Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Auditor General Says Prisons Crowded, Unsafe And Hardly Stop Repeat Crime

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2015 11:25 AM

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's prisons are overcrowded, tension-filled facilities that do little to prevent inmates from returning to crime when released.

    That's the conclusion of a report by auditor general Carol Bellringer who is recommending changes to provincial adult custody facilities and the programs they run.

    Bellringer calls on the government to develop and implement a performance framework that includes goals and targets to achieve safe and secure prisons that reduce criminal behaviour.

    The audit says B.C. jails, which held 16,000 people last year, are operating at 140 per cent capacity, with more than half of the inmates sharing cells meant for one person.

    The auditor says provincial jails succeed in providing accommodation for inmates, but little else because only one in five programs offered has been shown to cuts repeat offences.

    The audit says jails will remain overcrowded despite the addition of 800 new cells at the Surrey pre-trial centre and a new facility in the Okanagan.

    Late last year, Liberal backbencher Laurie Throness completed a report that recommended jails introduce more apprenticeship training programs in order to offer inmates skills they can use to find work once they are released.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area city is asking the National Energy Board to hand Kinder Morgan a bill that could be worth more than $2 million for policing and cleanup costs after pipeline work was targeted by protesters last month.

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades
    VICTORIA — Residents of Metro Vancouver will be asked to agree to pay an extra 0.5 per cent sales tax after the province approved a plebiscite on funding major upgrades to the regional transportation network.

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates
    VICTORIA — British Columbia needs to appoint a crime-fighting boss who can cut through provincial, municipal and social bureaucracies to build unified crime-prevention teams, say government reports released Thursday.

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's chief inspector of mines is allowing the owner of the Mount Polley mine to start repairs on the tailings pond that breached, sending a surge of mine waste and water into nearby lakes and rivers.

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach

    Ghiz reiterates he won't run for the federal Liberals in 2015

    Ghiz reiterates he won't run for the federal Liberals in 2015
    QUEBEC — Prince Edward Island Premier Robert Ghiz is again ruling out running for the federal Liberals in next year's election.

    Ghiz reiterates he won't run for the federal Liberals in 2015

    Police lay assault charges against South African woman after flight diverted

    Police lay assault charges against South African woman after flight diverted
    HALIFAX — The Mounties have charged a 30-year-old South African woman with assault after an international flight was diverted to Halifax on Wednesday.

    Police lay assault charges against South African woman after flight diverted