85 organizations call for end to use of federal prisons for immigration detention
May 13, 2024The surprising truth is that people change all the time
May 28, 2024“Canadian prison officials have said an inmate’s successful reintegration into the community requires at least some education beyond the high school level. But taking university or college courses inside Canadian prisons has become extremely difficult — and in some cases impossible.” notes the Toronto Star (.docx) in an investigative piece that came out in March.
The Star explains that the problem is “the federal government does not allow prisoners access to the internet, while paper correspondence courses have been almost entirely eliminated.”
Education isn’t the only issue. WriteOn! a volunteer-run organization that CFSC has supported financially and done events with, notes having received, “hundreds of letters from incarcerated people across Canada who request all kinds of information, including general legal information, educational resources and information about supports and programs that can benefit them in preparation for their release.”
WriteOn! has started a petition calling on Canada to let incarcerated people have access to the Internet. This would help “to improve their access to educational resources, including being able to take college/university courses, access career information, work on personal goals, and reduce isolation.”
Take action
Learn more about the campaign via WriteOn!
Read about CFSC’s transformative justice work.