| Segregation at Kent Maximum Security -
	        The ‘Cadillac’ of Canadian Penitentiaries
	       The British Columbia Penitentiary was closed in 1980. Its
	        replacement, Kent Institution, had started to receive prisoners in 1979.
	        Kent is the most modern of Canada’s maximum-security prisons. The commemorative
	        issue of the Canadian Correctional Service’s official magazine, Let's
	        Talk, published on the occasion of the closing of the British Columbia
	        Penitentiary, described Kent.
	       Kent Institution epitomizes a new era
	        in correctional philosophy. An atmosphere of punishment and rigid security
	        have been replaced by one of education, work, and rehabilitation opportunities.
	       Cramped cells, placed tier on tier, the
	        overcrowding, the noise, the institutional green paint of the BC Penitentiary,
	        have been replaced by Kent’s bright modern colours and living units, where
	        inmates live in groups small enough for them to get to know each other
	        and their living unit officers. They no longer eat, alone in their cells
	        as at the BC Pen, but in a cheerful cafeteria near a pleasant lounge.
	        ‘It’s like comparing the Black Hole of Calcutta with Buckingham Palace,’
	        former Solicitor-General Warren Alimand said two years ago, referring
	        to the opening of Mission Institution. You could say the same today, comparing
	        BC Penitentiary with Kent Institution. 131
	       The solicitor-general, the Honourable Robert Kaplan, in
	        his address on the occasion of the closing of the British Columbia Penitentiary,
	        boldly predicted a new future, one that should not ignore the experience
	        of the past.
	       We can all look forward with pride and
	        hope to a new era of corrections with greater opportunities for both inmates
	        and staff to work together in harmony ...We move toward an uncharted future
	        with unknown challenges, strengthened by the rich heritage of example
	        and experience of all those who have lived and worked here. It is worthwhile
	        remembering that ‘those who cannot remember the past are condemned to
	        repeat it.’132
	       It has been an underlying thesis of this work that an understanding
	        of the past - in particular, of the origins of penitentiary discipline
	        -is vital to an assessment of present carceral practices. It is therefore
	        appropriate that I should conclude this analysis of present practices
	        with a discussion of Kent Institution which, on another occasion, the
	        former solicitor- general called the ‘Cadillac’ of Canadian penitentiaries.
	        Behind the facade of its ‘bright modern colours,’ what has changed in
	        the theory and practice of carceral power for those who face administrative
	        segregation?
	        It will be recalled that the first Vantour Report recommended
	        that segregation units be established in each institution for prisoners
	        requiring short-term segregation. The original design of Kent Institution
	        provided for only four cells for such segregation. However, soon after
	        its opening, one of the eight ‘living units’ was designated a segregation
	        area, and H unit has since become synonymous with the ‘hole’ at Kent.
	        H unit consists of twenty-four cells which are the same size as all others
	        in the institution, being ten feet long, eight feet high, and six feet
	        wide; in each cell a solid door contains a small window that looks out
	        on the corridor and a window on the outside wall that lets in natural
	        light. The cells, which originally had no furnishings in them, have each
	        been equipped with the same steel bedframe, sink-toilet combination, and
	        table-chair combination introduced into the penthouse at the British Columbia
	        Penitentiary after the McCann case. These
	        furnishings were transferred to Kent when the British Columbia Penitentiary
	        was closed. A prisoner who has spent a substantial amount of time in H
	        unit has proved this description of the regime.
	       In this place people are virtually buried
	        alive in concrete tombs for periods of up to 231/2 hours daily. The exercise
	        area itself is only about 20 x 30 feet encircled by cement and bars with
	        wire fencing covering the roof. At no time are more than three prisoners
	        allowed to exercise together, and the exercise they do get only consists
	        of a brisk walk back and forth.
	        Prisoners in H Unit are not allowed
	        open visits with their families. All they receive are brief telephone
	        visits, where the visitor is on one side of a glass parti- tion and the
	        prisoner is on the other side. Even though the prisoners are skin- frisked
	        both before and after the visits, they are still refused human contact
	        with their loved ones. Unlike the main population, the prisoners in H
	        Unit are not allowed to watch any television or see a movie. The availability
	        of a newspaper is restricted. The only library that exists is a small
	        box of books that is made up of spy stories and westerns, which are exchanged
	        weekly by the guards. Treated differently than the main prison population,
	        the prisoners of H Unit do not have easy access to a telephone for outside
	        calls. Where prisoners in the popultion are allowed to phone both family
	        and lawyers, prisoners in H Unit can only occasion- ally telephone their
	        lawyers. That is, if their request forms are not lost or mis- placed as
	        the case has been. Prisoners placed in H Unit receive little or no funds
	        to purchase the items they require for basic survival. They are classified
	        as unproductive and receive the lowest scale of pay within the prison.
	        Thus writing paper, envelopes and communication with the outside world
	        is a major concern. People in the H Unit are not allowed a pen. They are
	        supplied a three-inch-long pencil for their written communication which
	        must be returned to the guards after its use. Sanitary arrangements for
	        prisoners in the H Unit are completely inadequate. They are only allowed
	        two showers per week and are restricted to only one set of clothes and
	        bedding that are exchanged weekly. Also, disinfectant is not allowed inside
	        the cells, nor is there even a mirror inside the cell area. Most everything
	        required for appearance and grooming is dependent upon a guard bringing
	        it to you for brief periods of time once a day. The only time a prisoner
	        gets to clear his cell is a ten-minute period, usually each morning. There
	        is no educational programme or instruction for prisoners in the H Unit.
	        Where the general population, as a whole, have access to this type of
	        programme, the prisoners entombed in H Unit do not. Nor are there any
	        hobbies allowed to H Unit prisoners to help with the idleness and boredom.
	        Unlike other segregation areas in Canada that allow prison population
	        committees access to the segregation area to hear fellow prisoner complaints,
	        grievances and concerns, the administration in Kent will not allow this;
	        all they will allow is written censored communication between the dissociation
	        inmates and the prison inmate committee. Contrary to other penitentiaries
	        that have segregation units, Kent Penitentiary houses both prisoners on
	        disciplinary punishment and dissociation inmates not on punishment together
	        in the same unit. The consequences of this [are] that the Kent staff treat
	        all inmates in the H Unit as if they were being punished due to a breach
	        of the rules and regulations ...In the B.C. Penitentiary, that type of
	        confinement was ruled to be cruel and unusual punishment contrary to the
	        Canadian Bill of Rights. It’s shocking to see a new prison like Kent carry
	        on the bad practices that made the B.C. Pen the cesspool it was. Does
	        that mean that you can disguise the monster but never change its heart?
	        This certainly appears to be the case here at Kent. Page 1 of 9
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