
Prisoners’ Legal Services recommends reforms to British Columbia correctional laws.
Prisoners’ Legal Services recommends reforms to British Columbia correctional laws.
Today, August 30, 2017, Prisoners’ Legal Services wrote to Premier John Horgan, Attorney General David Eby and Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth with a list of recommendations for legislative reforms that would improve the lives of BC provincial prisoners. You can read our list of recommendations here.
We hope the new BC government will take this opportunity to reform prison law to be in compliance with the United Nations’ Mandela Rules and abolish the use of solitary confinement in BC which is considered to be torture or cruel treatment if it is used for more than 15 days or on prisoners with mental disabilities. We also call for more resources to support prisoners with mental health needs.
Prisoners’ Legal Services
302-7818 6th Street
Burnaby, BC
Tel: 604-636-0470
Fax: 604-636-0480
Email: info@pls-bc.ca

We are grateful for the
funding provided by

How to Show Your Support
Help us to continue to fight for the human rights of prisoners in BC! PLS is currently litigating the important systemic issues of the segregation of prisoners with mental disabilities, access to health care, transgender prisoner rights, and access to religion and Indigenous spirituality. We need help to continue to do this important work. Donations to West Coast Prison Justice Society are non-charitable and are not tax deductible.
Donations can be made to
West Coast Prison Justice Society
Please call us at 604-636-0470 or email us at info@pls-bc.ca if you would like to discuss your donation.
Thanks for your support!

Correctional Service Canada is failing to treat prisoners with drug addictions. Read our letter.
Correctional Service Canada is failing to treat prisoners with drug addictions. Read our letter.
On July 17, 2017, Prisoners’ Legal Services wrote to Correctional Service Canada on behalf of 33 prisoners struggling with addiction who are unable to get appropriate medical treatment. The letter raises urgent concerns about woefully inadequate resources and the abrupt and inhumane discontinuation of medication for patients who do receive Opioid Substitution Therapy.
As the letter explains, many clients say they are looking for help to stop using drugs and are afraid of overdosing, but that they are unable to get the help they need. Some have been waiting months—and some even years—for treatment. Others have been cut off their life-saving medication after allegations of diversion with no meaningful opportunity to defend themselves or exploration of alternatives to termination.
The letter urges Correctional Service Canada to make immediate changes to its Opioid Substitution Therapy program to ensure everyone who needs this life-saving treatment has access to it. Read the letter here
Prisoners’ Legal Services
302-7818 6th Street
Burnaby, BC
Tel: 604-636-0470
Fax: 604-636-0480
Email: info@pls-bc.ca

We are grateful for the
funding provided by

How to Show Your Support
Help us to continue to fight for the human rights of prisoners in BC! PLS is currently litigating the important systemic issues of the segregation of prisoners with mental disabilities, access to health care, transgender prisoner rights, and access to religion and Indigenous spirituality. We need help to continue to do this important work. Donations to West Coast Prison Justice Society are non-charitable and are not tax deductible.
Donations can be made to
West Coast Prison Justice Society
Please call us at 604-636-0470 or email us at info@pls-bc.ca if you would like to discuss your donation.
Thanks for your support!
Transgender inmate in B.C. wins right to move to a federal prison for women
British Columbia is saving lives by giving drugs to opioid-addicted prisoners
Supporting Prisoners’ Mental Health: Best Practices and Alternatives to Solitary Confinement
June 2, 2017 | Vancouver Convention Centre
This conference is presented by the West Coast Prison Justice Society with funding from the Law Foundation of BC.
Session 1
Where We Are Now: International Law, Ethics and Current Policy on Solitary Confinement
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Session 2
Understanding Prisoners with Mental Health Issues
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Session 3
Complying with the UN Mandela Rules: Best Practices for Mental Health Care in the Correctional Setting
Part 1
Part 2
Canada’s prison agency closes in on new solitary confinement rules

Supporting Prisoners’ Mental Health: Conference Agenda
Supporting Prisoners’ Mental Health: Conference Agenda
Best practices and alternatives to solitary confinement
Friday, June 2, 2017 – Vancouver Convention Centre – Register for the conference at Eventbrite.
Agenda
8:00 – 8:30 Registration
8:30 – 8:50 Welcome
Aline LaFlamme, Métis Nation Elder
Jennifer Metcalfe, Executive Director, Prisoners’ Legal Services/West Coast Prison Justice Society
Stephanie Macpherson, Provincial Director, BC Corrections
Anuradha Marisetti, Pacific Regional Deputy Commissioner, Correctional Service of Canada
I. Where We Are Now: International Law, Ethics and Current Policy on Solitary Confinement
8:50 – 11:15
Howard Sapers, Independent Advisor on Corrections Reform to the Ontario provincial government and former Correctional Investigator of Canada – Mental Health and Segregation in Ontario
Dr. Terry Kupers, Professor Emeritus at The Wright Institute and author of Solitary: The Inside Story of Supermax Isolation and How We Can Abolish It – The Mental Health Effects of Solitary Confinement
Jennifer Wheatley, Assistant Commissioner, Health Services, Correctional Service Canada – The UN Mandela Rules that Apply to Medical and Mental Health Professionals
Dr. Ruth Elwood Martin, Clinical Professor, University of British Columbia – Canadian Family Physicians and Solitary Confinement
II. Understanding Prisoners with Mental Health Issues
11:15 – 3:30
Dr. Diane A. Rothon, Medical Director, BC Corrections – Understanding Addiction: When Caring is Treatment
Lunch & small group discussions
Dr. Gabor Maté, Best-selling author and retired medical doctor – Prisoners of Childhood: Trauma and Mental Illness in Our Criminal Justice System
Dr. John Livesley, Professor Emeritus, University of British Columbia – Treating Personality Disorder and Associated Self-Harming Behaviour
III. Complying with the UN Mandela Rules: Best Practices for Mental Health Care in the Correctional Setting
3:30 – 4:45 Panel Discussion
Moderator: Benjamin Goold, Professor, Allard School of Law
Melissa Taylor, A/Executive Director, Regional Treatment Centre – Pacific, Correctional Service Canada
Dr. Maureen Olley, Director of Mental Health, BC Corrections
Dr. Diane A. Rothon, Medical Director, BC Corrections
Aline LaFlamme, Métis Elder
Jennifer Metcalfe, Executive Director, Prisoners’ Legal Services/West Coast Prison Justice Society
4:45 – 5:00 Closing remarks
Michael Jackson, Q.C., President, West Coast Prison Justice Society and Professor Emeritus, Peter A. Allard School of Law
Register for the conference at Eventbrite.
Prisoners’ Legal Services
302-7818 6th Street
Burnaby, BC
Tel: 604-636-0470
Fax: 604-636-0480
Email: info@pls-bc.ca

We are grateful for the
funding provided by

How to Show Your Support
Help us to continue to fight for the human rights of prisoners in BC! PLS is currently litigating the important systemic issues of the segregation of prisoners with mental disabilities, access to health care, transgender prisoner rights, and access to religion and Indigenous spirituality. We need help to continue to do this important work. Donations to West Coast Prison Justice Society are non-charitable and are not tax deductible.
Donations can be made to
West Coast Prison Justice Society
Please call us at 604-636-0470 or email us at info@pls-bc.ca if you would like to discuss your donation.
Thanks for your support!

Registration open! Supporting Prisoners’ Mental Health
Registration open! Supporting Prisoners’ Mental Health
Supporting Prisoners’ Mental Health: Best practices and alternatives to solitary confinement
Register now!
This day-long collaborative conference will provide a forum for medical professionals to discuss ways that they can comply with the UN Mandela Rules and advocate for their patients’ mental health in a correctional setting, navigating the waters between ethical and professional obligations and the security concerns of the prison environment.
Confirmed speakers
Dr. Gabor Maté, Best-selling author and retired medical doctor
Dr. Craig Haney, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz
Jennifer Wheatley, Assistant Commissioner, Health Services, Correctional Service Canada
Dr. Diane A. Rothon, Medical Director, BC Corrections
Dr. John Livesley, Professor Emeritus, University of British Columbia
Dr. Ruth Elwood Martin, Clinical Professor, University of British Columbia
Jean-Frédéric Boulais, Director of Investigations and General Counsel, Office of the Correctional Investigator
Conference topics will include: the harms of solitary confinement; trauma and addiction; current standards for accommodating and treating prisoners with mental health issues, including personality disorders; and implementation of the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Mandela Rules).
We especially welcome doctors, nurses, psychiatrists, psychologists, counsellors and other correctional healthcare providers, as well as correctional staff whose work overlaps with mental healthcare and policy development.
Click here to register now – seats are limited. A full agenda will be available shortly. Please email info@pls-bc.ca if you have any questions.
Presented by the West Coast Prison Justice Society with funding from the Law Foundation of BC.
Prisoners’ Legal Services
302-7818 6th Street
Burnaby, BC
Tel: 604-636-0470
Fax: 604-636-0480
Email: info@pls-bc.ca

We are grateful for the
funding provided by

How to Show Your Support
Help us to continue to fight for the human rights of prisoners in BC! PLS is currently litigating the important systemic issues of the segregation of prisoners with mental disabilities, access to health care, transgender prisoner rights, and access to religion and Indigenous spirituality. We need help to continue to do this important work. Donations to West Coast Prison Justice Society are non-charitable and are not tax deductible.
Donations can be made to
West Coast Prison Justice Society
Please call us at 604-636-0470 or email us at info@pls-bc.ca if you would like to discuss your donation.
Thanks for your support!

Supporting Prisoner’s Mental Health: A False Choice between Treatment and Security
Supporting Prisoner’s Mental Health: A False Choice between Treatment and Security
The Correctional Service of Canada put JT under a Behaviour Management Protocol that required him to be locked in his cell if he engaged in head-banging, and to remain there for 24 hours without banging his head. If he did not stop banging his head, he would be given an order to stop and then force, including chemical agents, would be used against him. He was held in solitary confinement for hundreds of days…
Read the whole story at bc-counsellors.org. Also check out the conference we are hosting on June 2, 2017 on mental healthcare in prisons.
Prisoners’ Legal Services
302-7818 6th Street
Burnaby, BC
Tel: 604-636-0470
Fax: 604-636-0480
Email: info@pls-bc.ca

We are grateful for the
funding provided by

How to Show Your Support
Help us to continue to fight for the human rights of prisoners in BC! PLS is currently litigating the important systemic issues of the segregation of prisoners with mental disabilities, access to health care, transgender prisoner rights, and access to religion and Indigenous spirituality. We need help to continue to do this important work. Donations to West Coast Prison Justice Society are non-charitable and are not tax deductible.
Donations can be made to
West Coast Prison Justice Society
Please call us at 604-636-0470 or email us at info@pls-bc.ca if you would like to discuss your donation.
Thanks for your support!