SIUs per 1,000 Prisoners in the Region
Atlantic 355.3
Quebec 475.7
Ontario 107.5
Prairie 259.1
Pacific 321.1
Canada 278.2

To say that the variation in the use of SIUs reflects “local culture” in each region is not an adequate explanation. The fact that there is huge variation in the use of SIUs suggests two things. The regions are clearly using SIUs differently, and probably for different purposes or with different thresholds for their use.

The regions also differ dramatically in terms of the number of SIU cells they have, ranging from 13.4 SIU cells per 1000 in total cell capacity in Ontario, to 36.3 SIU cells per 1000 total capacity in the Prairie region. The Panel does not fully understand CSC’s reasons for the variation in the number of SIU cells per region. Second, the variation that we see in the use of SIUs across regions provides an opportunity for CSC to learn from those regions or institutions that use SIUs most sparingly.

IEDM Oversight of the SIUs

As already noted, external oversight by IEDMs is provided for certain decisions in SIUs; one of the most important of which is the length of the prisoner’s stay in the SIU. Although the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Mandela Rules)Footnote 7 distinguish between stays of 15 days or less, and longer stays, Canada decidedthe first external review of a prisoner’s stay in the SIU need not be completed until the prisoner has been in the SIU for at least 90 days.

Since the SIUs opened officially on 30 November 2019, 14 different IEDMs have made “length of stay” decisions on whether it was justified to keep a prisoner in an SIU. Looking only at the decisions of “Prisoner should not remain in the SIU” vs. “Prisoner should remain in the SIU”,IEDMs can be divided into two distinct groups: 9 IEDMs who never or seldom ordered the release of a prisoner, and 5 IEDMs who ordered release at least 23% of the time. As can be seen in Table C, there was huge variation across IEDMs in their decisions on whether a prisoner should be released.

Table C: Decisions by IEDMs
IEDM types Prisoner should not remain in the SIU Prisoner Should Remain in the SIU Total (definite) Decisions
Five IEDMs most likely to remove Prisoner from SIU 55 103 158

34.8%

Range: 23% to 50%

65.2%

Range: 50% to 77%

100%
Nine IEDMs most likely to order Prisoners to Remain in the SIU 19 348 367

5.2%

Range: 0% to 8%

94.8%

Range: 92% to 100%

100%
Total 74 451 525

14%

Range: 0% to 50%

86%

Range: 50% to 100%

100%

A related problem is that many prisoners who were ordered to be removed from the SIU were not immediately returned to general population. There may be legitimate reasons for delays in effecting Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) decisions to transfer prisoners out of a Structured Intervention Unit (SIU), but we found it difficult to understand why it would, in some cases, take months.

Although SIU stays are, according to the legislation, supposed to “end as soon as possible”Footnote 8, this does not mean that they are short. More than half (56.5%) of the SIU stays exceeded 15 days.Footnote 9 The length of stay in the SIU did vary across the time that we have been studying them (starting on 30 November 2019), but without any obvious pattern.

However, there were large regional differences in the length of stay in the SIU. For example, 32% of the SIU stays in Quebec were for 5 days or fewer, whereas only 10% of the SIU stays in the Prairies were for 1-5 days. About 30% of the SIU stays in Ontario lasted at least 62 days. In Quebec, however, only about 18% were 62 days or longer.

Although the IEDMs do make other (non-binding) recommendations (e.g., on whether CSC has taken all reasonable steps with respect to meaningful human contact under S. 37.83(1)), the “binding” investigations by IEDMs of “time in the SIU” (S. 37.8 of the CCRA) need not occur until the prisoner has been in the SIU for more than 60 days. Given that the IEDM need not report a decision until an additional 30 days has elapsed, there is, by design, the potential that Canadian prisoners will spend more than 6 times the length of time that the Mandela Rules define as prolonged solitary confinement (i.e., more than 15 days) absent an independent decision regarding their continued isolation. Our findings – and CSC documents – also note that even when ordered out of an SIU, CSC is sometimes slow to implement the decision. An independent external review of SIU placement that is not timely is largely without meaning. The legislation must be amended to correct this error.

Indigenous prisoners, who, as previously noted, were disproportionately more likely to be transferred into SIUs, were also less likely than other groups (Blacks, Whites, and other groups) to have very short stays (5 or fewer days) in the SIUs. Prisoners identified by CSC as having deteriorated mental health problems were especially likely to have very long stays in SIUs (62 days or longer).

Another key promise in the legislation is that prisoners will be offered at least four hours out of their cells, including two hours of meaningful human contact. Most prisoners did not actually spend four hours out of their cell each day, though the likelihood of not having two hours of meaningful human contact was somewhat higher. Achieving these legislated goals was much more likely in the Prairie region than elsewhere. CSC has advised the Panel that despite daily offers of time out of cell, many prisoners refuse to avail themselves of the opportunity.  When we looked in detail at prisoners who were in SIUs for 16 days or longer we found that for 1,335 of these long stay prisoners, or 64% of this group, refusals cannot explain the failure to achieve four hours out of cell. The results on achieving two hours a day of meaningful human contact were similar: Refusals do not explain all failures of prisoners to get two hours of meaningful human contact each day. We estimate that for 1,091 of the 2,071 long-stay prisoners (or 53% of these long stay SIU prisoners), refusals do not explain the failure to get the two hours of meaningful human contact promised in the legislation.

We understand that CSC has, from the early days of the SIU regime, been concerned about their ability to deliver on the legislated requirements related to time out of cell. This problem predated the presence of COVID-19 and lasted throughout the period that we studied. We did, however, find evidence that in 2021, there was significant improvement in ensuring that prisoners got out of their cells for the expected four hours.

In the last quarter of 2020, 70% of “long stay” SIU prisonersFootnote 10 (those in SIUs for 16 days or more) missed getting out of their cells on most days (76-100% of their days in the SIU). This “failure rate” was comparable to what it was when the SIUs first opened in November and December 2019. However, during 2021, this failure rate dropped steadily and substantially from 70% to 34%. Nevertheless, one cannot ignore the fact that 34% of the “long stay” prisoners in CSC’s SIUs missed getting their four hours out of the cell during most of their days in the SIU.

Part of the challenge for CSC is what to do when a prisoner refuses to leave the cell. The Commissioner’s Directive CD711 suggests that “all reasonable efforts” should be made to provide this time out of the cell. Said differently, it would appear to be CSC’s responsibility to try to get prisoners out of their cells. Nevertheless, for reasons that are not fully understood, about 65% of “long stay” SIU prisoners refused at least twice to leave their cells and about 10% refused to leave their cells during at least half of the days they spent in the SIU. But once again, the key to understanding prisoner refusals may already be in the hands of CSC: refusals to leave the SIU cells were much more likely in some regions (e.g., the Pacific region) than in others (Prairies or Ontario). This Panel does not yet have hard data to understand this regional variation.

CSC has an obligation to record information about offers to leave the cells and refusals. Refusals by prisoners to leave the cells do not fully explain prisoners not getting the required time out cells. We found records of (literally) hundreds of “long stay” SIU prisoners where refusals to leave the cell did not explain the failure to achieve the four hours out of cell. For example, looking only at those whose stays in the SIU were at least 16 days, there were 610 prisoners who were recorded by CSC as having refused to leave their cells on 20% or fewer of their days in the SIU, but missed getting their “four hours out of cell” on at least 76% of their days in the SIU.Footnote 11 In addition, from our interviews and other information we have received (e.g., derived from some IEDM decisions), some of these refusals are quite understandable in that what was being offered would be less attractive to almost anyone than remaining in a cell alone.

One cannot talk about solitary confinement, segregation, or SIUs without talking about mental health. Many prisoners – 29% of men and 64% of women – who were transferred to SIUs were identified by CSC as having mental health challenges. This was especially true for those transferred to SIUs multiple times.  We identified 161 prisoners who were transferred into SIUs on five separate occasions between 30 November 2019 and 13 February 2022. 53% of them were identified at the beginning of one or more of their stays as having mental health needs as compared to “only” 24% of those who had only one SIU stay during this period.

CSC’s practice often involves moving prisoners to different institutions and often different regions when they are transferred to SIUs or being transferred out of an SIU. Those with mental health needs that had been identified by CSC were especially likely to be transferred to different SIUs in the same or different regions. And, not surprisingly, when they are transferred to an SIU, they stay there longer than do those without mental health challenges. We found it difficult to reconcile this with CSC’s statement that “SIUs are about helping prisoners and providing them with the continued opportunity to engage in interventions and programs to support their safe return to a mainstream prisoner population.”  Moving prisoners from institution to institution and between regions does not appear to be the most obvious way to encourage them to engage in interventions and programs.

We have noted that Indigenous prisoners are especially likely to end up in Canada’s SIUs. On one day for which we have “census” data from CSC (13 February 2022), the proportion of Indigenous prisoners in the SIUs was higher than the proportion of Indigenous prisoners in CSC facilities in every region.  Given that the social isolation of anyone (even if in an SIU) almost certainly puts them at risk of developing or exacerbating existing mental health problems, it is concerning that Indigenous people transferred to Structured Intervention Units (SIUs) were especially likely to be flagged by Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) as having mental health challenges.

Given that isolation puts people at risk, it is the Panel’s hope that CSC will learn from its relative success in some institutions in keeping Indigenous people from being isolated in their SIU cells. There was huge variation across institutions in the success of getting Indigenous prisoners with long stays in the SIUs out of their cells. Table D looks at the percentage of days that prisoners missed getting their four hours out of their cells. This table contains data only for Indigenous people with long stays in SIUs (i.e., 16 or more days) in six institutions.

Table D: For Indigenous Prisoners: Success in getting 4 hours out of cell (stays of 16 or more days in the SIU, only)
Prisoner failed only infrequently (0-50% of the days in the SIU) to get four hours out of cell Prisoner failed to get four hours out of cell frequently (51% or more) Total
Saskatchewan Penitentiary 30 87 117
(25.6%) (74.4%) (100%)
Edmonton Institution 15 64   79
(19.0%) (81.0%) (100%)
Edmonton Institution for Women 8 11   19
(42.1%) (57.9%) (100%)
Stony Mountain 193 17  210
(91.9%) (8.1%) (100%)
Bowden 37 1   38
(97.4%) (2.6%) (100%)
Kent 4 163 167
(2.4%) (97.6%) (100%)
All other SIUs 35 271 306
(11.4%) (88.6%) (100%)
Total 322 614 936
(34.4%) (65.6%) (100%)

In Stony Mountain and Bowden penitentiaries, for example, only 8.1% and 2.6% of long-stay Indigenous prisoners, respectively, missed getting their four hours out of their cells during half or more of their days. The comparable figures for not getting the expected four hours out of the cell for Saskatchewan Penitentiary, Edmonton Institution and Kent are 74.4%, 81%, and 97.6%, respectively. In other words, Indigenous prisoners with long stays in Saskatchewan Penitentiary, Edmonton Institution, or Kent almost never got out of their cells for four hours in a day. In Stony Mountain Penitentiary and Bowden, they almost always did. Such variation across institutions was not unusual.Footnote 12

The Panel has just started to work on an issue already mentioned: the movement of prisoners around the country. Multiple stays in SIUs are common. Indeed, of the 1,920 different people who had been transferred to an SIU one or more times during the period 30 November 2019 to 13 February 2022, 46% had visited SIUs at least twice. Indeed 161 people had visited SIUs on at least five separate occasions, and as the number of stays in SIUs increased, the number of different SIUs they visited also increased, as did the number of different regions that these prisoners were taken to.

We identified 27 prisoners who had been in four different SIUs, and 43 prisoners who had been in SIUs in three or more regions in this 26.5-month period (30 November 2019 to mid-February 2022). Indeed, one prisoner had been sent to SIUs in all five of Canada’s regions and another six prisoners had been in SIUs in four regions. The question that arises is what these transfers are supposed to accomplish, and why did people need to go to more than one SIU in multiple regions? Those with multiple stays in SIUs were more likely to have been identified as having mental health challenges. It’s hard to imagine that transfers across institutions and regions is the best way to address those challenges. 

The 1996 Arbour Commission report into CSC’s response to disturbances in the Prison for Women in Kingston concluded that “(p)lacing a prisoner in segregation is the most intrusive decision the Service can make affecting a person’s liberty.”Footnote 13 Social isolation is not a “normal” state for social beings. However, in the prison environment, it is inevitable that at certain times, prisoners must be isolated for their own safety or the safety of others.

The legal and policy framework for SIUs suggests that stays are to be rare and brief, while at the same time providing for prisoners in an SIU to receive programs and services to address their needs and risks with the goal of returning them to the mainstream population as expeditiously as possible. There is, then, a tension between addressing, in an effective manner, the needs of high-risk, vulnerable and complex prisoners, and the goal of moving prisoners quickly from the SIUs into the general population.

We are not suggesting that long stays in SIUs should be allowed or encouraged.  What this conflict does suggest, however, is that the solution to destructive isolation is not guaranteed by the implementation of SIUs. This requires relying less on penitentiaries to meet complex needs, and if incarceration cannot be avoided, adopting more person-centred programs rather than the current “place based” approach (or off-loading difficult prisoners to other regions or institutions).

We conclude our first Annual Report with recommendations to the Commissioner of the Correctional Service of Canada and advice to the Minister of Public Safety. Our recommendations and advice address 14 key areas of concern regarding the operation of SIUs and the future of CSC oversight. Topics covered by the recommendations include the following:

Introduction

The enactment of Bill C-83: An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act and another Act in 2019 was intended to bring new and improved standards of care for Canadian prisoners. In CSC’s own words, “Structured Intervention Units are part of a historic transformation of the federal correctional system that saw the abolition of administrative segregation.” CSC commented further that “(a) key safeguard in place [in the SIU system] is external oversight. The importance of this cannot be overstated. Independent External Decision-Makers across the country provide oversight of a prisoner’s conditions and duration of confinement in a Structured Intervention Unit. Their decisions are binding.”Footnote 14

A second form of oversight, not mentioned in the legislation, was created a few months before the new legislation was proclaimed. The Minister of Public Safety established a Structured Intervention Unit Implementation Advisory Panel (SIU IAP) of eight people to provide advice to CSC and the Minister on the operation of the SIUs. For various reasons – including that CSC did not provide the SIU IAP with timely or adequate information about the actual operation of the SIUs – that Panel was not able to carry out its responsibilities. At the end of the one-year appointment of its members, the first SIU IAP submitted a report and automatically lapsed during the summer of 2020 without being able to make any assessments of how the SIUs were operating.Footnote 15

After the first SIU IAP’s mandate expired, Public Safety Canada ordered that data on the operation of the SIUs be released to Dr. Anthony Doob (the Chair of the first panel). Between the end of September 2020 and May 2021, Dr. Doob and his colleagues produced four separate reports on the operation of the SIUs.Footnote 16

This current report is the first Annual Report of the renewed Structured Intervention Unit Implementation Advisory Panel (SIU IAP), established by the Minister of Public Safety in the Spring of 2021. This report begins with a brief history of solitary confinement in Canada and how the  Structured Intervention Units (SIUs) came to be, as well as a description of the current Panel. Following these introductory sections, the report covers several broad themes and includes advice for the Minister of Public Safety and recommendations to the Commissioner of Corrections.

Solitary Confinement in Canada and the Promise of SIUs

Solitary confinement has a long history in prisons. In early North American prisons, all prisoners were confined to solitary living and working so as to prevent “contamination” through social interaction. As prisons evolved, association became the norm and only the most incorrigible of prisoners required isolation from others. With the abolition of corporal punishment, solitary confinement emerged as “the major formal mechanism of control.”Footnote 17 Over time, solitary confinement was replaced by the termFootnote 18 dissociation and, with that, came more nuanced placements. Prisoners were separated from the general population for either punitive or non-punitive reasons. Punitive dissociation involved disciplinary segregation for serious or flagrant institutional offences. Non-punitive dissociation included administrative segregation for the maintenance of good order and protective custody for the purposes of prisoner safety.

In 1975, a Study Group was tasked by the Solicitor General of Canada (in response to a report by the Correctional Investigator) to examine concerns about the dissociation model, including a lack of adequate record-keeping by the Canadian Penitentiary Service (CPS)Footnote 19, which failed to specify the reasons for and conditions of segregation (e.g., daily routine, length of stay, defined release). The Study Group identified a tendency for all dissociated prisoners to be treated the same regardless of the reason for their dissociation, and a related tendency for dissociated prisoners to be forgotten or ignored. The Study Group acknowledged variations across institutions due to age and architecture, as well as other factors that could exacerbate the impact of social isolation, including individual features (e.g., physical, intellectual, emotional) and concerns for safety, fear of illness and injury, and lack of health care and good food. The Study Group recommended that CPS demonstrate greater adherence to existing law, regulations, and policy; better training of staff dedicated to dissociated units; and more research on the effects of isolation. It also recommended the establishment of a segregation review board to oversee administrative segregation. The board was to be chaired by the warden who would be responsible for developing a plan for prisoner reintegration as soon as possible and monitoring thereafter. In 1977, a Parliamentary Sub-committee on the Penitentiary System in Canada endorsed the Study Group’s recommendations but advised that the Internal Segregation Review Board model be reviewed after two years. In 1977, CPS acted upon the recommendations. In 1979, the newly renamed Correctional Service Canada (CSC) failed to conduct the internal review (Jackson, 2006).

In 1983, University of British Columbia law Professor Michael Jackson assessed the “new, reformed” process by reviewing administrative segregation cases at Kent Institution in Agassiz, BC. In his book entitled, Prisoners of Isolation: Solitary Confinement in Canada, Jackson criticized the lack of criteria for segregation and the absence of an independent review process.He proposed a Model Segregation Code that called for independent adjudication of cases to ensure protection of prisoner rights and freedoms, and clearly defined limitations on duration of stay in segregation. While condemning the process, Jackson (1983) recalled that the origins of solitary confinement “lie not in the practice of torture and the abuse of state power, but rather in a reform-spirited reaction against such practices (p.6). In other words, “the best laid plans of mice and men” can go awry; thus, they require careful oversight and management. Neither independent adjudication of administrative segregation nor limits on confinement were incorporated into the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA) (1992).

Whereas disciplinary and administrative segregation often looked the same (physically), the two differed in important ways. Most importantly, because disciplinary segregation was punitive, it was highly regulated by law and policy. Section 44 of the CCRA dictated that a prisoner could only be placed in disciplinary segregation if sentenced by an independent chairperson following a disciplinary hearing. This required that the prisoner receive written notice of the disciplinary charge and be informed of the process by which they would be judged. By contrast, placement in administrative dissociation did not call for the same procedural protections. Moreover, while disciplinary segregation could not extend beyond 30 days (45 days if more than one offence had occurred), the duration of administrative segregation was undefined and potentially indefinite (until warrant expiry date). In practice, the regulation and scrutiny of disciplinary segregation led to an increased reliance on administrative segregation for the isolation of unmanageable prisonersFootnote 20.This, in turn, led to the abusive use of administrative segregation, which, 30 years later in 2007 would contribute to the death while in a segregation cell, of 19-year-old Ashley Smith. In 11.5 months of CSC custody, Smith endured almost continuous segregation, interspersed with numerous use-of-force episodes and 17 transfers involving eight different institutions.

What can happen to captive populations in the absence of independent adjudication and timely oversight was laid bare 13 years earlier by a series of events at the Prison for Women (P4W) in Kingston, Ontario. In her 1996 report on the PW4 incidents, Justice Louise Arbour was unequivocal in her condemnation of CSC’s punitive use of administrative segregation, which she maintained was “…administrative in name only” and “a form of punishment that courts would be loathe to impose, so destructive are its consequences”(p. 141-143). Arbour was especially critical of the indefinite nature of administrative segregation and CSC’s apparent unwillingness or inability to reform its practices without “judicial guidance and control” (p. 198). Justice Arbour offered the following recommendations: That administrative segregation be compliant with law and appropriately monitored (recommendation 9.a); the end of long-term confinement in administrative segregation (recommendation 9.d); segregation review after three days to a maximum of 30 days (recommendations 9.e.ii,iv); and that segregation be imposed no more than twice in a calendar year for a total of 60 days (recommendation 9.e.iii). If the maximum time was exhausted, alternatives to be considered could include institutional transfer, placement in a mental health unit or “forms of intensive supervision”(recommendation 9.e.iv), all of which were to involve interactions with the general population. If alternative options were not available or extended segregation was required, then CSC would have to apply to the court for direction (recommendation 9.e.v). Justice Arbour further recommended that if segregation was not subject to judicial supervision, then another form of independent adjudication of continued segregation over five days needed to be in place (recommendation 9.f).

In her report, Justice Arbour reminded readers of the need to measure CSC’s performance against its Mission Statement and its commitment to “openness”, “integrity”, and “accountability” (section 2.12). Arbour asserted that these values require compliance with the law and vigilance to correct any departures from the law. Arbour advised CSC to be more responsive to external criticism and more engaged in self-criticism, to provide fair and honest accounting of its actions and acknowledgement of error. Arbour reminded CSC that respect for prisoner rights requires integrity in managing sentences, including the careful management of segregation. Arbour (1996) concluded that conditions at P4W, including the use of administrative segregation, represented “a profound failure of the custodial mandate of the Correctional Service”.

In response to the Arbour Report, CSC established a Task Force on Administrative Segregation (1996-1997). The Task Force included both internal and external members. Initial Task Force findings confirmed Justice Arbour’s impression that “CSC has a culture that does not respect the Rule of Law” (Jackson, 2006, p. 168). The Task Force recommended that CSC pilot an “enhanced” internal model of segregation review that would include independent adjudication of segregation cases. Adopting this recommendation was seen as “a litmus test of the Service’s commitment to changing its corporate culture to one which not only professes but demonstrates its respect for the Rule of Law” (Jackson & Sloan, 1998). Concomitantly, CSC received a report from the Working Group on Human Rights (1997) that rendered the same recommendation. The combined weight of both reports failed to move then CSC Commissioner, Ole Ingstrup, who maintained CSC’s long-standing position of rejecting independent adjudication. In a letter to the Commissioner in June 1998, Michael Jackson and Todd Sloan (1998) characterized CSC’s resistance to independent adjudication as “a symbol of operational reality failing to conform to the principles of openness, integrity and accountability” (as cited in Jackson, 2006, p. 78).

Jackson’s 2006 article refers to other reviews of CSC practices. The CCRA 5-year review (2000) recommended immediate implementation of an independent decision-maker for administrative segregation. CSC’s response was to pilot an enhanced segregation review process (2001-2002) that included a segregation review board with an external member. An external evaluation of the pilot in 2003 found enhanced perceptions of fairness in the process but few actual differences in segregation review outcomes. The primary issues of concern were the rising number of voluntary cases, many of whom refused to reintegrate due to incompatibilities with other prisoners, and few viable alternatives, (e.g., intra-, or inter-regional transfers). The pilot process was soon suspended.

In 2004, the Canadian Human Rights Commission issued a report on federally sentenced women and recommended independent adjudication of administrative segregation at the five regional women’s prisons. Once again, Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) declined to accept the recommendation, claiming that the existing legal framework precluded it from doing so, but offered to “enhance” existing practices. This decision was roundly denounced as being disingenuous and illustrative of CSC’s commitment to maintaining status quo - retaining exclusive control of administrative segregation. CSC (2005) claimed to share “… the concern of long stays and possible overuse but situates this within operational realities which must be addressed first: outdated infrastructure, lack of alternatives, difficulties with transfers, management of long-term cases, including those who refuse to leave segregation”. These “operational realities” sound remarkably similar to the findings of the 1975 Study Group on dissociation and every review since, resulting in little progress over the intervening 30 years.

In a 2015 article (Kerr 2015A), Queen’s University Law Professor Lisa Kerr addressed how isolating prisoners without judicial input and for reasons unrelated to either the sentence imposed or the concerns of criminal law can profoundly intensify the severity and effects of a legal sanction of imprisonment. While acknowledging that Canadian law dictates that segregation be used as a measure of last resort, Kerr underscored the inadequacy of law in defining the terms of concrete time limits, independent review, and sufficient health protections for those subjected to isolation. In a second 2015 article, Kerr outlined the first comprehensive Charter-based challenge to segregation laws. This was the case of Bobby Lee Worm, an Indigenous woman who was held in solitary confinement for four years under a segregation regimen called the “Management Protocol” that applied only to women. According to Kerr, prior to its implementation, both internal and external stakeholders had advised CSC that the “Management Protocol” was unlawful. It did not comply with either the CCRA standards on administrative segregation or the Charter. CSC ignored the advice and proceeded to hold women, predominantly racialized women, in this form of confinement for years on end. At the same time, CSC ignored continuing criticism and demands for change from both the judiciary and the Correctional Investigator. When Bobby Lee Worm filed her case in March 2011, however, CSC reacted immediately, publicly promising to revise the policy. In May 2011, less than 60 days after pleadings were filed, CSC announced that it had cancelled the Protocol and offered a settlement to Ms. Worm, thereby ending the litigation.

While the Worm case was settled, it did not address the existing legislation that continued to enable questionable correctional practices, such as the “Management Protocol” or the abusive use of segregation more generally. Kerr (2019) outlined the legal costs of harmful correctional practices and inadequacies of law regarding segregation, such as stays of proceedings in criminal cases, extended credit for time spent in pretrial custody, and a $20 million Charter damages award against the federal government.Footnote 21 In testament to the inadequacies of existing law, courts were granting Charter-based relief to prisoners who had been held in segregation even when the prisons and jails had operated within legislative boundaries. In 2019, courts in both British Columbia and Ontario found that administrative segregation met the definition of solitary confinement as defined by the Mandela Rules, and violated sections 7 (i.e., prolonged and indefinite segregation violated liberty rights) and 12 (i.e., segregation over 15 days was cruel and unusual punishment) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (the Charter).Footnote 22

As appeals were underway, in 2019 the federal government passed Bill C-83, An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act and another Act, with the specific intent of eliminating disciplinary segregation and replacing administrative segregation with structured intervention units (SIUs). With Bill C-83, the Canadian government was claiming to “transform federal corrections” by conforming to the Nelson Mandela Rules and enhancing health care for prisoners. Despite this good intent, the legislation was not without concern. For example, some features of SIUs remain poorly defined, including time limits on placement, “meaningful human contact”, standards of physical environment, degree and form of judicial oversight, and categorical restrictions for vulnerable prisoners, such as those who are mentally ill.

SIUs were established with the legislated promise that each prisoner would be offered a minimum of four hours out-of-cell time, two hours of which would include “meaningful human contact”. Moreover, prisoners transferred to SIUs were to receive interventions and programs tailored to their needs. The provision of four hours of out-of-cell time meant that SIUs would exceed the Mandela Rules, specifically Rule 44, which defines solitary confinement as “the confinement of prisoners for 22 hours or more a day without meaningful human contact”.

The legislation requires that transfers to SIUs be avoided when possible, and if transfer to an SIU is considered to be necessary, efforts are to be made to quickly return prisoners to the general population. Policy and law require CSC to explore options and alternatives as part of the process when considering transfer to an SIU. These provisions – suggesting few stays and of short duration, and a guarantee of offers of time out of cell, including time involving meaningful human interaction – were the key justifications for the government’s announcement that the unconstitutional use of segregation had ended.

The Structured Intervention Unit Implementation Advisory Panel

Mandate and Panel Members

In April 2021, the Hon. Bill Blair, then Canada’s Minister of Public Safety, re-created an independent advisory panel to “enhance accountability and transparency in the new SIU system.” (Press Release, 2021). The mandate of the renewed SIU IAP was strengthened in terms of its independence, and its relationship with CSC and Public Safety Canada (PSC). More specifically the mandate of the new IAP was “to monitor and evaluate the implementation and operation of Structured Intervention Units (SIUs), to submit a report to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness to advise on whether the SIU model is being implemented as required by the Act, and to provide non-binding recommendations and advice to the Commissioner of Correctional Service of Canada (CSC).” (Terms of Reference, 2021). The Terms of Reference call for the Panel to produce annual reports in both official languages and obligate PSC to publish them on its website within 15 working days after submission to the Commissioner and the Minister.

In April 2021, Howard Sapers was appointed Chair of the SIU IAP. Up to nine additional Panel members were to be appointed and would include people with diverse experience and knowledge, including direct experience of incarceration. Members were to be selected in consultation with the Panel Chair and their mandates would be for a maximum of two years. Initial Panel membership included Howard Sapers, Anthony Doob, Ed McIsaac and Farhat Rehman. A few months later, Ed Buller and Johanne Vallée were appointed, creating the quorum (six) necessary to hold a first meeting. A third round of appointments in early 2022 saw Janet Taylor, Margo Watt, and Robert WrightFootnote 23 become members of the Panel.Footnote 24 At the time of writing the Panel was still awaiting the promised appointment of a member with direct experience of incarceration.

Panel Governance and Operations

The Panel is independent but is administratively supported by Public Safety Canada (PSC), specifically by the Crime Prevention Branch. A member of this Branch is responsible for the preparation of Records of Discussion of the Panel meetings, except when the Panel decides to meet in camera. Panel expense claims for travel and per diems are processed and paid by the Department in accordance with Treasury Board rules. The primary point of contact with PSC is the Assistant Deputy Minister of the Crime Prevention Branch. The Chair and other PSC staff liaise when necessary and the Deputy Minister is also available to discuss any matter related to the work of the Panel. In addition, the Terms of Reference call for the Chair and Minister of Public Safety to meet.

The Panel meets regularly and makes decisions by consensus. The Panel determines its own work plan, the topics discussed, the preferred methodology, the identification of individuals and organizations it wishes to meet, and the institutions it visits. Between July 2021 and June 2022, the Panel has convened 18 times.

Collaborating Framework Between the IAP and CSC

In October 2021, the Panel and Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) agreed to a Collaborating Framework which outlines the information to which the Panel has access, mutual expectations, and the specific timeframes within which CSC must provide the various types of data and information required by the Panel. The framework also establishes the timing and nature of the meetings to be held between CSC and the Panel.

The CSC has identified an individual responsible for coordinating the exchange of information and responses to Panel requests, which has resulted in a positive and productive relationship. Moreover, the Panel has access to the entire CSC senior management team, including the CSC Commissioner, and the Chair of the Implementation Advisory Panel (IAP) and the Commissioner maintain frequent contact.

The Collaborating Framework has been helpful. The Panel has made several information requests and has generally received what has been asked for. With some exceptions, responses have been timely and complete. When information is not available or easily compiled, CSC has worked with the Panel to identify alternative data responsive to our needs. 

Methodology

To effectively fulfill its mandate to monitor and evaluate the implementation of the SIUs, the Panel employs the following:

  1. Analysis of quantitative data requested from the CSC
  2. Analysis and review of reports and other documents, including Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) decisions
  3. SIU site visits that include meetings with staff and interviews with prisoners transferred to an SIU
  4. Meetings with CSC senior leaders at its national and regional headquarters
  5. Meetings with various organizations and stakeholders.

At the request of the Panel, PSC has contracted with prominent criminologist, Dr. Jane Sprott, to support the Panel’s work. It is important to note that the data used for the Panel’s analysis come directly from CSC. Professors Doob and Sprott have secure access to the relevant departmental networks to facilitate data exchange and they are also able to directly communicate with the CSC Research Branch.

The Panel has access to information regarding the number of prisoners entering and leaving every SIU in all of CSC’s five administrative regions. This data includes gender, race, general reasons for placements in the SIU and whether the file contains an indicator that the prisoner has a documented mental health need in their medical record. The data normally include the length of the stay, the time out of cell and the time that the prisoner was engaged in what was deemed by CSC to be meaningful human interaction. A substantial amount of information about the prisoner and the stay in the SIU was provided to the panel by CSC from its administrative records. In addition, data concerning “time in the SIU” reviews by Independent External Decision-Makers were provided to the panel.

Much of the statistical information provided to the panel comes from new data collection tools implemented at the same time as the transformation from “administrative segregation” to the “structured intervention units”. CSC has informed the panel that there have been some challenges in implementing these new data collection tools. Although there is no doubt that the data are not error-free, the panel could find no evidence to suggest that the records related to stays in the SIUs were biased in any particular direction.

More recently, CSC implemented software that generates an End of Day Report which allows the Correctional Manager of each SIU to review all activities in their SIU at the end of the day and to ensure quality control. Since Spring 2022, wardens and regional management teams have had access to real‑time SIU operational information.

To gather firsthand observational and interview data, it was essential to visit the SIUs and gather information through direct observation, meetings with CSC management and front-line staff, and interviews with prisoners. Panel members also have met with several stakeholders and organizations identified later in this section. The COVID-19 pandemic delayed the start of the site visits, but as soon as it was possible, the Panel commenced site visits (typically with two panel members at each visit). As of 30 June 2022, the following institutions have been visited or visits have been scheduled:

During visits, the panel members examine the physical locations of the SIUs to assess conditions of confinement and opportunities for access to spaces dedicated to programs, meetings, and activities. They speak with staff from various occupational groups within the institutions to understand local, regional, and national issues, challenges, and best practices. Members also meet with prisoners. Prisoners are asked about the activities and opportunities offered, time spent out of cell, medical and psychological services, reasons for placement in the SIU, quality of interactions with others (staff and prisoners) in the SIU and, where relevant, about their refusals of offers to leave their cells.

When meeting with CSC SIU staff and managers, panel members discussed several aspects of SIUs, including policies, the implementation process, staffing, financial resources, performance indicators, and health services. Meetings and briefings were also arranged with various stakeholders and organizations outlined below. The following is a partial listFootnote 25 of meetings held:

What is a Structured Intervention Unit?

It is essential to remember that SIUs are the solution developed by the Government of Canada following its decision not to defend at the Supreme Court of Canada the practice of segregation. As was explained in the introduction, Canadian courtsFootnote 26 and the Mandela RulesFootnote 27 have established that prisoners shall not be confined in their cells for more than 22 hours without meaningful human contact.

The relevant Mandela Rules are:

Rule 44

For the purpose of these rules, solitary confinement shall refer to the confinement of inmates for 22 hours or more a day without meaningful human contact. Prolonged solitary confinement shall refer to solitary confinement for a time period in excess of 15 consecutive days.

Rule 45

  1. Solitary confinement shall be used only in exceptional cases as a last resort, for as short a time as possible and subject to independent review, and only pursuant to the authorization by a competent authority. It shall not be imposed by virtue of an inmate’s sentence.
  2. The imposition of solitary confinement should be prohibited in the case of prisoners with mental or physical disabilities when their conditions would be exacerbated by such measures

The Mandela Rules also prohibit prolonged solitary confinement (defined in Rule 44) as follows:

Rule 43

  1. In no circumstances may restrictions or disciplinary sanctions amount to torture or other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment. The following practices, in particular, shall be prohibited:
    1. Indefinite solitary confinement;
    2. Prolonged solitary confinement;
    3. Placement of a prisoner in a dark or constantly lit cell.Footnote 28

The operation of these new units must meet the legal requirements that are now included in the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA). These requirements include the provision of opportunities to interact with others, whether through programs, interventions, services, or recreation. The ultimate goal is to promote the prisoner’s reintegration into the institution’s general population as soon as possible.Footnote 29 The use of SIUs is a temporary measure for prisoners whose safety is threatened, when the security of the institution is compromised due to the prisoner’s behaviour, or during an investigation. In addition to its obligation to offer time outside the cell and activities, CSC must also provide physical and mental health care for the prisoners in these units.

Section 37(2) of the CCRA states that CSC must keep a record of the opportunities offered to each prisoner and the prisoner’s responses. CSC had to review the physical layout of institutions housing SIUs in order to facilitate an environment conducive to meeting its obligations to offer these opportunities. The CSC informed the IAP that several institutions made changes to their infrastructure to include spaces dedicated to interviews, recreation, and programs, as well as common rooms, outside yards and offices for staff. Work has been completed at several institutions and other sites expect renovations to be completed in the coming months (roughly three years after the opening date of the SIUs was known).

The IAP has been told by CSC Executive Committee members that the choice of sites for establishing SIUs was determined in cooperation with regional headquarters. Notwithstanding, most sites reported they had little or no input into the decision to create SIUs at their location, the placement of the units within the institution, or the capacity of the units. There are SIUs in all of CSC’s five administrative regions, in institutions for both men and women. There are SIUs at the sites listed in Table 1.

Table 1: SIU Capacity and Prisoner Counts
Region Institution SIU Capacity SIU Count on 13 February 2022 Regional Prisoner Count on 13 February 2022 Rated cell capacity for region (July 2021) SIU cells per 1000 rated capacity
Atlantic 56 20 1,027 1,819 30.8
Atlantic 54 20
Nova (women) 2 0
Quebec 107 35 2,571 3,596 29.8
Port Cartier 19 14
Donnacona 48 20
RRC 18 1
SHU 18 0
Joliette (women) 4 0
Ontario 53 19 3,268 3,970 13.4
Millhaven 50 19
Grand Valley (women) 3 0
Prairies 154 58 3,697 4,246 36.3
Stony Mountain 40 33
Bowden 30 0
Saskatchewan 32 14
Edmonton 48 11
Edmonton (women) 4 0
Pacific 52 33 1,619 2,657 19.6
Kent 48 33
Fraser Valley (women) 4 0
Total 422 165 12,182 16,288 25.9

As of May 10, 2022,Footnote 30 SIUs in Canada had a total cell capacity of 422. Distribution across the country is uneven, resulting in varying SIU capacity per 1000 rated capacity in the region. It is not clear how decisions were made regarding the allocation of SIU spaces in each institution or by region. The result, however, is that there is dramatic regional variation in the number of SIU cells available per 1000 “rated capacity” in the region’s penitentiaries (last column of Table 1).

In developing the SIU model, CSC developed a staffing framework to meet the legislative requirements. Each SIU has correctional officers (male institutions) or front-line workers (institutions for women) as well as correctional managers. There are also Parole Officers, Correctional Program Officers, Social Program Officers, Security Intelligence Officers, Indigenous Liaison Officers, Teachers and access to Indigenous Elders, Chaplains, and health care staff. Since SIUs house prisoners who have or could present mental health problems, CSC has told the Panel it takes steps to ensure that staff members assigned to SIUs first receive mental health training. However, due to staff turnover and other human resources pressures, CSC has also informed the panel that it has struggled to maintain this training objective.

The CSC must ensure ongoing monitoring of the physical and mental health of prisoners in an SIU. A mental health assessment must be conducted within 24 hours of their arrival in the SIU and regularly thereafter; however, the advice from the health care professional conducting these assessments is presented as a recommendation to the Institutional Head and is not binding. It is the Institutional Head who determines what actually happens:

37.3 (1) The Institutional Head shall determine, in accordance with regulations made under paragraph 96(g), whether an inmate should remain in a structured intervention unit

  1. as soon as practicable after a registered health care professional recommends under section 37.2, for health reasons, that the inmate not remain in the unit
  2. within the period that begins on the day on which the determination under subsection 29.01(2) is made and that ends on the expiry of the period of 30 days that begins on the first day on which the inmate is confined in the unit

If the Institution Head does not implement the recommendation, a Health Committee chaired by the Assistant Commissioner of Health Services will review the case, and ultimately an Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) may receive the case to make a determination. 

“As soon as practicable” is not defined and is a difficult standard in terms of accountability. Furthermore, it could be argued that the legislation itself does not intend for decisions to be made quickly since subsection (b) indicates that the Institutional Head’s decision on whether the prisoner should be in the Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) in the first place need not be made until the prisoner has been confined in the SIU for 30 days.

There are no health human resources dedicated to SIUs, but prisoners are to receive daily visits from a registered health care professional. What such a visit entails is also not clearly established in the legislation. Some details about the nature of visits are outlined in CSC’s own Mental Health Guidelines and Commissioner’s Directives, but the panel has no systematic data on actual practice.

In various meetings with CSC senior leaders and during IAP visits to the SIUs, CSC management staff indicated that they regularly face human resources challenges. While some institutions seem to be less affected than others, retention, staff turnover and the impacts of the pandemic on overtime and absenteeism are all factors that have had consequences on the stability of the teams in place in the SIUs. At this point in our work, the IAP cannot fully assess this impact on CSC’s ability to deliver expected services and meet its legal requirements.

At all institutions, staff have generally presented as being enthusiastic and committed to the SIU model, often stating that things are much better than when the former Administrative Segregation regime was in place. That said, front line staff have consistently raised concerns about delayed infrastructure improvements, limited or inappropriate physical space, failure of the data collection process, management’s singular focus (at all levels) on “time out of cell” numbers at the expense of appreciating what they referred to as “the bigger picture”. The Panel consistently heard from program staff that the preponderance of SIU placed prisoners who can not be out of their cell with others is making it nearly impossible to offer all prisoners reasonable options given current limitations on staffing and space. While the physical space is certainly limited, we have witnessed staff creativity at a number of sites to overcome many of these barriers. We have also heard consistently from health care staff that the current charting requirements are excessively demanding and duplicative.

CSC informed the IAP that, after 2.5 years of operation, it intends to add health care staff to institutions to better support SIU prisoners and those in the mainstream population. As the new staffing is not yet in place, the Panel is unable to assess the proposed changes. With respect to health services, CSC informed us that additional financial resources have been allocated to add nursing and psychiatry positions within institutions, but these positions are not specifically assigned to SIUs. During site visits, we found many health care staff were unaware of the planned new human resources model and had not provided input into decisions regarding the allocation of new staff either by occupational group or regarding the number of new staff required. The CSC has informed us that its goal is to improve the initial assessment of prisoners’ health, but once again, this enhancement is not targeted to SIU placed prisoners. The Panel plans to examine the issue of SIU human resources more closely over the coming year.

When preparing this report, the IAP had no data on the number of prisoners who participated in programs during their time in an SIU or on the effectiveness of the programs. The same is true for other activities offered to prisoners in an SIU. As with the issue of staffing in SIUs, this point will be examined more closely in the second year of the panel’s mandate.

SIU Decision-Making and the Monitoring of SIUs

The amended CCRA provides for decision-making authority outside of CSC by establishing the Independent External Decision-Makers (IEDMs). Among other functions that they carry out, the IEDMs review files following certain decisions by the Commissioner.

To understand the “length of time” reviews that IEDMs carry out, it may be worthwhile to start by looking at where these reviews take place in the context of the entire process leading up to the review (starting from the original placement in the SIU).

The relevant sections of the CCRA are included in the following timeline. In order to understand when the reviews occur, we have listed the time starting from the initial authorization to place the prisoner in the SIU.

  1. Staff member may authorize transfer to SIU [s. 29.01(1)] [Day 1]
  2. Institutional Head shall determine if inmate stays (within 5 working days) [s. 29.01(2)] [Day 6-8]
  3. Within two days of their placement in the SIU, written reasons are provided to the prisoner [s. 34(3)] [Day 1-3]
  4. Mental health reviews take place within two days of placement and daily thereafter and a mental health assessment may be ordered. However, it is ultimately the Institutional Head’s decision as to what happens to the prisoner [s. 37.2 & s. 37.3]. This process can take an additional 30 days.
  5. Within 30 days of the placement in the SIU, Institutional Head determines if prisoner remains in SIU “as soon as practicable in any of the prescribed circumstances” [s. 37.3(1)].
  6. 30 days after #5, the “Commissioner” decides if prisoner stays in the SIU. [37.4] [Day 61-66]]
  7. 30 days after decision in #6, the IEDM shall determine if prisoner remains in SIU [s. 37.8] [Day 91-96] This is sometimes referred to as the “30-day review”.

While an Institution Head may review a case for release whenever a safe alternative is identified, the legislated timeframe for the length of time reviews is cumbersome and does not guarantee timely reviews. Specifically, if the prisoner is still in the SIU 60 days after the Commissioner’s previous decision (in #6) and therefore roughly at day 120 or shortly thereafter, the Commissioner makes another determination (as in #6). This then triggers another IEDM determination 30 days later [Day 150 or shortly thereafter]. This gets repeated until the prisoner is ordered released by the Commissioner or by the IEDM.

While section 37(2) of the CCRA authorizes health staff to recommend changes to the conditions of confinement in an SIU or even to remove a prisoner from an SIU who shows signs of deteriorating health, it bears repeating that section 37(3) is clear that any such recommendation by health staff is not binding on the Institutional Head.

Observations on the Independent External Decision-Maker Role and Functions

The original bill (C-83, 42nd Parliament, 1st session) creating the SIUs contained no external review of the operation of the SIUs. Very quickly during the review of the bill by the parliamentary committee, it became clear that some form of independent external review of certain decisions was required. Amendments creating Independent IEDMs were passed and incorporated into the final form of the legislation. The role of the IEDMs is to conduct case reviews, provide oversight related to a prisoner’s conditions of confinement, and the frequency and duration of SIU placements. They are given responsibility to review certain decisions and make recommendations. They have the authority to meet and speak with the prisoners and access documents relevant to decision-making. IEDMs have legislative authority to make binding decisions for movement out of an SIU. These decisions, of course, must be implemented by CSC. As will be discussed later in this report, the implementation of these decisions is not as straightforward as one would hope.

Independent External Decision-Makers (IEDMs) are not CSC employees. They are appointed by the Minister and occupy statutory positions. Appointees must have knowledge of administrative decision-making processes, and their work and their findings are directed by sections 37.6 to 37.83 of the CCRA. They are appointed to serve either full-time or part-time for a renewable term of not more than five years, and they receive remuneration at rates fixed by the Treasury Board based on a minimum of 1,800 hours in any consecutive 12-month period. There are currently twelve IEDMs appointed for various terms, eleven of which are serving on a full-time basis and one part-time. Two of the twelve were appointed as senior IEDMs; one for the Western SIUs and one for the Eastern SIUs. The current terms and conditions of IEDM appointment do not provide for benefits or paid leave. IEDMS may choose to not work (or get paid) for up to four weeks during the year, but they must first ensure the workload allows for their leave. In practice, since some IEDM coverage must be available 365 days a year, we are told some full-time IEDMs have not been able to take four weeks off since their appointment. If a full-time IEDM does not meet the 1,800 hour minimum (e.g., if they are ill), not only could they forfeit income, but there is also a risk that cases will be left unaddressed or not addressed within legislated timeframes.

The Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) positions were not created within a structure that includes independent support. As a result, Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) has allocated staff to provide administrative support to the IEDMs. The staff assigned to these duties are federal public servants and report to CSC. In discussions with panel members, some IEDMs have reported issues related to receiving documents in a timely manner. As mentioned, CSC provides administrative support for the IEDMS, and is responsible for the collection of documents to be shared. Currently there are six CSC positions allocated for these tasks. There is little concern about CSC employees collecting the documents requested by the IEDMs, however, there are concerns about the impact on the perception of IEDM independence due to CSC fulfilling a secretariat function and the resulting perception of a conflict of interest.

The Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA) states:

37.7 (1) The Service shall furnish to an independent external decision-maker all information under the Service’s control that is relevant to the making of a determination in respect of an inmate by the independent external decision-maker.

One clear problem is that there is no way of knowing what constitutes “all information under the Service’s control that is relevant to the making of a determination…”. Without access to CSC’s Offender Management System (OMS), IEDMs may not be aware of the existence of information that could be relevant to their decision-making tasks. Some IEDMs have expressed concerns that this limits their ability to be certain they have reviewed all relevant information prior to making a finding or decision.

IEDM Training

Initial IEDM training consisted of a two-week session provided by CSC and Public Safety Canada (PSC). Much of the material that the panel examined from that training session consisted of generic information about the operation of CSC. Aside from the issue of whether it is appropriate for the CSC to be developing and delivering the training for those responsible for providing oversight of its operations, members of this panel identified what it considers important elements missing from the initial training, including:

Assignments

The senior IEDMs receive a list of new cases provided by CSC with limited information that essentially identifies only the prisoner and what section of the legislation the pending review will address. The senior IEDMs are responsible for assigning the cases. Interestingly, if a specific IEDM has already rendered a previous decision on a case, subsequent reviews are typically assigned to the same IEDM for further decisions (if the prisoner remains uninterrupted in the SIU). Once the prisoner transfers out of the SIU, the assignment will typically go to a new IEDM. This helps ensure that prisoners don't begin to view the IEDM as their "worker" or "advocate". In addition, involving different IEDMs contributes to the perception of independence and unbiased reviews. The Panel has been told that, occasionally, an IEDM may feel they have a conflict of interest, or they believe they have rendered an excessive number of decisions on a specific file and recuse themselves.

IEDM Case Reviews

Two of the most frequent categories of review that the IEDMs carry out include time out of cell reviews (s. s. 37.83) and length of stay reviews (s. 37.8).   

The IEDM typically starts a length of stay review (s. 37.8) following the Commissioner’s decision on the prisoner’s placement pursuant to section 37.4, which is generally 60 days after initial placement. Typically, a decision is rendered within 90 days after the beginning of the confinement in the SIU. Under the legislation, it is possible that a prisoner could be reviewed by the IEDM, simultaneously, for different issues.

IEDMs have noted that once they render a decision calling for a prisoner to be removed from an SIU, they receive little or no feedback on how and when that decision is acted on. Concerns have been raised that no explanation is provided if the direction to remove is not followed. Although this Panel has seen a small sample of anonymized IEDM decisions and the senior IEDMs have told the Panel they are comfortable sharing decisions (once identifying information is removed), IEDM decisions have yet to be made routinely available for review. Resistance to sharing these decisions is difficult to understand given that the CCRA and its regulations provide for transparency as well as dissemination for research purposes. Specifically, s.37.77 provides that:

37.77 An independent external decision-maker may, in accordance with regulations made under paragraph 96(g.1), publish or otherwise disseminate information, other than personal information, relating to any determination made by the independent external decision-maker.

The relevant regulation states that:

23.02 For the purposes of section 37.77 of the Act, a representative sampling of information related to any determination of the independent external decision-maker may be published in print and electronically and those publications are to be made available to offenders, staff members and the public.

The Panel is aware that CCRA section 37.74(1) would seem to prohibit the sharing of information. However, a full reading of section (including s.37.74(2) dispels this concern:

37.74 (1) Subject to subsection (2), an independent external decision-maker shall not disclose any information that comes to their knowledge in the course of the exercise of their powers, or the performance of their duties and functions, under this Act or any other Act of Parliament.

(2) An independent external decision-maker may disclose information referred to in subsection (1) in the exercise of their powers or the performance of their duties and functions.

IEDM Length of Stay Decisions

The Panel focused its attention on length of stay reviews. Importantly, a prisoner, during one SIU stay, can have more than one length of stay review if they are in the SIU for an extended period. The IEDM review process initiated once the prisoner has been in the SIU for 60 days, can take a further 30 days to complete despite the legislated requirement for reviews to be timely. Thirty days is twice the amount of time that a stay in “solitary confinement” may be considered “torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment” under the Mandela Rules if the prisoner is experiencing solitary confinement conditions (Rule 43).

In 36% of the cases originally referred to the IEDM, the prisoner had already been transferred out of the SIU before a decision could be made, and in another 1.4% of the other cases, the IEDM determined that a review would be moot. When we looked at the two most obvious outcomes of the review process (i.e., remain in the SIU vs. not remain in the SIU), we found 451 of 525, or 86% of the IEDM decisions were that the prisoner should remain in the SIU.

Perhaps the most interesting finding when reviewing the decisions is the variability across individual IEDMs. Table 2 highlights this unexpected issue - the significant variability across IEDMs in the decisions that they made.

Table 2: Decisions on Release for Each of the 14 IEDMs
IEDM Identifier IEDM Decision
Inmate should NOT remain in SIU Inmate should remain in SIU Total
1 3 49 52
5.8% 94.2% 100.0%
2 0 57 57
0.0% 100.0% 100.0%
3 21 24 45
46.7% 53.3% 100.0%
4 4 62 66
6.1% 93.9% 100.0%
5 10 33 43
23.3% 76.7% 100.0%
6 9 27 36
25.0% 75.0% 100.0%
7 3 36 39
7.7% 92.3% 100.0%
8 12 16 28
42.9% 57.1% 100.0%
9 3 47 50
6.0% 94.0% 100.0%
10 2 22 24
8.3% 91.7% 100.0%
11 4 55 59
6.8% 93.2% 100.0%
12 0 6 6
0.0% 100.0% 100.0%
13 0 14 14
0.0% 100.0% 100.0%
14 3 3 6
50.0% 50.0% 100.0%
Total  74 451 525
14.1% 85.9% 100.0%

Table 2 shows that the Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) to which a case was assigned is important. Specifically, looking at those IEDMs with 40+ reviews, we see that the percentage of “removal from SIU” decisions ranges from zero to 46.7%. Said differently, if a prisoner’s case was being reviewed by IEDM #2, the expected result would be a determination that the prisoner should remain in the Structured Intervention Unit (SIU). While a number of IEDMs recommended removal for fewer than 5% of their cases, others recommended that over a quarter of the prisoners they reviewed be released.

To find out what happens when an IEDM orders that a person be transferred out of the SIU, we looked at the subset of decisions involving person-stays in the SIUs where there was only one review.

Based on the premise of external oversight with decision making authority, it is reasonable to expect that when an IEDM has ordered CSC to transfer a prisoner out of an SIU it would happen fairly quickly. The rules for this are covered in Commissioner’s Directive 711: Structured Intervention Units (CD 711)Footnote 32, which states that the timing of the transfer out of the SIU depends on where the prisoner is being transferred to:

This last set of provisions may explain why, sometimes, people spend a long time in the SIU after they are ordered out by the IEDM.

The time for the transfer to be effected is shown in Table 3:

Table 3:  Number of Days to be Released as a Function of the Decision of the IEDM
IEDM Decision Number of days in the SIU (from date file referred to IEDM to date of leaving the SIU)
Released within 30 days of referral to IEDM Released 31 to 40 days after file was referred to IEDM Released 41 to 60 day after file was referred to IEDM Released 61+ days after file was referred to IEDM Total
Prisoner to be removed from SIU 11 13 9 18 51
21.6% 25.5% 17.6% 35.3% 100%
Prisoner to remain in the SIU 21 35 47 10 113
18.6% 31.0% 41.6% 8.8% 100%
No decision necessary because already transferred out/moot 218 5 1 1 225
96.9% 2.2% 0.4% 0.4% 100%
Total 250 53 57 29 389
64.3% 13.6% 14.7% 7.5% 100%

Note: Person-stays with only one IEDM length of stay review. The times involved in this table relate to the time to release, starting from the date that the issue was referred to the IEDM.

The data in Tables 3 and 4 suggest that IEDM reviews may be somewhat less of a check on long stays than intended. After about 60 days, a case should be sent to an IEDM for a length of stay review. However, it appears that CSC didn’t refer a significant number of prisoners for length of stay reviews even after they had been in the SIU for quite some time.

Table 4: Time in the SIU and Whether the Case was Referred to an IEDM
Number of days in the SIU

Was the stay sent to IEDM to be reviewed for length of stay?

Not sent for review Sent to IEDM Total
Up to 65 days 3,097 57 3,154
98.2% 1.8% 100%
66 to 75 days 63 94 157
40.1% 59.9% 100%
76 to 90 days 59 105 164
36.0% 64.0% 100%
91 to 120 days 66 136 202
32.7% 67.3% 100%
121+ days 93 196 289
32.2% 67.8% 100%
Total 3,378 588 3,966
85.2% 14.8% 100%

Note: We have used 65-66 as the break point since it, in effect, gives the benefit of the doubt to CSC on the manner in which days should be counted.

We identified two potential explanations for the findings in Tables 3 and 4. First, it is possible that CSC intended to implement the IEDM’s decision but was waiting for an intra- or inter-regional transfer to take place (i.e., the prisoner was going to another institution, but CSC wasn’t able to arrange for the transfer very quickly). The Panel was told that the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to transfer delays. A second possibility is that the prisoner didn’t want to leave the SIU, and CSC saw no reason for an IEDM review. Neither explanation satisfactorily explains the failure of CSC to refer cases for IEDM review as required by the legislation.

The Independent External Decision-Makers (IEDMs) are meant to play an important role in ensuring that prisoners in federal custody are treated fairly in accordance with the Legislation. However, it is not clear to the Panel that the IEDM review process is working as intended. Terms of appointment, gaps in training and orientation, an overly complex policy framework, limited and conflicted administrative support are among identified concerns. To add to this list, the Panel has noted a lack of consistency in the form of decisions, timeliness of reviews, wide variation across IEDMs in patterns of decisions, and legislation that allows for interpretation when precise language is called for.

SIU Operational and Legal Requirements

The Panel has noted wide variations in practice from institution to institution and across regions, as evidenced by the data on SIU operations. Some institutions demonstrating greater success in integrating offenders into general populations are using their Inmate Committees from the general population to work with prisoners in the SIU on exit plans. At other institutions, we have witnessed the involvement of outside groups in providing programming and activities. However, other institutions do not allow Inmate Committees access to the SIU and there is no evidence of involvement of outside groups. Many institutions have effectively incorporated Indigenous Elders into the daily operations of the SIU, including participation in the development of prisoner case management plans. At other institutions we have been told that Elders feel marginalized and not part of the team.

As has been pointed out earlier in this report, it is generally agreed that solitary confinement is harmful to those who experience it, especially for long periods of time. At the same time, correctional administrators argue that some form of isolation from the general penitentiary population is sometimes necessary in the case of certain prisoners. We have heard as well from both staff and prisoners that many of the more vulnerable offenders feel safer in the SIU than in general population. A number of prisoners, in addition to feeling more comfortable in the SIU environment, see the SIU as a better place to access health care, programming, and cultural services. Many prisoners have also expressed the belief that a security reclassification and/or transfer to lower security is easier from the SIU than from general population. These factors have aided in fostering a sense within the inmate population that the SIU is not a bad place to be if you want to feel safe, do quiet time, and work on your correctional plan. In addition, program staff have suggested that offenders with mental health needs are better served by remaining in the SIU than returning to the general population in terms of access to and continuity of programing and treatment.

This dilemma should be a surprise to no one. There has traditionally been a significant portion of the segregated population placed there for their own protection. With the measures taken to address the negative aspects of isolation it is then not at all surprising that prisoners seeking safety have found a home in the Structured Intervention Unit (SIU). The surprise is that Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) does not appear to date to have developed specific strategies to address this dilemma.

The fact that a certain portion of the prisoner population finds the SIU a preferable home to a general population range is faint praise for the conditions of confinement in the SIU. While a significant number of resources have been added, the majority of SIUs are located in former Administrative Segregation areas. Although fresh paint has been applied, these areas are often spartan, with cramped office and program space, poor natural lighting, limited indoor and outdoor recreation areas, and the ghosts of their recent history. The Panel has noted that a number of projects to enhance the infrastructure of these units, two and a half years in, remain in the planning stage or under construction.

When the government decided, in response to Court of Appeal judgements, to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA) to abolish segregation and to move, at least in law if not in practice, toward becoming compliant with the Mandela Rules, it had to establish what might be considered legislative goals or requirements. There are essentially two objectives - First, the use of time locked in a cell in isolation (relative or absolute) from other people is meant to be used as a last resort. Second, even when a prisoner is experiencing isolating conditions of confinement, complete isolation is to be minimized, if not forbidden.

Canadian legislation now allows this isolating use of cell confinement in SIUs for three reasons outlined explicitly in the CCRA. The use of SIUs for the purposes of punishment is not permitted in law, and prisoners are not to be transferred to an SIU for treatment purposes.

34 (1) A staff member may authorize the transfer of an inmate into a structured intervention unit under subsection 29.01(1) only if the staff member is satisfied that there is no reasonable alternative to the inmate’s confinement in a structured intervention unit and the staff member believes on reasonable grounds that:

  1. the inmate has acted, has attempted to act or intends to act in a manner that jeopardizes the safety of any person or the security of a penitentiary and allowing the inmate to be in the mainstream inmate population would jeopardize the safety of any person or the security of the penitentiary;
  2. allowing the inmate to be in the mainstream inmate population would jeopardize the inmate’s safety; or
  3. allowing the inmate to be in the mainstream inmate population would interfere with an investigation that could lead to a criminal charge or a charge under subsection 41(2) of a serious disciplinary offence.

In addition to the three possible grounds for SIU placement (i.e., safety of others, prisoner’s own safety, and interference with an ongoing investigation) there is another important issue to consider: the length of time that a person is in an SIU.  As noted above, if CSC is contemplating putting someone in an SIU, there can be “no reasonable alternative” to the SIU, and “an inmate’s confinement in a structured intervention unit is to end as soon as possible.”Footnote 33 There is no ambiguity about these goals. Implicitly, the legislation incorporates the idea that time in an SIU is not in the best interest of a prisoner and is to be used as a last resort.

Within 24 hours of the transfer of a prisoner to an SIU, the “inmate’s case” must be referred to CSC health care “for the purpose of conducting a mental health assessment of the inmate”Footnote 34 and the prisoner must be visited daily by a “registered health care professional”Footnote 35. In addition, there are repeated internal (and eventually external) reviews. In all cases, despite the legislated provision for binding independent decision making, CSC exercises ultimate authority regarding what, if any, actions are taken in response to the reviews.

Upon close examination of the review sections of the CCRA it becomes clear that it is only after a prisoner has been in an SIU for roughly four times the length of time that the Mandela Rules specify for ‘solitary confinement’ to be considered torture or other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment (i.e. 60 days), does the CommissionerFootnote 36 determine if the prisoner should continue in the SIU (CCRA 37.4).Taking these factors together, there should be relatively few people transferred to SIUs, and they should stay for as short a time as possible. Short stays, then, are preferable to long stays according to the law. What the law does not provide, however, is a hard limit to the length of a stay. But if two regions were to be compared, and one had fewer stays than the other and its stays in the SIU were also of shorter duration, it would be clear that the region with fewer and shorter SIU stays would be more compliant with the law.

The second legislative requirement is that prisoners must be provided an opportunity to spend four hours every day out of their cells, two hours of which are supposed to involve meaningful human contact. These are separate, but obviously related legislative requirements.Footnote 37 A problem that arises is in understanding why a person might not avail themselves of the opportunity that is offered by CSC. Knowing that they were offered “time in the yard” and that the prisoner “didn’t want to spend time in the yard” is hard to interpret. In reading Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) reports (together with local weather records), one might infer prisoners sometimes refuse four hours in the yard in the winter because of unpleasant outdoor conditions. Similarly, it is difficult to evaluate the “two hours” of “interaction” under s. 36(1)(b) since we don’t know, in meaningful detail, what was being offered and why it might or might not have been attractive.

For the analyses that follow, we used CSC’s own data based on SIU stays from 30 November 2019 until 13 February 2022. However, for the purposes of evaluating anything related to time in the SIU, we used an earlier cut-off for the start of the SIU stay (the end of November 2021) so that we could determine whether a person stayed more than two months (by the time our data were collected by CSC in mid-February 2022).

Length of Stay in the SIU

As shown in Table 5, there are a number of SIU stays that lasted longer than the key international threshold that is often used in talking about solitary confinement – 15 days. Indeed, more than half of the stays during this period lasted 16 days or more.

Table 5: Total days in SIU
Number of Days in the SIU: Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
1 thru 5 752 20.1 20.1
6 thru 15 874 23.4 43.5
16 thru 31 606 16.2 59.8
32 thru 61 636 17.0 76.8
62 thru 552 866 23.2 100.0
Total 3,734 100.0

To put these numbers in context, the Panel considered data on previous length of stay in administrative segregation. The 2020 Corrections and Conditional Release Statistical Overview (CCRSO: Public Safety Canada, 2022) reports 72.2% of the placements in Administrative Segregation in 2019 (April 2019-November 2019) were for less than 30 days (based on 3216 placements). The previous CCRSO (2019) reported a comparable figure for 2018-19 (74.7% (n=5421)). Hence about 72-75% of the stays in segregation were for less than 30 days. It would appear, then, that stays commencing during the first two years of the operation of SIUs were, overall, somewhat longer than was the case under administrative segregation. Even so, across time, the length of stay for prisoners in SIUs varied without any obvious pattern (see Table 6).

Table 6: Length of Stay in the SIU as a function of the date that it started
When the person’s SIU stay started

Total days in SIU including those still in on 13 February 2022

1 thru 5 6 thru 15 16 thru 31 32 thru 61 62 thru 552 Total
Nov 2019 thru Dec 2019 36 50 44 74 95 299
12.0% 16.7% 14.7% 24.7% 31.8% 100.0%
Jan 2020 thru March 2020 137 149 83 84 121 574
23.9% 26.0% 14.5% 14.6% 21.1% 100.0%
April 2020 thru June 2020 151 117 87 70 83 508
29.7% 23.0% 17.1% 13.8% 16.3% 100.0%
July 2020 thru Sept 2020 121 168 104 94 108 595
20.3% 28.2% 17.5% 15.8% 18.2% 100.0%
Oct 2020 thru Dec 2020 104 102 71 78 120 475
21.9% 21.5% 14.9% 16.4% 25.3% 100.0%
Jan 2021 thru March 2021 76 127 75 59 105 442
17.2% 28.7% 17.0% 13.3% 23.8% 100.0%
April 2021 thru June 2021 52 53 48 70 83 306
17.0% 17.3% 15.7% 22.9% 27.1% 100.0%
July 2021 thru Sept 2021 49 63 49 69 80 310
15.8% 20.3% 15.8% 22.3% 25.8% 100.0%
October 2021 thru Nov 2021 26 45 45 38 71 225
11.6% 20.0% 20.0% 16.9% 31.6% 100.0%
Total 752 874 606 636 866 3,734
20.1% 23.4% 16.2% 17.0% 23.2% 100.0%

The regional differences in the way in which SIUs are used suggests that each region might be able to benefit from understanding the best practices (or more accurately, the best outcomes) that occur in other regions. This variation also complicates understanding of how the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic was responsible for prolonged SIU stays.

As shown previously in Table 1, the number of Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) cells that were created per 1000 rated capacity in the region varied considerably. We see in Table 7 below that the number of SIU stays per 1000 prisonersFootnote 38 in a region also varied considerably, and regions that tended to have a high rate of short stays (Atlantic and Quebec) also tended to have high rates of long stays. Ontario is notable for having low counts (and rates) of both short and long stays in SIUs.

Table 7: Rate of Short and Long Person-Stays in SIUs per 1000 Prisoners in the Region
Region Short Stays in SIUs (1-15 days) per 1000 prisoners in the Region Long Stays in SIUs (16 or more days) per 1000 Prisoners in the Region Total Stays in SIUs per 1000 Prisoners in the Region
Atlantic 134.8 220.5 355.3
Quebec 278.4 197.3 475.7
Ontario 39.8 67.7 107.5
Prairie 74.8 184.3 259.1
Pacific 144.2 176.9 321.1
Canada 121.1 157.0 278.2

But the regions varied not only in terms of their overall use of the SIUs, but also in how they used these cells. We have no obvious explanation for the variation across regions. That said, if the goal is to have relatively few stays in SIUs (long or short), it is a matter of concern that there is as much variation as there is.

As shown in Table 8, once a prisoner is transferred to an SIU, the region that they are in is a good predictor of how long they will stay in the SIU. Very short stays in the SIU (i.e., five days or fewer) are significantly more likely to occur in Quebec than in the Prairies.

Table 8: Length of Stay in the SIU by Region
Region of SIU

Total days in SIU including those still in

1 thru 5 6 thru 15 16 thru 31 32 thru 61 62 thru 552 Total
Atlantic 57 108 67 80 123 435
13.1% 24.8% 15.4% 18.4% 28.3% 100.0%
Quebec 403 338 155 148 222 1,266
31.8% 26.7% 12.2% 11.7% 17.5% 100.0%
Ontario 70 77 48 81 121 397
17.6% 19.4% 12.1% 20.4% 30.5% 100.0%
Prairies 99 192 213 230 274 1,008
9.8% 19.0% 21.1% 22.8% 27.2% 100.0%
Pacific 123 159 123 97 126 628
19.6% 25.3% 19.6% 15.4% 20.1% 100.0%
Total 752 874 606 636 866 3,734
20.1% 23.4% 16.2% 17.0% 23.2% 100.0%

There are also some race/ethnicity differences in length of stay. Indigenous prisoners were less likely than other groups to spend five days or less in the SIU, once transferred there. However, the proportion of very long stays (62 days or more) does not seem to vary much across groups (See Appendix Table A1)

As mentioned earlier, a concern that appears to form the basis of the sections of the CCRA that created SIUs is that long periods of time in SIUs are assumed to be harmful to the prisoner. As can be seen in Table 9, those whose mental health deteriorated at some point during the SIU stayFootnote 39 are substantially more likely to stay in an SIU for an extended period. Those whose mental health did not deteriorate during the SIU stay (i.e., whether the person has no identified mental health needs, or has identified but stable needs) are much more likely to be transferred out of the SIU within 15 days.

Table 9:  Length of Stay in the SIU for Prisoners with Varied Mental Health Challenges
Mental Health Groups (from CSCs 9 mental health groups) Total days in the SIU including those still in
1 thru 15 days 16 thru 552 days Total
No low or some needs, not getting worse 1,433 1,681 3,114
46.0% 54.0% 100.0%
High needs, not getting worse 158 171 329
48.0% 52.0% 100.0%
Various mental health needs and getting worse 35 256 291
12.0% 88.0% 100.0%
Total 1,626 2,108 3,734
43.5% 56.5% 100.0%

Indigenous prisoners in SIUs (who constitute about 41% of the person stays we are examining in these analyses) are more likely than other groups to have high mental health needs or to be identified as having deteriorated mental health (See Appendix Table A2).

Summary of Findings Regarding Length of Stay in the SIU

Time Out of the SIU Cell

There is, for various obvious reasons, much more concern about long stays in SIUs than there is with short stays. Some jurisdictions have limits on the length of stays in solitary confinement or special review procedures for longer stays. 

Slightly more than half (56%) of the SIU stays during the period covered by our data were for 16 days or more.

In the section that follows, we will be focusing largely on those whose stays in SIUs were at least 16 days. These “long stay” SIU prisoners are more likely than the “short stay” prisoners (i.e., those with SIU stays of 15 days or less) to get their four hours out of the SIU cell and their two hours of meaningful human contact (see Appendix Tables A3 and A4).

Achieving the “Promised” Four Hours Out of the SIU Cell

Nevertheless, during the period covered by these statistical analyses (stays in SIUs beginning between November 2019 and November 2021), the majority of long stay prisoners in SIUs did not receive their “four hours” out of their SIU cells on at least half their days. As can be seen in the Table 10, about 58% of long stay SIU prisoners didn’t get their four hours during at least three quarters of their days. A more detailed breakdown can be found in Appendix Table A5. Furthermore, and perhaps most importantly, as shown in Appendix Tables A8 and A10, for the long stay prisoners, “refusals” by prisoners do not adequately account for the fact that many prisoners do not receive the time out cell that one would expect from the legislation.

Table 10: Percent of days during which long-stay prisoners missed getting 4 hours out of their cell
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
Missed zero days up to 50% of their days 518 25.0 25.0
Missed 51% to 75% of their days 351 16.9 42.0
Missed 76% to 100% of their days 1,202 58.0 100.0
Total 2,071 100.0

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

There were, however, huge differences across regions. The Structured Intervention Units (SIUs) in the Prairie region were measurably more successful in achieving this legislative requirement than were the other four regions (see Table 11).

Table 11: Regional differences on achieving the “4 hours out of cell” (Long stay SIU prisoners only) Note: Long stay (16+ days) SIU prisoners only
Region of SIU

Percent of days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved

Missed zero days up to 50% of their days Missed 51% to 75% of their days Missed 76% to 100% of their days Total
Atlantic 33 52 179 264
12.5% 19.7% 67.8% 100.0%
Quebec 26 88 406 520
5.0% 16.9% 78.1% 100.0%
Ontario 50 71 125 246
20.3% 28.9% 50.8% 100.0%
Prairies 401 88 213 702
57.1% 12.5% 30.3% 100.0%
Pacific 8 52 279 339
2.4% 15.3% 82.3% 100.0%
Total 518 351 1,202 2,071
25.0% 16.9% 58.0% 100.0%

Regional and institutional differences are important in understanding what is possible in the SIUs. For example, in this case, if about 57% of those in SIUs in the Prairie region availed themselves of their four hours out of cell on most days (i.e., they missed getting them on 50% or fewer days), why is it that only about 2.4% of those in SIUs in the Pacific experienced this result?

More encouraging is the fact that during 2021, CSC got better at getting people out of their SIU cells. This can be seen in detail in Table 12 which divides success in achieving the four hours out of cell into three groupings.

Table 12: Success in achieving four hours out of cell as a function of starting date in SIU (Long stay prisoners only)
When the person’s SIU stay started Percent of days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved
Missed zero days up to 50% of their days missed 51% to 75% of their days missed 76% to 100% of their days Total
Nov 2019 thru Dec 2019 33 34 146 213
15.5% 16.0% 68.5% 100.0%
Jan 2020 thru March 2020 64 53 162 279
22.9% 19.0% 58.1% 100.0%
April 2020 thru June 2020 55 24 156 235
23.4% 10.2% 66.4% 100.0%
July 2020 thru Sept 2020 79 42 178 299
26.4% 14.0% 59.5% 100.0%
Oct 2020 thru Dec 2020 26 53 184 263
9.9% 20.2% 70.0% 100.0%
Jan 2021 thru March 2021 57 39 139 235
24.3% 16.6% 59.1% 100.0%
April 2021 thru June 2021 73 35 92 200
36.5% 17.5% 46.0% 100.0%
July 2021 thru Sept 2021 67 35 93 195
34.4% 17.9% 47.7% 100.0%
October 2021 thru Nov 2021 64 36 52 152
42.1% 23.7% 34.2% 100.0%
Total 518 351 1,202 2,071
25.0% 16.9% 58.0% 100.0%

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

The findings in Table 12 are certainly encouraging. 70% of those whose SIU stays began in the final quarter of 2020 missed getting the legislated expectation of four hours out of cell in at least 76% of the days they were in the SIUs. For those beginning their SIU stays in October or November 2021, this had dropped by about half to 34.2%.

“Getting better” is good, but it doesn’t mean that improvements are not still necessary. We can’t help noting that only 42.1% missed half or fewer of their promised four hours out of cell. The numbers (not percentages) perhaps make this point clear. During this much improved period, 152 people entered SIUs and stayed there at least 16 days. 52 of them did not get out of their cells on at least three quarters of their days in the SIU. In addition, improvement was not uniform across regions. The national improvement appears to have come from relatively clear improvement in two regions – Atlantic and the Prairie regions, and less consistent or less favourable change in the others.

The CCRA presents the four hours requirement as a “hard floor” of what a prisoner can expect in an SIU. The language is that prisoners are to be provided “an opportunity to spend a minimum of four hours outside the inmate’s cell” (s.36(1)(a). Similarly, paragraph 117 of Commissioner’s Directive 711: Structured Intervention Units (CD 711) indicates that “…all reasonable efforts will be made to provide inmates with as much time out of their cells beyond the minimum of four hours…”. In most cases, however, the average time the prisoner gets out of their cell does not come close to the “promised” four hours. Said differently, 5.5% of prisoners got their full four hours each day. But 69.6% got an average time out of their cells of only two hours or less (see Appendix Table A6).

CSC also has a legal requirement to record refusals from prisoners to leave their cell. Recording these refusals whenever they occur for any reason is in CSC’s best interest. It is notable that for these long stay prisoners, refusals cannot account for the failure to provide four hours out of cell. As shown in Table 13, about 70% of the “long stay” prisoners refused only once or twice, constituting less than 20% of their days in the SIU.

Table 13: Amount of refusal to leave the cell all day (Long stay prisoners only)
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
Refused zero or one time 730 35.2 35.2
Refused at least twice, constituting up to 20% of their days 724 35.0 70.2
Refused at least twice, constituting 20.1% to 50% of their days 417 20.1 90.3
Refused at least twice, constituting 50.1% to 100% of their days 200 9.7 100.0
Total 2,071 100.0

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Refusals on the part of prisoners to leave their cells happened in all regions and across all time periods. However, regional differences are dramatic, with refusals much more common in some regions (Pacific and Quebec) than elsewhere. Refusals were relatively rare in the Prairie region (see Table 14).

Table 14: Regional variation in rate of refusals to leave the cell all day
Region of SIU Amount of refusal to leave the cell all day
Refused zero or one time Refused at least twice, constituting up to 20% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 20.1% to 50% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 50.1% to 100% of their days Total
Atlantic 77 114 64 9 264
29.2% 43.2% 24.2% 3.4% 100.0%
Quebec 88 201 167 64 520
16.9% 38.7% 32.1% 12.3% 100.0%
Ontario 103 130 12 1 246
41.9% 52.8% 4.9% 0.4% 100.0%
Prairies 437 201 53 11 702
62.3% 28.6% 7.5% 1.6% 100.0%
Pacific 25 78 121 115 339
7.4% 23.0% 35.7% 33.9% 100.0%
Total 730 724 417 200 2,071
35.2% 35.0% 20.1% 9.7% 100.0%

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Consistent with the data on success in achieving four hours out of the cell, refusals appeared to be somewhat less common for long Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) stays starting in 2021 than with stays in SIUs beginning in 2019 and 2020 (Appendix Table A7).

The failure of prisoners to have four hours out of their cells cannot be adequately explained by prisoner refusals. We examined the records of the 2,071 long-stay SIU prisoners who did not get their four hours out of the cell for a high proportion (51% or more) of their days in the SIU (Appendix Table A8). A fair number did refuse to leave their cells on at least one day. However, for 1,335 of these long stay prisoners, or 64% of this group, refusals cannot explain the failure to achieve four hours out of cell.

Two Hours of Meaningful Human Contact.

The “time out of cell” findings are mirrored, for the most part, in the data for the “two hours of meaningful human contact”. As seen in Table 15, about three quarters of long-stay prisoners missed getting two hours of meaningful human interaction quite frequently (over 21% of their days).

Table 15: Percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
Missed zero to 20% of their days 502 24.2 24.2
Missed 21% to 75% of their days 1,035 50.0 74.2
Missed 76% to 100% of their days 534 25.8 100.0
Total 2,071 100.0

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Table 16 demonstrates that the Prairie region was most successful, and Quebec and the Pacific regions were least successful in providing two hours of meaningful human interaction for these long-stay SIU prisoners (as was found when examining time out of cell results). The variation across regions is, once again, dramatic.

Table 16: Regional Variation in the percent of days that 2 hours of Meaningful Human Contact out of cell was not achieved
Region of SIU Percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved
Missed zero to 20% of their days Missed 21% to 75% of their days Missed 76% to 100% of their days Total
Atlantic 45 168 51 264
17.0% 63.6% 19.3% 100.0%
Quebec 53 273 194 520
10.2% 52.5% 37.3% 100.0%
Ontario 55 143 48 246
22.4% 58.1% 19.5% 100.0%
Prairies 329 252 121 702
46.9% 35.9% 17.2% 100.0%
Pacific 20 199 120 339
5.9% 58.7% 35.4% 100.0%
Total 502 1,035 534 2,071
24.2% 50.0% 25.8% 100.0%

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

In comparison with SIU stays from November 2019 through March 2021, for the period beginning around April 2021, CSC was more successful in providing prisoners with two hours of meaningful human contact (see Table 17). This is similar to the more inclusive measure (four hours out of cell) described earlier. CSC has suggested to the Panel that these improved numbers may be the result of better documentation, and not changes in operational practices.

The panel examined the new record keeping measures which came into effect in late 2021 and are therefore not useful for understanding the first two years of operation of the SIUs. Our conclusion is a simple one: they may well be better than the original measures for accountability purposes within CSC. However, they do not provide a substantively different picture of the SIUs than the measures we used to examine the SIUs since they first opened. A discussion of the new measures is contained as Appendix B to this report.

Table 17: Changes over time in the percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved
When the prisoner’s SIU stay started Percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved
missed zero to 20% of their days missed 21% to 75% of their days missed 76% to 100% of their days Total
Nov 2019 thru Dec 2019 36 128 49 213
16.9% 60.1% 23.0% 100.0%
Jan 2020 thru March 2020 67 141 71 279
24.0% 50.5% 25.4% 100.0%
April 2020 thru June 2020 53 112 70 235
22.6% 47.7% 29.8% 100.0%
July 2020 thru Sept 2020 60 152 87 299
20.1% 50.8% 29.1% 100.0%
Oct 2020 thru Dec 2020

34

150 79 263
12.9% 57.0% 30.0% 100.0%
Jan 2021 thru March 2021

61

94 80 235
26.0% 40.0% 34.0% 100.0%
April 2021 thru June 2021 68 95 37 200
34.0% 47.5% 18.5% 100.0%
July 2021 thru Sept 2021 63 86 46 195
32.3% 44.1% 23.6% 100.0%
October 2021 thru Nov 2021 60 77 15 152
39.5% 50.7% 9.9% 100.0%
Total 502 1,035 534 2,071
24.2% 50.0% 25.8% 100.0%

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Refusals to accept offers of two hours out of the cell for meaningful human contact are a concern, since there are a non-trivial number of refusals (see Appendix Table A9).

Refusals, however, do not explain all failures of prisoners to get two hours of meaningful human contact each day. We estimate (see Appendix Table A10) that for 1,091 of the 2,071 (53% of these long stay SIU prisoners), refusals do not explain the failure to get the promised two hours of meaningful human contact.

Summary of Findings Regarding Time Out of Cell (Four Hours and 2 Hours of Meaningful Contact)

The data provide us with the following set of interrelated findings:

Promising Practice Example from Millhaven Institution

During a site visit to Millhaven Institution (MI) in June 2022, Panel Members met with the Warden who was eager to discuss a new project at MI intended to enhance services to SIU-placed prisoners. The project represents a local initiative between MI and the Community and Justice Services (CJS) Program at Loyalist College. This 2-year college program is designed to contribute to safer communities by helping people at risk for or involved with the criminal justice system to gain the skills and support they need to make positive life choices. The Warden (a Loyalist College alumnus) contacted the Loyalist College CJS program coordinator to explore a role for students in designing and delivering activities for prisoners transferred to the SIU. Despite the challenges of COVID-19 and institutional scheduling, a pilot project was successfully launched. The project involved students identifying feasible “activities” (not to be confused with “programs”) that they could deliver to SIU-placed prisoners who would be able to gain micro-credentials (a certificate) for participating. The two activities delivered over the 2021/22 winter months were “Indigenous Creations/Crafts” (offered in collaboration with the institution’s Elder and Indigenous Liaison Officer) and “Job Readiness Skills” (computer-based skills, including working with Excel and Word). Three prisoners earned certificates for their participation.

Plans are in place to extend the project this Fall (2022) to include more SIU-placed prisoners and staff. Extending this initiative to the general population, as well as to other institutions is being explored. As the Warden explained, extending this project to the general population could facilitate the transition out of SIU for prisoners resistant to leave, and extending it to other institutions could ease post-transfer adjustment. This project has potential to be a win for SIU-placed prisoners; a win for institutions that struggle to provide enough activities and meaningful interactions with prisoners; a win for students who gain valuable experience; and a win for corrections generally due to the enhanced transparency provided by community members being inside prison walls. The Warden and the CJS program director are currently in discussions and sharing resources with a university professor who coordinates a similar practicum-based program in the Atlantic Region.

Special Areas of Concern

Mental Health

The prevalence of mental health problems/disorders/illnesses/needs among correctional populations has consistently been considerably higher than found in the general non-carceral population. A CSC study by Beaudette et al. (2015) found that 73% of over 1000 newly admitted male prisoners met criteria for at least one mental disorder; over half met lifetime criteria for major mental disorder other than substance use disorders and antisocial personality disorder, such as anxiety and mood disorders (46.4%). A CSC study by Brown et al. (2018) found that 79.2% of female prisoners met criteria for current mental disorder; the rate was 95.6% among Indigenous women. The most common disorders included personality disorders (82.7%), substance use (76%), anxiety (54.2%) and mood (22.1%). Further complicating the situation are the high rates of comorbidity (co-occurring disorders), which in any population, can be 30% or higher. By comparison, about 20% of Canadians experience a mental illness in any given year; up to 50% by age 40. It is worth noting that only 6% of public health spending is devoted to mental health. It is unclear what proportion of CSC health care spending is devoted specifically to mental health, but according to a 2017 report, about 11% of CSC's total direct program spending in 2014-2015 was allocated to three areas: clinical, public, and mental health services.

Prisoners with mental health problems are disproportionately at greater risk for isolation than those without a mental illness. Research shows that in correctional environments, segregation is a common response to mental health problems manifested by aggressive, disruptive, self-injurious behaviour and cognitions (e.g., suicidal ideation). These manifestations/symptoms actually align with the primary criteria for being transferred to an SIU – risks for personally safety, risks to others, or risks to the security of the institution.

As can be seen in Table 18, CSC itself has flagged a substantial portion of people entering the SIUs as facing mental health issues. Women and Indigenous prisoners who enter an SIU are especially likely to be identified by CSC as having a mental health challenge (see Appendix Tables A11 and A12).

As mentioned, there are three justifications for transfers to an SIU. A substantial portion of each group was flagged by CSC as having mental health needs (Appendix Table A13).

Prisoners who, during the period 30 November 2019 and 13 February 2022 had multiple stays in SIUs were substantially more likely to be identified (at the start of one or more of these stays) as having mental health needs. As shown in Table 18, 55% of those who had five or more SIU stays during this 26-month period were identified by CSC as facing mental health challenges. “Only” 24.4% of those who visited an SIU once during this period were identified as having mental health needs.

Table 18: Likelihood of an indication of a mental health need as a function of the number of transfers to an SIU (30 November 2019 to 13 February 2022)
Number of SIU stays Was there a flag during any SIU stay indicating that the prisoner had mental health needs?
No Yes Total
One 779 251 1,030
75.6% 24.4% 100%
Two 277 126 403
68.7% 31.3% 100%
Three 124 87 211
58.8% 41.2% 100%
Four 67 48 115
58.3% 41.7% 100%
Five or more 72 89 161
44.7% 55.3% 100%
Total 1,319 601 1,920
68.7% 31.3% 100%

A person whom CSC identifies as having mental health challenges who has multiple SIU stays is somewhat more likely to be transferred to a different SIUs in different regions (37.4% vs. “only” 30.4% of those without a CSC mental health flag. See Appendix Table A14). These may be more challenging prisoners to deal with. The strategy of moving prisoners to a different SIU in a different region is reminiscent of abusive segregation practices that resulted in difficult to manage prisoners being frequently moved across the country.

It is hard to understand how the needs of people whom Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) has identified as having mental health issues are going to be addressed during multiple short Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) stays especially if, between SIU stays, they are moving across institutions and regions. This does not appear to us to be conducive to establishing positive therapeutic relationships or an effective way of providing stability in the lives of prisoners.

Prisoners with identified mental health needs were slightly (but statistically significantly) more likely to have relatively long stays in SIUs (Appendix Table A15).

CSC has provided a detailed mental health assessment index of those in SIUs to the Panel. Essentially, it divided people into low, some, and high needs groups and indicated whether their mental health challenges were stable or getting worse or better. The group of most concern, obviously, were those whose mental health status was seen, by CSC, as deteriorating. They turned out to be most likely to have long stays in SIUs. These findings are especially important as separation from others has been found to produce extremely high psychological distress, and greater levels of isolation are associated with a higher rate of suicide.

Understanding the impact of SIUs on prisoner mental health requires considerably more information than is currently available to the Panel. CSC stresses that SIU placements are a temporary measure to assist prisoners in adopting more positive behaviours, though as shown in Table 18, having mental health challenges is associated with multiple stays in SIUs. Furthermore, those with mental health challenges and multiple stays in SIUs are more likely to be moved across two or more regions (Appendix Table A24). Depending on the circumstances, in the short-term, being isolated from the general population may help to reduce symptoms of psychological distress, enhance one’s sense of safety and security, and reduce exposure to environmental and interpersonal triggers. Over a longer term, however, isolation can exacerbate existing mental health problems (e.g., low mood), contribute to new problems (e.g., social anxiety), and lead to stigmatization.

This brings into question the basis of CSC’s claim that “SIUs are about helping inmates and providing them with the continued opportunity to engage in interventions and programs to support their safe return to a mainstream prisoner population”Footnote 40. At this point, the Panel does not have sufficient information to assess whether SIUs are therapeutic or counter-therapeutic for prisoners with mental health problems. For example, we lack adequate information on specified reasons for placement in SIUs; whether and how those reasons align with mental health symptoms (see reference to OCI, 2015 below); SIU prisoner specific symptom/disorder profiles; alternatives to SIUs, including intra- and inter-regional transfers and creation of subpopulations (see reference to CSC 2016 below); alternatives to SIUs outside of maximum security; impact of SIU placement on access to, and performance in, interventions and programming.

An Office of the Correctional Investigator (OCI)Footnote 41 report on 10 year trends in administrative segregation released in 2015 showed that prisoners with (vs. without) the following “issues” (many, if not all, of which are mental health related) were significantly more likely to be segregated: behavioural issues (68.6% vs 44.9%); cognitive issues (68.8% vs. 45.3%); interventions issues (64.9% vs. 47.5%); mental health issues (63.2% vs. 48.0%); mental ability issues (61.6% vs. 47.8%); and sexual behaviour issues (54.0% vs. 48.0%). It is noteworthy that prisoners with (vs. without) a history of segregation were significantly more likely to be assessed as being high risk (75.5% vs. 45.5%), high needs (74.4% vs. 47.5%), low motivation (27.2% vs. 11.2%), low reintegration potential (62.3% vs. 24.5%) and low accountability (30.3% vs. 17.9%). A 2016 report by CSC indicated that the number of prisoners in administrative segregation had been reduced from 474 in November 2015 to 360 in August 2016. The reduction was due largely to two strategies; specifically, inter-regional transfers and the creation of additional sub-populations of prisoners considered to be unsuitable for general population housing. Neither of these strategies is recommended for SIUs and it is important to determine how often they are being employed to manage SIU cases.

Mental health care in correctional facilities has long been hampered by understaffing and high turnover rates. According to a report by the Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC) (2017), vacancy rates in federal and provincial correctional institutions hovered around 8.5% and up to 30% for specific roles, like psychologists. Primary care tends to be overloaded because intermediate and specialized care are not adequately resourced. Regional Treatment Centres, which provide tertiary care, have limited capacity. Some mental health problems (substance use, adjustment problems) get attended to whereas others are under-detected (e.g., neurodevelopmental disorders like autism spectrum and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), under-treated (e.g., trauma and stress disorders); and misdiagnosed (e.g., obsessive-compulsive and related disorders). Symptom manifestations that demand more immediate attention (e.g., emotional dysregulation, oppositional, defiant, and self-injurious behaviour) may end up in SIUs. Whether SIUs are the best option for prisoners with mental health problems in the short- or long-term remains to be determined. As mentioned, with the prevalence of mental health problems exceeding 70% for both males and females, it is abundantly evident that CSC must respond to this challenge. The manner in which SIUs are currently configured – limited space for treatment and private consultation, cell capacity that is not matched to demand, located mostly in maximum security prisons, physically aversive and austere, without dedicated healthcare staff – render them inadequate for this task.

Indigenous Prisoners

To introduce the issue of Indigenous people in SIUs, we have summarized in Table 19, some facts about the Indigenous population of Canada’s penitentiaries.  This table provides a picture of the dramatic over-representation of Indigenous people in Canada’s penitentiaries. While Indigenous people make up about 4.2% of Canada’s adult population, we see that Indigenous men and women are over-represented generally in penitentiary populations, and specifically within the SIUs. On 13 February 2022, the percentage of Indigenous prisoners in CSC facilities was 32.4% and, for the first time, Indigenous women made up almost half of the federal female prisoner population. On that same day, about 48% of the male SIU population were of Indigenous origin.

The most dramatic single figure is the fact that while Indigenous women make up about 4.2% of the population of Canada’s women, 75.8% of the person-stays in SIUs experienced by women since the SIUs opened in November 2019 involve Indigenous women.

Table 19: Indigenous people in Canada’s Penitentiaries and SIUs
Male Female Total
Proportion of adult Canadian population that is Indigenous 4.2% 4.2% 4.2%
Penitentiary population, 13 February 2022 – Number 11,608 574 12,182
Penitentiary population 13 February 2022 - Percent 95.3% 4.7% 100%
Indigenous in penitentiary on 13 February 2022 3,665 282 3,947
% Penitentiary population that is Indigenous on 13 February 2022 31.6% 49.1% 32.4%
SIU population that day 164 -- 164
Number of Indigenous prisoners in SIUs that day 79 -- 79
% of SIU population that is Indigenous that day 48.2% -- 48.2%
Person stays in SIUs through 13 February 2022 that involve Indigenous people 39.8% 75.8% 41.1%

Variation exists among CSC Regions, reflecting at least in part presumably, the non-incarcerated population in the region. Quebec recorded that 15.6% of their prisoner population was Indigenous while in the Prairie Region it was 55.7%.  Close behind the Prairie Region was the Pacific Region with an Indigenous prisoner population of 39.3%.

The issue of Indigenous over-representation in federal corrections has been the focus of several task forces, inquiries, and Royal Commissions since the early 1980s, and, despite efforts by governments and interventions by the courts, the percentage of Indigenous people in federal corrections has continued to increase. Indigenous over-representation in federal corrections has been used both nationally and internationally to question Canada’s commitment to human rights, and as over-representation increases, Canada’s reputation in that area declines.

With respect to SIUs, in February 2022, the Prairies recorded that 67.2% of all SIU prisoners were Indigenous with the Pacific Region being a close second with 54.5%. It should be noted that in February 2022, in every region of Canada, the proportion of Indigenous SIU-placed prisoners was higher than the proportion of Indigenous people in the general population of CSC’s penitentiaries.

Table 20: Census of Penitentiaries, 13 February 2022
Region % Indigenous in the Region’s CSC facilities, overall % Indigenous in the SIUs in the Region
Atlantic 20.8% 40.0%
Quebec 15.6% 26.5%
Ontario 19.5% 26.3%
Prairie 55.7% 67.2%
Pacific 39.3% 54.5%
Canada 32.4% 48.2%

The percentage of Indigenous SIU prisoners with a mental health flag is 37.6% which is a higher proportion than with any of the other three racial groupings of prisoners (white, black, and other/mixed) entering SIUs (see Appendix Table A16).

For both Indigenous and non-Indigenous prisoners, the length of stay in an Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) is considerably longer in some institutions than  in others. Across Canada, slightly more than half (56.5%) of the SIU stays are “long” (16 days or more). Overall, across all institutions, Indigenous SIU prisoners are more likely to have long stays (62.0% of stays are at least 16 days long) than are non-Indigenous SIU prisoners (52.6%).

Variation is notable between both institutions and regions, as seen in Table 21. There is, for example, significant regional variation with respect to Indigenous prisoners getting time out of their cells for the required four hours a day. In Stony Mountain and Bowden, the vast majority of long-stay Indigenous prisoners seldom or never miss getting their four hours out of cell on most of their days in the SIU. By contrast, in Saskatchewan Penitentiary, Edmonton, and Kent, as well as everywhere else, Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) is considerably less likely to be successful in accomplishing this central goal of SIUs.

Table 21: Achieving 4 hours out of cell for long stayFootnote 42 (16+ days) Indigenous SIU prisoners only
SIU Location Percent of days that the 4 hours out of cell was not achieved
Missed 0-50% of their days Missed 51% to 100% of their days Total
Saskatchewan Penitentiary 30 87 117
25.6% 74.4% 100%
Edmonton 15 64 79
19.0% 81.0% 100%
Edmonton Institution for Women 8 11 19
42.1% 57.9% 100%
Stony Mountain 193 17 210
91.9% 8.1% 100%
Bowden 37 1 38
97.4% 2.6% 100%
Kent 4 163 167
2.4% 97.6% 100%
All Other SIUs 35 271 306
11.4% 88.6% 100%
Total 322 614 936
34.4% 65.6% 100%

When we reviewed the equivalent data for non-Indigenous prisoners, the pattern is much the same (see Appendix Table A17).

Panel members were told by both CSC staff and prisoners that the SIUs in Bowden and Stony Mountain Penitentiaries were “special” in a good way. Table 21 suggests that the experience of prisoners with long SIU stays in Stony and Bowden are in fact different from the experiences of long SIU stay prisoners elsewhere. In Stony and Bowden, they typically get out of their cells reasonably often; elsewhere they do not.

There are several reasons for an Indigenous prisoner (and other prisoners) refusing to leave their cells for the legislated four hours. During interviews, prisoners reported that sometimes they were not offered time out of the cell or that they did not avail themselves of time out of cell because of weather, the time of day, what was offered held no interest, or because they wanted a time-out away from staff and other prisoners. By law and directives, it is incumbent on CSC to provide meaningful alternatives to prisoners as a way of encouraging them to leave their cells. Failure of a person to leave the cell, then, should not be attributed solely to the prisoner.

CSC is required to transfer all prisoners out of SIUs at the earliest opportunity.  However, many Indigenous prisoners interviewed to date in SIUs prefer to stay in the SIU. As one Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) noted, the prisoner’s personal safety is understood to be a major reason for refusals to leave. Other reasons were that the prisoners may have developed a good relationship with SIU staff, they had more time out of cell, and received more attention from non-security staff than elsewhere. Prisoners also realize the pressure prison staff are under to comply with the legislation and this provides a certain amount of negotiating power because CSC wants to keep the SIU population low.

Members of rival gangs are often present in federal institutions, particularly in the Prairie and Pacific Regions. Belonging to one of the gangs, being an Associate Member or even simply associating with a gang member, can lead to inter-gang violence. For that reason, voluntary placement in an SIU is the preferred option for many gang-involved Indigenous prisoners who are incompatible with other prisoners in the general population. Several prisoners interviewed acknowledged that they did whatever they could to be transferred to an SIU.

Once in an SIU, Indigenous prisoners may attempt to stay as long as possible for their own personal safety as well as access to programs and other activities.  Prisoners frequently expressed what they felt were the only acceptable reasons for leaving a SIU. Key among those reasons were (a) to stay in the SIU until they could be cascaded from maximum to medium security, (b) to stay until their parole eligibility date, or (c) to stay until they could be transferred to an institution outside the Region where their gang involvement would either not be known or they would not face conflicts with rival gangs.

Elders are recognized as being an important and integral part of an Indigenous prisoner’s healing journey and provide opportunities for ceremony, spiritual guidance, and one-on-one counselling. Although Panel members have so far only consulted with a small number of Elders, they have generally raised similar concerns. Many felt that they lacked sufficient time to do the work with prisoners and that more Elders should be hired. Currently, the contracts in place with Indigenous Elders range from one year to multi-year agreements.

Programming for Indigenous prisoners, both within the SIU and elsewhere in the institution is guaranteed by section 80 of the CCRA which states that “the Service shall provide programs designed particularly to address the needs of Indigenous offenders”. What is implied in the legislation is that Elders’ services should not be the only support for Indigenous prisoners, but part of a larger strategy to assist Indigenous prisoners as they complete their correctional plans.

Commissioner’s Directive 702: Indigenous Offenders (CD 702)Footnote 43 specifically states that Elders shall be members of the case management team, have appropriately equipped facilities for the provision of confidential spiritual services, and ensure that the prisoner’s Indigenous Social History (ISH) report is considered in decision-making processes, including their placement in and out of the SIU. These requirements do not appear to be routinely met, with the possible exception of the SIU cultural space at Stony Mountain. The Elders we spoke to told us that they were informed about decisions made by the Warden’s Board regarding placements and transfers, but they weren't specifically involved in the decision-making. They were also not involved in case management in any significant way, although they did work with prisoners on individual healing plans.

CD 702 further states that the prisoner’s ISH needs to be considered in all decisions respecting an Indigenous prisoner’s transfer. While some Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) decisions did include input from Elders’ reports, in only two cases reviewed by the Panel thus far has there been evidence that ISH was included as part of the material given to IEDMs by CSC. The Panel has asked for, but not yet received, evidence of compliance with this component of CD 702.

Elders require stability in their positions if they are to accomplish any healing work that cannot realistically be achieved in a short period of time. While Elders at Stony Mountain, Edmonton Institution and Edmonton Institution for Women (EIFW) have long term contracts, and the Elder at EIFW has been on site for almost two decades, the Elder at Kent was released from his contract after one year without a replacement being hired. In both Stony Mountain and EIFW, the cultural spaces were well appointed and well used and neither Elder had any specific concerns with the SIU. On the other hand, the Elder at Edmonton and Kent had less than appropriate space for counselling and ceremony. The Elder at EIFW has no difficulties accessing women but told us that in her experience, SIU placement was usually only for a few days.

Elders have acknowledged challenges working with Indigenous prisoners transferred to SIUs, including that they have received minimal training about CSC’s SIU policies and practices. Despite the existence of a comprehensive Elder Orientation Program, Elders told the Panel their training has been on the job and often lacked detail, which has, at times resulted in conflict between their interpretation and CSC’s interpretation of policies and practices. Elders told the Panel they would like to see more support coming from Regional Elders Councils and the reintroduction of a National Elder at Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) Headquarters.

Multiple Stays in the SIU

There are many ways to understand the operation of the Structured Intervention Units (SIUs). In this report, we have looked at the SIUs as distinct units within larger institutions. When Panel members spoke to prisoners who had been or were currently placed within an SIU, we clearly were hearing individual prisoners’ experiences. In our statistical analyses, we mostly look at “person stays” in the SIU, where each separate transfer to an SIU was a data point that we were examining. The results of these analyses did not make a distinction between two stays by one person and a single stay by each of two people. Each stay (by the same or different people) constitutes a separate “person stay”. When attempting to understand the daily operation of the SIUs, this clearly is the most appropriate way of describing what is occurring.

But many prisoners in CSC institutions – even in the short time that the SIUs have been operating – have spent time in SIUs on more than one occasion. Based on data obtained from CSC systems in early March 2022, there are 3,966 person stays in SIUs between 30 November 2019, and 13 February 2022. Some of these 3,966 stays involved prisoners who were transferred to SIUs more than once. The data show that “only” 1,920 different prisoners were transferred to an SIU. Hence some of them got two or more stays.

Looking at the number of “stays” in the SIUs each of these 1,920 prisoners got (see Appendix Table A18), the majority (1,030 or 53.6%) were placed only once.  This means that 890 people (46.4% of the 1,920 people) stayed at least twice in an SIU during this period (30 November 2019 to 13 February 2022). Multiple stays, in other words are not unusual. Indeed, there were ten prisoners who visited an SIU on ten or more separate occasions during the period November 2019 to February 2022.

When we consider the 890 people who stayed more than once in an SIU during this period and look at the number of different SIUs that they were transferred to, we find that almost a third of those (31.5%) who had two SIU stays during this period, had their second SIU visit in a different institution from the first (see Appendix Table A19). At the other extreme, there were 161 people (or 8.4% of the total population of 1,920) who, during this period, were transferred to an SIU on five or more separate occasions. Of these 161 people who had been in an SIU five or more times, 80.7% were transferred to at least two different SIUs.

The question that arises is what these transfers are supposed to accomplish. If SIU placement was an attempt to solve a problem, why did people need to go to more than one SIU (often, of course, in more than one region since only two regions – Quebec and the Prairies – have multiple SIUs for men).

Those who visit SIUs many times are very likely to be moved to different regions (Appendix Table A20). Of those who were transferred to SIUs five or more times, most (62.7%) were put in SIUs in more than one region. One of these prisoners was transferred to SIUs in all five regions.

Understanding Why People Are Sent to SIUs More Than One Time

There are only three legally permissible justifications for putting prisoners in SIUs. We looked at the number of different legal justifications that were used to justify a stay in an SIU. A little over half (54.6%) of the people who had two or more SIU stays during this period, had two or more legal justifications used to justify the stays (Appendix Table A21).

A much more concerning characteristic of the prisoners who experienced multiple stays in SIUs is the relationship between multiple SIU stays and CSC’s identification of a person as having a mental health need. As we saw earlier (and is summarized in Appendix Table A22) people identified as having mental health challenges were more likely to have multiple SIU stays (58.2% vs. 40.9%). This is also evidenced by Table 22, which demonstrates that the more stays a person had in SIUs during this 26.5-month period, the more likely it was that CSC would identify them, at some point during this journey, as having mental health challenges. For people with only one stay, 24.4% had a mental health flag. For those with five or more stays, 55.3% had a mental health flag. Bluntly, having a flag on one’s file noting mental health challenges appears to also be a flag suggesting that multiple placements in an SIU is likely.

Looking only at those with multiple stays, those with mental health flags are more likely to experience different SIUs and different regions compared to those without mental health flags. While 46.7% of those without mental health flags experienced two or more different SIUs, 55.7% of those with mental health flags experienced two or more different SIUs. Similarly, people with mental health flags were more likely to be transferred to SIUs in different regions (37.4%) compared to those without mental health flags (30.4%) (see Appendix Tables A23 and A24).

The use of the SIU and the movement of prisoners to different regions and different SIUs may be a useful tool in understanding CSC’s approach to those facing mental health challenges. A prisoner whom CSC identifies as having mental health challenges who has multiple SIU stays is more likely to be moved to different SIUs in different regions (37.4% vs. “only” 30.4% of those without a CSC mental health flag) (see Appendix Table A24). These may be more challenging prisoners to deal with, but it is unclear how constant movement can be therapeutic or in itself constitute good correctional practice.

We are concerned that these data on the movement of prisoners who have experienced multiple stays in SIUs across institutions and regions, and especially those who face mental health challenges, may reflect a larger issue related to the way CSC addresses the very significant and complex challenges faced by some of its prisoners.

Conclusion

“Placing a prisoner in segregation is the most intrusive decision the Service can make affecting a person’s liberty” (Arbour Report, 1996) and is “a litmus test for the legitimacy of the correctional system” (Jackson & Sloan, 1998). Almost 25 years later, these statements remain true. What have we learned in the intervening years? Response to the issue of problematic prisoner segregation tends to follow a familiar pattern: Concerns emerge about prisoner segregation, either through media attention, or expressed by prisoners themselves. A mandated review of CSC practices, including an examination of CSC’s compliance with the law usually follows. Recommendations are then made and typically include the need for independent adjudication and oversight of segregation, limitations on the placement of vulnerable prisoners, greater compliance with law, better record keeping, and legal and human rights education for staff and administrators. CSC then responds to the recommendations but declines to accept recommendations for mandated placement limitations and enhanced external oversight or independent adjudication, offering instead to conduct its own review and to “enhance” practices (e.g., “enhanced” security units, “enhanced” segregation review). In the end, meaningful change is elusive, and the cycle eventually repeats. When viewed across time and considering the many reports and reviews that have been written on this issue, CSC’s resistance to external adjudication, restrictions about who could be segregated, its variable adherence to law, regulations, and policy, and reluctance to implement recommendations, is notable and worrisome.

Social isolation is not a natural state for social beings. Isolating people from their community, from “meaningful human contact”, whether inside or outside of prison, is a significant decision. It jeopardizes the individual’s legal rights (to life, liberty, and security) largely by the threat it poses to their psychological well-being. Social isolation is harmful and increases personal vulnerability. Decades of research show that social connectedness is critical for health and wellbeing, strongly related to indicators of morbidity and mortality, including mental and physical health. Social connectedness is rewarding and stress buffering; by contrast, social isolation and ostracization are aversive. It is imperative that such isolation be carefully adjudicated and duly monitored, both legally and psychologically. We need interaction with others for reality testing, perspective taking, social skills acquisition and practice, and interpersonal functioning (all of which contribute to successful post-incarceration success).

A primary question that needs to be addressed is what does intervention mean and what results are expected from a prisoner’s time in a SIU? If it is to simply give a prisoner a “time out” from the general population while other options for cell placement can be identified, then perhaps a short interval in the SIU meets that goal. On the other hand, if intervention means working with the prisoner to address the needs that precipitated SIU placement, then ongoing involvement with Elders, clinicians, program officers and other supports is required. 

Managing a population defined by histories of abuse, intergenerational trauma, inadequate education, skill and learning deficits, addictions, and other mental health problems is not an easy task. Inevitably, there will be times when individuals must be isolated for their own safety or the safety of others. Isolating prisoners from the general population can be a legitimate tool in managing a potentially dangerous environment, provided it is done legally, responsibly, and with the prisoner’s best interests and legal rights in mind.

There is a discord between the legislative requirements and intervention, particularly for prisoners who come into federal custody with a myriad of traumatic experiences. There is a fundamental contradiction in the legislative and policy framework that created and governs the SIUs. On the one hand, SIUs are meant to replace dangerous isolation with safe, structured interventions for the most vulnerable and/or difficult and/or complex men and women in federal custody. On the other hand, a careful reading of the legislation would suggest that transfer to an Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) is meant to be a last resort. Furthermore, the provisions related to ending placement within an SIU as soon as possible make it very clear that stays are meant to be short. It is difficult to reconcile the extraordinary efforts undertaken and resources dedicated to operationalizing SIUs, with the goal of moving the most challenging prisoners out of them as quickly as possible. Dedicated staff to assess and address the risks and needs of the incarcerated is part of good correctional practice, but this takes time. The current focus on short stays and resulting frequent involuntary movement interferes with both continuity and sustained level of effort this good practice requires.

We are not suggesting that long stays, with or without monitoring, should be allowed or encouraged. What we are saying is that there is a clear tension between meeting the needs of high-risk, vulnerable and complex prisoners, and the operational and legislative pressure to quickly remove them from potentially safer and well resourced, intervention focused, conditions of confinement.

This tension arises from the circumstances that fueled the creation of SIUs. Bill C-83 responded to the British Columbia and Ontario court decisions that found CSC’s use of segregation to be unconstitutional. The indeterminate nature of administrative segregation, the lack of truly independent oversight, the differential impact on Indigenous men and women, and those with mental health concerns, were all found to be problematic. The first goal of Bill C-83 was to address these problems. Instead of amending existing policy and operations, segregation was to be eliminated, at least in name if not in practice. What the Panel observed during site visits, and through examining Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) data, is that the same population of prisoners who were chronically placed in administrative segregation is now being serially transferred to SIUs, and once transferred, are the most likely to remain in an SIU.Footnote 44

During institutional visits, a frequent observation of both staff and prisoners was that SIUs have become viewed as desirable accommodation. Prisoners point out the benefits of priority access to health care, more contact with parole officers, no double bunking, and improved sense of personal safety. Staff complain these positive aspects of SIUs undermine their ability to move prisoners back to general population. This raises another fundamental question: Should SIUs be less accommodating and supportive, or should the general population accommodation and support be enhanced so that SIUs are not seen as offering preferential treatment?

CSC staff have also commented on the impact SIUs have on other areas of operation. The roll-out of SIUs placed heavy demands on CSC staff, and SIUs continue to add operational and administrative burdens throughout the organization. These reporting, staffing, monitoring, and intervention burdens have reportedly meant less attention paid to other institutional priorities and have diverted resources from other initiatives. Notwithstanding, the leadership of CSC view SIUs as essential to the transformation of the Service. This vision of transformation includes progress on addressing the problems identified by the courts.

Despite sincere and intensive effort on the part of CSC staff to make SIUs work, the Panel notes that many prisoners continue to experience long stays, multiple (sometimes almost continuous) placements, extended periods of time locked up, and without meaningful human contact. There continues to be a marked over-representation of Indigenous men and women and those with known mental health concerns locked up in the SIUs (as they formerly were in segregation). It is not hard to conclude that even if SIUs were perfectly operated, without significant changes in correctional policy and practices throughout, this state of affairs will persist.

Advice to the Minister of Public Safety and Recommendations to the Commissioner of Corrections

1. Alternatives to SIU Placement

2. Length of SIU Stays

3. Time out of Cell

4. Meaningful Human Contact

5. Inter-Regional Transfer

6. Health Care

7. Indigenous Prisoners

8. Programs/Interventions

9. Independent External Decision-Makers

10. Infrastructure

11. Human Resources

12. Staff Training

13. Enhanced Accountability

14. Future of IAP

Appendices

Appendix A – Data Tables

Table A1: Time in the SIU as a Function of Race/Ethnicity
Total days in SIU including those still in
1 thru 5 6 thru 15 16 thru 31 32 thru 61 62 thru 552 Total
White 318 344 196 208 315 1,381
23.0% 24.9% 14.2% 15.1% 22.8% 100.0%
Indigenous 246 336 291 306 354 1,533
16.0% 21.9% 19.0% 20.0% 23.1% 100.0%
Black 113 106 64 75 121 479
23.6% 22.1% 13.4% 15.7% 25.3% 100.0%
Other/Combination/Missing 75 88 55 47 76 341
22.0% 25.8% 16.1% 13.8% 22.3% 100.0%
Total 752 874 606 636 866 3,734
20.1% 23.4% 16.2% 17.0% 23.2% 100.0%
Table A2: Mental Health Status of those Prisoners Transferred to SIUs
Mental Health Groups (from CSCs 9 mental health groups
No low or some needs, not getting worse High needs, not getting worse Various mental health needs and getting worse Total
White 1,167 113 101 1,381
84.5% 8.2% 7.3% 100.0%
Indigenous 1,203 184 146 1,533
78.5% 12.0% 9.5% 100.0%
Black 438 13 28 479
91.4% 2.7% 5.8% 100.0%
Other/Combination/Missing 306 19 16 341
89.7% 5.6% 4.7% 100.0%
Total 3,114 329 291 3,734
83.4% 8.8% 7.8% 100.0%
Table A3: Length of Stay in the SIU and  Success at Achieving 4 hours Out of Cell
Number of days in SIU Percent of days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved
Missed zero days to 50% of their days Missed 51% to 75% of their days Missed 76% to 100% of their days Total
1 thru 15 days 294 171 1,174 1,639
17.9% 10.4% 71.6% 100.0%
16 thru 551 days 518 351 1,202 2,071
25.0% 16.9% 58.0% 100.0%
Total 812 522 2,376 3,710
21.9% 14.1% 64.0% 100.0%
Table A4: Length of Stay in the SIU and Success in Receiving 2 Hours of Meaningful Human Contact out of the Cell
Number of days in SIU

Percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved

Missed zero to 20% of their days Missed 21% to 75% of their days Missed 76% to 100% of their days Total
1 thru 15 days 309 569 761 1,639
18.9% 34.7% 46.4% 100.0%
16 thru 551 days 502 1,035 534 2,071
24.2% 50.0% 25.8% 100.0%
Total 811 1,604 1,295 3,710
21.9% 43.2% 34.9% 100.0%
Table A5: Percent of days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved (long stay only)
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
Missed zero days (0%)/got out for 4 hrs every day in SIU 113 5.5 5.5
Missed up to 20% of their days 201 9.7 15.2
Missed 21% to 50% of their days 204 9.9 25.0
Missed 51% to 75% of their days 351 16.9 42.0
Missed 76% to 99% of their days 887 42.8 84.8
Missed 100% of their days 315 15.2 100.0
Total 2,071 100.0
Table A6: For those who missed their full 4 hours on 1 or more days -- The average hours they got (Long Stay Prisoners Only)
Average time received: Frequency Percent of all long stay prisoners Percent of those who missed getting their 4 hours on at least one day
0 thru a half hour 252 12.2 12.9
over half an hour to 1hr 304 14.7 15.5
over 1hr to 2hrs 885 42.7 45.2
over 2hrs to 3hrs 500 24.1 25.5
over 3hrs to 4hrs 17 .8 .9
Total 1,958 94.5 100.0
Out 4 hours every day 113 5.5
Total 2,071 100.0 100%

Long stay prisoners (16 or more days) only

Table A7: Refusals to leave the SIU cell all day across time
When the person’s SIU stay started Amount of refusal to leave the cell all day
Refused zero or one time Refused at least twice, constituting  up to 20% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 20.1% to 50% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 50.1% to 100% of their days Total
Nov 2019 thru Dec2019 65 96 41 11 213
30.5% 45.1% 19.2% 5.2% 100.0%
Jan 2020 thru March 2020 95 111 57 16 279
34.1% 39.8% 20.4% 5.7% 100.0%
April  2020 thru June 2020 80 63 60 32 235
34.0% 26.8% 25.5% 13.6% 100.0%
July 2020 thru Sept 2020 95 98 69 37 299
31.8% 32.8% 23.1% 12.4% 100.0%
Oct 2020 thru Dec 2020 72 98 59 34 263
27.4% 37.3% 22.4% 12.9% 100.0%
Jan 2021 thru March  2021 95 66 40 34 235
40.4% 28.1% 17.0% 14.5% 100.0%
April 2021 thru June  2021 83 72 33 12 200
41.5% 36.0% 16.5% 6.0% 100.0%
July 2021 thru Sept 2021 77 73 30 15 195
39.5% 37.4% 15.4% 7.7% 100.0%
October 2021 thru Nov 2021 68 47 28 9 152
44.7% 30.9% 18.4% 5.9% 100.0%
Total 730 724 417 200 2,071
35.2% 35.0% 20.1% 9.7% 100.0%
Table A8: Percent of days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved and the Amount of refusal to leave the cell all day
Percent of days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved Amount of refusal to leave the cell all day
Refused zero or one time Refused at least twice, constituting up to 20% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 20.1% to 50% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 50.1% to 100% of their days Total
Missed zero days up to 50% of their days 431 83 4 0 518
83.2% 16.0% 0.8% 0.0% 100.0%
missed 51% to 75% of their days 152 178 18 3 351
43.3% 50.7% 5.1% 0.9% 100.0%
missed 76% to 100% of their days 147 463 395 197 1,202
12.2% 38.5% 32.9% 16.4% 100.0%
Total 730 724 417 200 2,071
35.2% 35.0% 20.1% 9.7% 100.0%

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Table A9: Amount of refusal to leave the cell for meaningful human contact all day (Long Stay Prisoners Only)
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
Refused zero or one time 619 29.9 29.9
Refused at least twice, constituting up to 20% of their days 746 36.0 65.9
Refused at least twice, constituting 20.1% to 50% of their days 495 23.9 89.8
Refused at least twice, constituting 50.1% to 100% of their days 211 10.2 100.0
Total 2,071 100.0

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Table A10: Percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved and Refusal to Leave the Cell (Long Stay Prisoners Only)
Percent of days that 2 hours out of cell was not achieved Amount of refusal to leave the cell for meaningful human contact all day
Refused zero or one time Refused at least twice, constituting up to 20% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 20.1% to 50% of their days Refused at least twice, constituting 50.1% to 100% of their days Total
missed zero to 20% of their days 401 101 0 0 502
79.9% 20.1% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
missed 21% to 75% of their days 189 572 267 7 1,035
18.3% 55.3% 25.8% 0.7% 100.0%
missed 76% to 100% of their days 29 73 228 204 534
5.4% 13.7% 42.7% 38.2% 100.0%
Total 619 746 495 211 2,071
29.9% 36.0% 23.9% 10.2% 100.0%

Note: Long stay (16 days or more) prisoners only.

Table A11: Rate at which mental health needs were identified by CSC for Men and Women transferred to an SI
Sex of prisoner Mental Health Need Identified by CSC
No Yes Total
Male 2,708 1,126 3,834
70.6% 29.4% 100.0%
Female 47 85 132
35.6% 64.4% 100.0%
Total 2,755 1,211 3,966
69.5% 30.5% 100.0%
Table A12: Rate at which mental health needs were identified by CSC for Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Prisoners Transferred to an SIU
Mental Health Need Identified by CSC
No Yes Total
Non-Indigenous 1,732 594 2,326
74.5% 25.5% 100.0%
Indigenous 1,023 617 1,640
62.4% 37.6% 100.0%
Total 2,755 1,211 3,966
69.5% 30.5% 100.0%
Table A13: Reason for Transfer to SIU and Mental Health Needs
Transfer Reason Mental Health Need Identified
No Yes Total
Jeopardize Safety/Security of Institution 1,564 630 2,194
71.3% 28.7% 100.0%
Prisoner’s Own Safety 1,133 562 1,695
66.8% 33.2% 100.0%
Interfere with an Investigation 58 19 77
75.3% 24.7% 100.0%
Total 2,755 1,211 3,966
69.5% 30.5% 100.0%
Table A14: Mental Health and Travel Across SIUs and Regions
Was there a flag during any SIU stay that the person had mental health needs? For those with more than one SIU stay: Location of stays
All stays in one SIU/one region Different SIUs but all in same region Different SIUs and different regions Total
No 288 88 164 540
53.3% 16.3% 30.4% 100.0%
Yes 155 64 131 350
44.3% 18.3% 37.4% 100.0%
Total 443 152

295

890
49.8% 17.1% 33.1% 100.0%

Note: Table contains data only from those prisoners with multiple SIU stays during the study period.

Table A15: Days in the SIU as a Function of Whether the Prisoner has an Identified Mental Health Need
Mental Health Need Number of days in SIU
1 thru 15 days 16 thru 551 days Total
No 1,187 1,408 2,595
45.7% 54.3% 100.0%
Yes 452 663 1,115
40.5% 59.5% 100.0%
Total 1,639 2,071 3,710
44.2% 55.8% 100.0%
Table A16: Identified Mental Health Need by Group
Identified Mental Health Need
No Yes Total
White 1,032 424 1,456
70.9% 29.1% 100.0%
Indigenous 1,023 617 1,640
62.4% 37.6% 100.0%
Black 427 86 513
83.2% 16.8% 100.0%
Other/Combination/Missing 273 84 357
76.5% 23.5% 100.0%
Total 2,755 1,211 3,966
69.5% 30.5% 100.0%
Table A17: Percent of days 4 hours not achieved, selected SIUs, Non-Indigenous Prisoners
SIU Location % days that 4 hours out of cell was not achieved
Missed zero days (got out for 4 hrs every day in SIU) Missed up to 20% of their days Missed 21% to 50% of their days Missed 51% to 75% of their days Missed 76% to 99% of their days Missed 100% of their days Total
Sask. Pen 0 3 15 14 26 4 62
0% 4.80% 24.20% 22.60% 41.90% 6.50% 100.00%
Edmonton Institution 0 1 7 11 41 18 78
0.00% 1.30% 9.00% 14.10% 52.60% 23.10% 100.00%
Edmonton Institution for women 0 1 0 0 1 0 2
0.00% 50.00% 0.00% 0.00% 50.00% 0.00% 100.00%
Stony Mountain 19 30 9 4 1 0 63
30.20% 47.60% 14.30% 6.30% 1.60% 0.00% 100.00%
Bowden 13 13 7 1 0 0 34
38.20% 38.20% 20.60% 2.90% 0.00% 0.00% 100.00%
Kent 0 0 3 30 82 56 171
0.00% 0.00% 1.80% 17.50% 48.00% 32.70% 100.00%
Everywhere else 1 12 62 147 393 110 725
0.10% 1.70% 8.60% 20.30% 54.20% 15.20% 100.00%
Total 33 60 103 207 544 188 1,135
2.90% 5.30% 9.10% 18.20% 47.90% 16.60% 100.00%

Note: Non-Indigenous prisoners only

Table A18: Number of SIU stays
Number of Stays Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
1 1,030 53.6 53.6
2 403 21.0 74.6
3 211 11.0 85.6
4 115 6.0 91.6
5 70 3.6 95.3
6 35 1.8 97.1
7 20 1.0 98.1
8 12 .6 98.8
9 14 .7 99.5
10 3 .2 99.6
11 4 .2 99.8
12 1 .1 99.9
14 1 .1 99.9
15 1 .1 100.0
Total 1,920 100.0
Table A19: For those with multiple SIU stays, the number of different SIUs that they stayed in
Number of SIU stays (removing those with only one stay) Number of different SIUs person has stayed in
One Two Three Four Five Six Total
2. 276 127 0 0 0 0 403
68.5% 31.5% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
3 102 86 23 0 0 0 211
48.3% 40.8% 10.9% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
4 34 55 24 2 0 0 115
29.6% 47.8% 20.9% 1.7% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
5+ 31 58 47 21 2 2 161
19.3% 36.0% 29.2% 13.0% 1.2% 1.2% 100.0%
Total 443 326 94 23 2 2 890
49.8% 36.6% 10.6% 2.6% 0.2% 0.2% 100.0%
A20: Multiple Stays in SIUs and Number of Regions
Number of SIU stays (removing those with only one stay) Number of different regions person has been in for SIU stays
One Two Three Four Five Total
Two 335 68 0 0 0 403
83.1% 16.9% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100%
Three 142 65 4 0 0 211
67.3% 30.8% 1.9% 0.0% 0.0% 100%

Four

58 49 8 0 0 115
50.4% 42.6% 7.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100%
Five+ 60 70 24 6 1 161
37.3% 43.5% 14.9% 3.7% 0.6% 100%
Total 595 252 36 6 1 890
66.9% 28.3% 4.0% 0.7% 0.1% 100%
Table A21: Number of different legal justifications for transfers by number of SIU placements
Number of separate stays in SIUs during this period: Number of Legal Justifications
One Two Three Total
Two 249 154 -- 403
61.8% 38.2% -- 100%
Three 88 120 3 211
41.7% 56.9% 1.4% 100%
Four 32 79 4 115
27.8% 68.7% 3.5% 100%
Five or more 35 112 14 161
21.7% 69.6 8.7% 100%
Total 404 465 21 890
45.4% 52.2% 2.4% 100%
Table A22: Mental Health and number of stays in SIUs
Was there a flag during any SIU stay that the person had mental health needs? Number of SIU stays
single stay multiple stays Total
No 779 540 1,319
59.1% 40.9% 100.0%
Yes 251 350 601
41.8% 58.2% 100.0%
Total 1,030 890 1,920
53.6% 46.4% 100.0%
Table A23: Mental Health and Number of Different Stays
Was there a flag during any SIU stay that the person had mental health needs? Number of different SIUs person has stayed in
1 2 3 4 5 6 Total
No 288 179 61 10 0 2 540
53.3% 33.1% 11.3% 1.9% 0.0% 0.4% 100.0%
Yes 155 147 33 13 2 0 350
44.3% 42.0% 9.4% 3.7% 0.6% 0.0% 100.0%
Total 443 326 94 23 2 2 890
49.8% 36.6% 10.6% 2.6% 0.2% 0.2% 100.0%
Table A24:  Mental Health and Number of Different Regions
Was there a flag during any SIU stay that the person had mental health needs? Number of different regions person has been in for SIU stays
1 2 3 4 5 Total
No 376 136 25 3 0 540
69.6% 25.2% 4.6% 0.6% 0.0% 100.0%
Yes 219 116 11 3 1 350
62.6% 33.1% 3.1% 0.9% 0.3% 100.0%
Total 595 252 36 6 1 890
66.9% 28.3% 4.0% 0.7% 0.1% 100.0%

Appendix B – New Measurement System

In late 2021, Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) refined its approach to measuring “time out of cell” to correct deficiencies in the existing approach and to provide a more accurate account of whether people got their full four hours of time out of their SIU cell. For example, if the prisoner entered the Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) in the evening (after 6:00 pm, for example), then there would not be four hours available for that prisoner to be out of the cell that day. Under the old approach, CSC’s “day count” would count that day as a day in the SIU (even if they were released from the SIU the next day). Similarly, if the prisoner were at court or in the hospital, time out of cell or “meaningful human interaction” would not have the same meaning as they would if the person were in the SIU.

We accounted for this issue in our analyses by subtracting a day when counting “days in the SIU”. Thus, a prisoner who entered the SIU on Monday (any time) and was released from that SIU the next day counts under our system as having been in the SIU for one day (not two). These details – and the modifications of the measurement system that CSC instituted in late 2021 – may well constitute an important improvement for managers in CSC who are trying to ensure that staff do what is expected of them. For example, given that a person who enters the SIU late in the evening of a given day cannot be “outside of the cell” for four hours before 10:00 pm, it is clearly not reasonable to count this as a failure when this occurs.

There was also a more subtle shift in the way these measures of the key elements of the SIU are described. An explicit record of an “offer” for time out of cell is now made and whether the prisoner “availed” themselves of that offer. Under this scheme, if the prisoner was offered but declined the offer, then CSC, or those responsible for the local SIU, may accept little responsibility for the prisoner not getting out of the cell.

There is one additional issue that is important to consider. The effects of this “fine tuning” of the measurements are more likely to be important for assessing short stays in SIUs since what happens on one or two days (e.g., the first day) is a much higher proportion of the days for a short stay than for a long stay in the SIU.

That said, we did look at the new data. Clearly the numbers are going to be slightly different. The conclusions that one would draw from these “new” data are, however, not different from what we have concluded using the measures that allow us a longer period of time to examine. The basic findings, using the new measure, involve stays that began on 1 November 2021. Given that our data were “harvested” on 13 February 2022, this provided only 2.5 months of data to review. There were 344 person-stays that began during this period, 339 of which we could examine carefully.Footnote 45 The difficulty is that many of these people – especially those whose stays began in 2022 – were still in the SIU when the data were harvested, so we don’t know how long their actual stay was. This means we cannot compare the measures for the group of the greatest interest to us – the long stay prisoners.

Table B1 shows that, using this new measure, most people were, in fact, offered time out of cell.

Table B1: Using new measure: What percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 get asked about getting outside of cell?
Frequency Valid Percent Cumulative Percent
Less than or equal to 50% 28 8.3 8.3
Greater than 50% thru 75% 26 7.7 15.9
Greater than 75% thru 90% 63 18.6 34.5
Greater than 90% thru 99% 105 31.0 65.5
100% of days 117 34.5 100.0
Sub-Total 339 100.0
Missing 5
Total 344

Being offered time out of cell is especially likely to occur for longer stay prisoners (understanding that the difference between “long and short” stay is problematic, given that some prisoners are still in the SIU) (see Table B2).

Table B2: Total days in SIU including those still in -- using new measure of total days available -- and the percent of days those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 got asked about getting outside of cell?
Total days in SIU including those still in -- using new measure of total days available Using new measure:  What percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 get asked about getting outside of cell?
50% of days 50% thru 75% of days 75% thru 90% of days 90% thru 99% of days 100% of days Total
1 thru 15 26 24 36 4 58 148
17.6% 16.2% 24.3% 2.7% 39.2% 100.0%
16 thru 98 2 2 27 101 59 191
1.0% 1.0% 14.1% 52.9% 30.9% 100.0%
Total 28 26 63 105 117 339
8.3% 7.7% 18.6% 31.0% 34.5% 100.0%

Turning to whether the prisoners availed themselves of the offer, we see, in Table B3 – consistent with findings referred to in the body of this report – that a substantial portion of prisoners did not accept the offer of time out of the cell.

Table B3: Using new measure: What percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 avail themselves of the offer to get out of cell?
Frequency Percent Valid Percent Cumulative Percent
50% 245 71.2 72.3 72.3
50% thru 75% 33 9.6 9.7 82.0
75% thru 90% 27 7.8 8.0 90.0
90% thru 99% 23 6.7 6.8 96.8
100% of days 11 3.2 3.2 100.0
Total 339 98.5 100.0
Missing 5 1.5
Total 344 100.0

The likelihood of a prisoner not availing themselves of the offer to leave the cell was especially high in short stays (see Table B4).

Table B4: Including those still in the SIU, for those with long and short stays, what percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 avail themselves of the offer to get out of cell?
Total days in SIU including those still in -- using new measure of total days available Using new measure: What percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 avail themselves of the offer to get out of cell?
50% 50% thru 75% 75% thru 90% 90% thru 99% 100% of days Total
1 thru 15 119 15 6 1 7 148
80.4% 10.1% 4.1% 0.7% 4.7% 100.0%
16 thru 98 126 18 21 22 4 191
66.0% 9.4% 11.0% 11.5% 2.1% 100.0%
Total 245 33 27 23 11 339
72.3% 9.7% 8.0% 6.8% 3.2% 100.0%

In Table B5, we look at the likelihood that people were asked about getting out of the SIU cell. In the body of this report, we saw large regional variation. In this new, improved measure, we also see (even though sometimes the sample size is small) large regional variation. This finding serves to undercut in advance any notion that the regional variation that we see in virtually every measure we have looked at is the result of measurement errors. Here, with the new and improved measures, we continue to see large regional variation.

Table B5: Success in being asked about getting out of the cell, by region and length of SIU stay
Total days in SIU including those still in -- using new measure of total days available Using new measure:  What percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 get asked about getting outside of cell?
50% 50% thru 75% 75% thru 90% 90% thru 99% 100% of days Total
1 thru 15
Atlantic 2 1 5 0 8 16
12.5% 6.3% 31.3% 0.0% 50.0% 100.0%
Quebec 14 14 13 1 12 54
25.9% 25.9% 24.1% 1.9% 22.2% 100.0%
Ontario 6 2 8 0 1 17
35.3% 11.8% 47.1% 0.0% 5.9% 100.0%
Prairies 1 5 10 2 23 41
2.4% 12.2% 24.4% 4.9% 56.1% 100.0%
Pacific 3 2 0 1 14 20
15.0% 10.0% 0.0% 5.0% 70.0% 100.0%
Total 26 24 36 4 58 148
17.6% 16.2% 24.3% 2.7% 39.2% 100.0%
16 thru 98
Atlantic 1 0 1 7 12 21
4.8% 0.0% 4.8% 33.3% 57.1% 100.0%
Quebec 0 1 4 25 8 38
0.0% 2.6% 10.5% 65.8% 21.1% 100.0%
Ontario 1 1 13 7 1 23
4.3% 4.3% 56.5% 30.4% 4.3% 100.0%
Prairies 0 0 1 42 35 78
0.0% 0.0% 1.3% 53.8% 44.9% 100.0%
Pacific 0 0 8 20 3 31
0.0% 0.0% 25.8% 64.5% 9.7% 100.0%
Total 2 2 27 101 59 191
1.0% 1.0% 14.1% 52.9% 30.9% 100.0%
Total
Atlantic 3 1 6 7 20 37
8.1% 2.7% 16.2% 18.9% 54.1% 100.0%
Quebec 14 15 17 26 20 92
15.2% 16.3% 18.5% 28.3% 21.7% 100.0%
Ontario 7 3 21 7 2 40
17.5% 7.5% 52.5% 17.5% 5.0% 100.0%
Prairies 1 5 11 44 58 119
0.8% 4.2% 9.2% 37.0% 48.7% 100.0%
Pacific 3 2 8 21 17 51
5.9% 3.9% 15.7% 41.2% 33.3% 100.0%
Total 28 26 63 105 117 339
8.3% 7.7% 18.6% 31.0% 34.5% 100.0%

Again, there is the same pattern we have seen earlier in the willingness of prisoners across regions to accept the offers made.

Table B6: Likelihood of availing themselves of offers to get out of the cell by region and length of SIU stay
Total days in SIU including those still in -- using new measure of total days available Using new measure: What percent of days did those starting their stay in an SIU after 1 November 2021 avail themselves of the offer to get out of cell?
LE 50% 50% thru 75% 75% thru 90% 90% thru 99% 100% of days Total
1 thru 15
Atlantic 15 1 0 0 0 16
93.8% 6.3% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Quebec 51 3 0 0 0 54
94.4% 5.6% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Ontario 15 2 0 0 0 17
88.2% 11.8% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Prairies 20 9 6 1 5 41
48.8% 22.0% 14.6% 2.4% 12.2% 100.0%
Pacific 18 0 0 0 2 20
90.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 10.0% 100.0%
Total 119 15 6 1 7 148
80.4% 10.1% 4.1% 0.7% 4.7% 100.0%
16 thru 98
Atlantic 18 0 3 0 0 21
85.7% 0.0% 14.3% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Quebec 37 1 0 0 0 38
97.4% 2.6% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Ontario 19 3 0 1 0 23
82.6% 13.0% 0.0% 4.3% 0.0% 100.0%
Prairies 23 12 18 21 4 78
29.5% 15.4% 23.1% 26.9% 5.1% 100.0%
Pacific 29 2 0 0 0 31
93.5% 6.5% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Total 126 18 21 22 4 191
66.0% 9.4% 11.0% 11.5% 2.1% 100.0%
Total
Atlantic 33 1 3 0 0 37
89.2% 2.7% 8.1% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Quebec 88 4 0 0 0 92
95.7% 4.3% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0%
Ontario 34 5 0 1 0 40
85.0% 12.5% 0.0% 2.5% 0.0% 100.0%
Prairies 43 21 24 22 9 119
36.1% 17.6% 20.2% 18.5% 7.6% 100.0%
Pacific 47 2 0 0 2 51
92.2% 3.9% 0.0% 0.0% 3.9% 100.0%
Total 245 33 27 23 11 339
72.3% 9.7% 8.0% 6.8% 3.2% 100.0%

When we look at the number of hours, on average, that people actually get out of the cell, we see in Table B7 that most prisoners are not getting close to the required minimum of four hours.

Table B7: Average hours out of cell
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
0 thru a half hour 56 16.3 16.3
over half an hour to 1hr 54 15.7 32.0
over 1hr to 2hrs 118 34.3 66.3
over 2hrs to 3hrs 79 23.0 89.2
over 3hrs to 3.75hrs 21 6.1 95.3
Received their full four hours 16 4.7 100.0
Total 344 100.0

One of the primary reasons for the change from the segregation to the SIU model was to ensure that people were not isolated in their cells. In that sense, whether the reason for being isolated in one’s cell is because the prisoner wasn’t offered time out of the cell, or the prisoner was asked and declined is irrelevant. The responsibility of CSC is to ensure that prisoners do not suffer from the effects of prolonged isolation in their cells.

The legislation as written gives the impression that people are spending at least four hours per day out of their cells. Using these new measures, Table B8 looks at what prisoners actually experienced, broken down by how long (as of 13 February 2022) the stay in the SIU had lasted. A similar picture emerges - most prisoners are not getting what the legislation implies they should be getting. These are, of course, person stays that began on or after 1 November 2021. As shown in Table B8, about two thirds of the prisoners are getting half or less than half of what is “promised” by the legislation.

Table B8: Total days in SIU including those still in and average hours out of cell
Total days in SIU including those still in -- using new measure of total days available Average hours out of cell
0 thru a half hour over half an hour to 1hr over 1hr to 2hrs over 2hrs to 3hrs over 3hrs to 3.75hrs Got their full four hours Total
1 thru 15 39 25 40 26 11 7 148
26.4% 16.9% 27.0% 17.6% 7.4% 4.7% 100.0%
16 thru 98 17 29 78 53 10 4 191
8.9% 15.2% 40.8% 27.7% 5.2% 2.1% 100.0%
Total 56 54 118 79 21 11 339
16.5% 15.9% 34.8% 23.3% 6.2% 3.2% 100.0%

The new and improved measures applied to the most recent data available to us demonstrate that the SIUs continue to face challenges similar to those evident in the use of the old segregation regime.

Appendix C – CSC Operational Goals and Performance Measures

In a document dated May 2022 provided to the Panel at a meeting with CSC, CSC outlined 11 performance indicators that it had put in place for measuring performance, as part of its commitment to the Treasury Board. Our first concern with these measures results from the footnote indicating that Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) has “the objective of revising it by March 2023.” To indicate in advance that the measures will be revised 3.5 years into the Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) regime could well mean that we will not have comparable measures upon which to make judgements about the performance of the SIUs over time.

The immediate problem, however, is different. It is whether these are measures that will indicate the extent to which CSC meets the objectives of the new law which is for the SIUs to be a fair and effective replacement for segregation. In that sense, the performance measures might be seen as measuring the degree to which CSC meets the aspirations of the law and the transformation CSC has been promoting.

The CSC websiteFootnote 46 lists aspirations and goals for SIUs:

  1. CSC should be following the correctional plan that was set out for the prisoner.
  2. Prisoners should get targeted intervention and health services “based on their unique needs and risks.”
  3. The prisoner can interact with staff.
  4. The prisoner can get access to visitors, legal counsellors, elders, etc.
  5. Prisoners should have access to health, including mental health, services
  6. Prisoners can engage in indoor/outdoor exercise (daily)
  7. Prisoners have the opportunity to have at least 4 hours out of cell.
  8. Included in that 4 hours are two hours of meaningful human contact.
  9. Prisoners are provided with multiple offers of time out of their cell.

In addition, of course, there are the legislative aspirations that:

  1. The SIUs should be used as little as possible.
  2. The “Four” and “Two” hour legislated opportunities for time out of cell should not relate to brief unattractive “offers” to the prisoner but should be of a quality that prisoners are successfully motivated to cease their isolation and avail themselves of the opportunities for association with others and activities.  Said differently, time out of cell should not only be “offers” to the prisoner but should be of a quality that prisoners are successfully encouraged not to isolate themselves. CSC has an obligation to actively encourage prisoners to leave the cells voluntarily for meaningful human contact specifically and “time out of cell” more generally.
  3. The stay in the SIU should be as short as possible.

SIU Performance Measurement Framework

As of 30 November 2019, CSC put in place 11 performance indicators:

  1. Rate of transfers to SIUs per 1000 offenders in federal custody.
  2. Rate of transfers out of SIUs per 1000 offenders in federal custody
  3. Median number of days spent in SIUs
  4. Percentage of successful transfers out of SIUs (successful if the inmate remains in mainstream population for a period of 120 days)
  5. Number of subsequent transfers to SIUs within the past 12 months
  6. Percentage of days offenders housed in SIUs were offered time out of their cell
  7. Percentage of days offenders in SIUs were out of their cell
  8. Percentage of days with interaction time offered to offenders housed in SIUs
  9. Percentage of days where interaction time was used by offenders housed in SIUs
  10. Percentage of accepted offers of interventions in SIUs
  11. Median number of days from decision to transfer an offender out of the SIU to the actual transfer.

Upon examination, we have serious concerns regarding these performance indicators. In particular:

Table C1: Total days in SIU including those still in
Frequency Percent Cumulative Percent
1 thru 5 752 20.1 20.1
6 thru 15 874 23.4 43.5
16 thru 31 606 16.2 59.8
32 thru 61 636 17.0 76.8
62 thru 552 866 23.2 100.0
Total 3734 100.0
  1. We grouped these data so that one can easily see the distribution of the lengths of time. If, over time, the proportion of stays of 62 days or more went up, we would know that SIU stays were getting longer. If the proportion were to go down over time (from 23.2% to some lower proportion) we would know that there were fewer long stays.
  2. The median of these data (when one does a frequency distribution of the ungrouped data) is 21 days. Hence CSC can legitimately and accurately say that the median length of stay in an SIU for those admitted to the SIU between November 2019 and November 2021 is 21 days. But, for example, if the 1000 prisoners with the longest SIU stays in this table were to have had stays which averaged 6 months longer than they were, the median – the score with 50% shorter stays and 50% longer stays – would still be 21 days, even though 1000 prisoners were spending 6 months longer. Similarly, if the 1000 longest stays in the next period of time did not exceed 35 days and nothing else changed, the median would still be 21 days. Simply put, this is an inadequate measure of length of stay.
  1. Performance indicator 4 may be useful but is also at least in part dependent on total use of the SIU. If, in a given region, SIU placements are very common and involve large numbers of not-very-difficult offenders, then the percent of repeat placements is likely to be low. If SIU placements are reserved for very difficult or complex prisoners, then they are likely to reappear in an SIU.
  2. We had difficulty understanding what performance indicator 5 means (i.e., how “subsequent” relates to “past”). But as with indicator 4 (discussed above), it would appear to relate at least as much to the mix of prisoners going to SIUs. Can one determine if SIUs live up to policy aspirations by counting the transfer of large numbers of “easy” prisoners?
  3. Performance indicators 6 through 9 are interesting for what they do not include. As pointed out earlier, the critical factor that separates SIU time from segregation and prolonged solitary confinement (defined as torture under the Mandela Rules) is the amount of time that the prisoner gets out of the cell (and time involved in meaningful human contact). These indicators don’t even mention the amount of time.
  4. The percent of accepted interventions is a bit meaningless unless one knows two things: (i) what interventions were offered, and (ii) what was done to make the intervention attractive (or unattractive) to the prisoner.
  5. Performance indicator 11 is quite interesting. Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) clearly is aware this is a problem as evidenced by a mid-2020 memo from a senior CSC employee indicating that there were 79 decisions to transfer the inmate out of the Structured Intervention Unit (SIU) that had not been effected.”Footnote 47

It is interesting to note that this performance measure – the time between the making of a legal decision and the implementation of that decision – was created due to the central importance of compliance with Independent External Decision-Maker (IEDM) decisions. But using the measure of “median” time might be seen as a conscious attempt to obscure this problem. In an earlier analysis (reported in the sections on IEDMs), we noted that of those who were ordered to be released by IEDMs, 35.3% had not been released within two months of the referral to the IEDM. This translates, we estimate, to mean that 35.3% of those ordered to be released from the SIU by the IEDM were still in the SIU a month after the IEDM had ordered the transfer. If the “median” were reported (estimated to be about 10-15 days after the IEDM decision), one might get the impression that the median described the data quite well. It doesn’t.

Appendix D – SIU-IAP Member Biographies

Chairperson

Howard Sapers

Mr. Sapers, a prominent expert on effective and humane corrections management, previously served as the Correctional Investigator of Canada and an Independent Advisor to the Government of Ontario on corrections matters. He has also served as Vice-Chairperson for the Prairie Region of the Parole Board of Canada, Director of the Crime Prevention Investment Fund at the National Crime Prevention Centre, and as Executive Director of the John Howard Society of Alberta. Mr. Sapers is a past President of the Canadian Criminal Justice Association. He has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Forum of Canadian Ombudsman and, between 2012 and 2016, was a North American Regional representative to the International Ombudsman Institute. Mr. Sapers is currently a Trustee on the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health's (CAMH) Board of Trustees. He is a Visiting Professor at the University of Ottawa's Department of Criminology, Adjunct Professor at Simon Fraser University's School of Criminology, and has been awarded an Honorary Doctor of Laws from the University of Ottawa.

Members

Ed Buller

Mr. Buller is a member of the Mistawasis First Nation in Saskatchewan. He has been the Executive Director of the National Association of Friendship Centres and the Native Canadian Centre of Toronto as well as President of Pedahbun Lodge, an Aboriginal substance abuse centre in Toronto.

While working at the federal Department of the Solicitor General, Mr. Buller was responsible for the development, implementation, and evaluation of the Aboriginal Justice Initiative's Corrections Initiative (1991-1996) and the Aboriginal Community Corrections Initiative (1996-2001), which were implemented as part of the Federal Government's Strategy for Aboriginal Justice. Mr. Buller has also been Director of Aboriginal Policy with the Department of Public Safety.

He is currently a board member of Crime Prevention Ottawa, Ontario's Quarter Century Club and is an Elder/Advisor to the Canadian Institute for Health Information as well as a resource, Elder and counsellor at the Royal Ottawa Hospital. Ed is a former member of Canadian Reference Group to the World Health Organization Commission on the Social Determinants of Health.

Anthony Doob

Dr. Doob is Professor emeritus of criminology and was a long-serving director of the Centre of Criminology at the University of Toronto. He has championed the place of empirical evidence in the development of policy for over 40 years, notably as a member of the Canadian Sentencing Commission, as a contributor to programs of the National Judicial Institute and as the founder and co-director of the University of Toronto's Criminological Highlights, a publication that provides an accessible look at recent high-quality research. Since 2009, Dr. Doob has been a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada's Academy of Social Sciences. He received the University of Toronto's Carolyn Tuohy 'Impact on Public Policy' award in 2011 and was awarded the Order of Canada in 2014 for his scholarship in the field of criminology and his role in shaping Canadian justice policy.

Ed McIsaac

Mr. McIsaac has been active in the Canadian criminal justice system for over four decades. He has worked with both government and non-government agencies to promote the recognition of offender human rights in correctional institutions.

When he served as the long time Executive Director at the Office of the Correctional Investigator, he directed numerous reviews of segregation practices in federal penitentiaries across the country. He has authored scores of recommendations focused on improving Correctional Service of Canada's treatment of incarcerated individuals.

In 2009, Mr. McIsaac received the Public Service Award of Excellence recognizing an "outstanding career exemplifying the ethics, values and priorities of the Public Service of Canada." On his retirement, the Office of the Correctional Investigator established an award in his name to acknowledge annually those who "have demonstrated a lifelong commitment to improving Corrections and protecting the human rights of the incarcerated."

Mr. McIsaac has an undergraduate degree from Queen's University and a Master' degree in criminology from the University of Ottawa.

Farhat Rehman

Ms. Rehman co-founded Mothers Offering Mutual Support (M.O.M.S) in 2010, a support group for women who, like herself, have a son or a close relative in Canada's correctional systems. She has participated in advocacy efforts by speaking out publicly about her experiences as a mother of a son suffering from mental health challenges while incarcerated. Ms. Rehman represents M.O.M.S. on the Corrections Reform Coalition in Ontario, a group of over 20 agencies and groups advocating for reforms in Ontario's criminal justice system. She was the president of CCMW-Ottawa Chapter from 1995 to December 2020. The Canadian Council of Muslim Women (CCMW) focuses on women's equality, social justice, civic engagement, and gender justice for women.

Ms. Rehman has received several awards for her community work, including the Canadian Council of Women's Women Who Inspire Award in 2016, the Governor General's Meritorious Service Award in 2017, and the Ottawa Muslim Women's Organization's Community Service Award in 2019.

Janet Taylor

Mrs. Taylor began her 27-year career with CSC in 1988 prior to retiring in 2015. Over the course of this period, she held various positions which enabled her to gain a broad understanding of the organization's mandate and operations. Having a keen interest in working directly with the offender population, Mrs. Taylor became a Parole Officer and eventually Manager of Assessment and Intervention (MAI). As the MAI, she chaired and coordinated the activities of the weekly Correctional Intervention Board and was the institutional liaison between the Parole Board of Canada and the Atlantic Institution, where she supervised the activities of the Indigenous Liaison Officer and Elder and worked closely with them and the Regional CSC Headquarters on implementing activities related to Indigenous initiatives. 

Mrs. Taylor chaired the institutional Segregation Review Board and became a valuable and highly respected resource for the Wardens of Atlantic Institution on issues related to segregation and the initiatives to develop plans to reduce the segregated population. During her last few years at Atlantic Institution, she served as acting Assistant Warden of Intervention over various periods, while continuing her efforts to assist with the reduction of segregation cases.

Mrs. Taylor has a BA, majoring in Sociology with a minor in Psychology, from St. Thomas University in Fredericton, New Brunswick. 

Johanne Vallée

Mrs. Vallée has a diverse background of experience, working not only in the community criminal justice sector, but also the broader public service. Over her 20-year career, she led the Association des services de réhabilitation sociale du Québec (association of rehabilitative services of Quebec). She was also Vice-President of the National Crime Prevention Council of Canada, Associate Deputy Minister of the Correctional services directorate in Quebec, Deputy Commissioner of women offenders and Deputy Commissioner for the Quebec region at Correctional Services Canada. She is currently Chair of the Joint Committee between peace officers in correctional services and the Ministry of Public Safety Quebec. She is also Vice-President of the Centre de pédiatrie sociale (Centre for social pediatrics) in Laval.

Mrs. Vallée has a sociology degree from the University of Ottawa and a Master's degree in criminology from the University of Montreal. In 2005, she received an award from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences of the University of Montreal for her career achievements. In 2012, she received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal and in 2019, the Society of Criminology in Quebec gave her an award honouring her career achievements.

Margo C. Watt

Dr. Watt is a Full Professor of Psychology, and Coordinator of the Applied Forensic Psychology program at St. Francis Xavier University (StFX, Antigonish, NS). Dr. Watt is an Adjunct Professor at Dalhousie University (Halifax, NS), and Honorary Research Associate at the University of New Brunswick. As a registered clinical psychologist, Dr. Watt has provided professional services to the Correctional Service of Canada over the past 25 years, including forensic risk, specialized mental health, and complex case assessments.

She was the recipient of StFX’s President’s Research Award in 2009, Outstanding Teaching Award in 2013, and Jules Léger Research Chair (2017-2019). Her publications in Forensic Psychology include Explorations in Forensic Psychology: Cases in Abnormal and Criminal Behaviour (2014) and Case Studies in Clinical Forensic Psychology (Winter 2023).

Robert Seymour Wright

Mr. Wright is an African Nova Scotian Social Worker whose more than 30-year career has spanned the fields of education, child welfare, forensic mental health, trauma, sexual violence, and cultural competence.

A “clinician/academic/administrator,” he has always integrated his work delivering direct practice clinical service to clients with teaching and supervising interns and promoting lasting systemic change through social policy advocacy. He teaches, consults, trains, speaks, and comments on a wide range of clinical, social policy and social justice issues. He has served in senior roles in child welfare administration and as a civil servant in Nova Scotia and has been a sessional instructor on child and youth studies, education, counselling, social work, and criminology in various universities.

His extensive pro bono work gave birth to The Peoples' Counselling Clinic, a non-profit mental health clinic. He is the pioneer of Impact of Race and Culture Assessments (known as Enhanced Pre-sentence Reports in Ontario) and is leading a project to recruit and train assessors nationally.

References

Legislation

Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act, 1982 (UK), 1982, c 11.

Corrections and Conditional Release Act S.C. 1992, c.20.

Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations (SOR/92-620).

Jurisprudence

Brazeau v. Attorney General (Canada), 2019 ONSC 1888.

British Columbia Civil Liberties Association v. Canada (Attorney General), 2019 BCCA 228.

British Columbia Civil Liberties Association v. Canada (Attorney General), 2018 BCSC 62, 43 C.R. (7th) 1 (B.C. S.C.) [BCCLA, Trial Judgment].

Canadian Civil Liberties Association v. Canada (Attorney General), 2019 ONCA 243.

Other Material

Addo, M. (2020). Segregation in Canada and Other Western Democracies, The Canadian Criminal Justice Association. Retrieved from https://www.ccja-acjp.ca/pub/en/briefs-articles/segregation-in-canada-and-other-western-democracies-mark-addo/.

Beaudette, J.N., Power, J., & Stewart, L. A. (2015). National prevalence of mental disorders among incoming federally sentenced men offenders (Research Report, R-357). Ottawa, ON: Correctional Service Canada.

Brown, G., Barker, J., McMillan, K., Norman, R., Derkzen, D., & Stewart, L. (2018). National prevalence of mental disorders among federally sentenced women offenders: In custody sample (R-406). Ottawa, ON: Correctional Service of Canada.

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (2022). Mental Illness and Addiction: Facts and Statistics. Retrieved from https://www.camh.ca/en/driving-change/the-crisis-is-real/mental-health-statistics.

Canada, Commission of Inquiry Into Certain Events at the Prison for Women in Kingston (1995). Retrieved from https://www.publications.gc.ca/site/eng/9.831714/publication.html.

Canada, Parliament, House of Commons, Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, Minutes of Proceedings and Evidence, 43rd Parliament, 2nd Session. Document Submitted July 23 ,2021, Part 1, b. Retrieved from https://www.ourcommons.ca/content/Committee/432/SECU/WebDoc/WD11469999/11469999/CorrectionalServiceCanada-2021-07-23-Part1-b.pdf.

Canada, The Structured Intervention Unit Implementation Advisory Committee, Preliminary Observations of the Operation of Correctional Service Canada’s Structured Intervention Units (26 October 2021). Retrieved from https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/2022-siu-iap/index-en.asp.

Cloward, R. (1960). Social Control in the Prison as cited in Canada, Report on the Study Group on Dissociation (1975). Retrieved from https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/lbrr/archives/hv%209506%20g7%201975-eng.pdf.

Correctional Service Canada, CD-711 Structured Intervention Units. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/politiques-et-lois/711-cd-en.shtml.

Correction Service Canada, CD-702 Indigenous Offenders. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/lois-et-reglements/702-cd-eng.shtml.

Correctional Service Canada. Structured Intervention Units. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/acts-and-regulations/005006-3000-en.shtml.

Correctional Service Canada. Overview: Structured Intervention Units. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/acts-and-regulations/005006-3002-en.shtml.

Correctional Service Canada. (2022). Status Report on Administrative Segregation. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/acts-and-regulations/005006-3000-en.shtml.

Correctional Service Canada (2022). CSC Structured intervention Units – Construction Project Completion – Executive Dashboard Last updated:2022-05-10, document submitted to the IAP on May 24, 2022.

Correctional Service Canada (2021). Characteristics of Federal Offenders in Structured Intervention Units, the Mainstream Population and Administrative Segregation. Research in Brief No RIB-21-13. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/research/005008-rib-21-13-en.shtml.

Correctional Service Canada. (2017). Comorbid mental disorders: Prevalence and impact on institutional outcomes (Document No. R-379) [Research brief]. https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/005/008/092/r-379-eng.pdf.

Correctional Service Canada. (2016). Status Report on Administrative Segregation. Retrieved from https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/publications/005007-2540-eng.shtml.

Doob, A & Sprott, J. (2020). Understanding the Operation of Correctional Service Canada’s Structured Intervention Units: Some Preliminary Findings. Retrieved from https://www.crimsl.utoronto.ca/news/reports-canada%E2%80%99s-structured-intervention-units.

Haney, Craig: “The Psychological Effects of Solitary Confinement: A Systematic Critique.” Crime and Justice: A Review of Research (Michael Tonry, Editor). Volume 47. University of Chicago Press, 2018.

Kerr, L. “The Chronic Failure to Control Prisoner Isolation in US and Canadian Law” (2015A) Queen’s Law Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2, 483–530.

Kerr, L. “The Origins of Unlawful Prison Policies” (2015B) Canadian Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 4, No. 1, 91–119.

Mental Health Commission of Canada (MCCC, 2017). The Mental Health Needs of Justice-Involved Persons A Rapid Scoping Review of the Literature

Office of Correctional Investigator (May 28, 2015) Administrative Segregation in Federal Corrections 10 Year Trends. Retrieved from https://www.oci-bec.gc.ca/cnt/rpt/oth-aut/oth-aut20150528-eng.aspx?texthighlight=segregation.

Segregation in Canada and Other Western Democracies (Mark Addo, May 6, 2020; The Canadian Criminal Justice Association).

Sprott, J., Doob, A., Iftene, A. (2021). Do Independent External Decision Makers Ensure that “An Inmate’s Confinement in a Structured Intervention Unit Is to End as Soon as Possible”? Retrieved from https://www.crimsl.utoronto.ca/news/reports-canada%E2%80%99s-structured-intervention-units.

Sprott, J. & Doob, A. (2021). Solitary Confinement, Torture, and Canada’s Structured Intervention Units. Retrieved from https://www.crimsl.utoronto.ca/news/reports-canada%E2%80%99s-structured-intervention-units.

Sprott, J. & Doob, A. (2020). Is there clear evidence that the problems that have been identified with the operation of Correctional Service Canada’s “Structured Intervention Units” were caused by the COVID-19 Outbreak? An examination of data from Correctional Service Canada. Retrieved from https://www.crimsl.utoronto.ca/news/reports-canada%E2%80%99s-structured-intervention-units.

Stewart, M. J., & Watt, M. C. (2014). Substance use and mental health problems among Canadian women offenders. Canadian Psychological Association (CPA) newsletter, Psynopsis, Special Issue: Criminal Justice and Mental Health, 36(1), 14-16.

Summary of Evaluation of CSC’s Health Care Services (2015) https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/publications/005007-2018-eng.shtml.

United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. The United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Nelson Mandela Rules). Retrieved from https://www.unodc.org/documents/justice-and-prison-reform/Nelson_Mandela_Rules-E-ebook.pdf.

Wang, J. et al. (2017). Public Expenditures for Mental Health Services in Canadian Provinces: Dépenses publiques pour les services de santé mentale dans les provinces canadiennes. The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 63, 250–256.

Webster, C. (2015). On the Willful Induction of Mental Disorder. See  https://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/research/forum/e02*3/e023j-eng.shtml.

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