Prisoner segregation falls, but ombudsman questions conditions in alternatives
OTTAWA — Canada’s federal prison ombudsman is noting a steep decline in the use of solitary confinement in jails in the past two years, but remains concerned some inmates are facing long periods of isolation in the cells where they’re placed.
Ivan Zinger said that on average about 400 inmates were in solitary confinement in a federal prison on any given day last year, about half the roughly 800 that were segregated in 2013-14.
A report he released on Tuesday evening also says that the average length of stay also fell from 44 days a decade ago to 26 days last year.
Zinger says the trend is positive and has been continuing this year, and he credits the decline to a change in approach by senior management at Correctional Service Canada.