Approximately one third of Canada’s 15,000-plus inmates have
some form of mental illness or an addiction issue. Our now over-crowded
facilities are certainly a cauldron for mental illness, a problem also, in
Ashley’s case, likely exacerbated by isolation.
Are there sufficient mental health facilities and training of personnel in
our prisons? Is there enough funding for
this? And how many qualified people want to work in this setting in the first
place? Will ‘mental health’ in prisons always
be left to the unqualified, as Ashley’s case in part suggests?
Confidentiality prevents us from ever having the complete
story, but was it really too much to intervene and care for a teenage life, or
were guards too busy following orders? Do not the mentally ill – especially when they
are still minors - have some right to state-protection, assuming they can be
protected from the state? Is individual
helplessness an ideal stage for reintegration, or was Ashley (borrowing from
Rousseau) ‘forced to be free’? How could the misuse of prison power persist for
so long, or do we already have an answer for that? Who needs Guantanamo when we
have the Correctional Service of Canada?[1]
[1]
See ”Ashley Smith Videos: The Madness of our Neglect”, Editorial. Globe and Mail, Friday November 2, 2012,
p. A14. Or listen: Anna Maria Tremonti
CBC Radio, The Current – “Ashley Smith Case & Mental Health in Canadian
Prisons,” Monday November 12, 2012.
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