Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

NL

For years, this program kept men out of prison. Here's why the agency that runs it is giving it up

Catherine Kennedy, interim CEO of the provincial division of the Canadian Mental Health Association, says 10 clients will be redirected to other services.

Interim CEO Catherina Kennedy says 10 clients will be redirected to other services

A prison complex on a grassy hill
A program that aims to keepformer inmates with mental illness out of Her Majesty's Penitentiary, pictured here, is coming to an end in the new year. (Paul Daly/The Canadian Press)

A program that aims to keepformer inmates with mental illness out of jail is coming to an end after Christmas, but it's not because of a lack of provincial government funding.

Catherina Kennedy, interim CEOof the Newfoundland and Labrador chapter of the Canadian Mental Health Association,saysthe association is winding down thejustice program in an attempt to get back to its core mandate amid external funding challenges.

"Its mandate has always been advocacy and education and we're the leaders in that, and we continue to demonstrate our strong commitment to make mental health services accessible," said Kennedy in a recent interview.

"The challenge we're having, like many non-profits are having, is [that] the availability of funds is very, very difficult."

The program is finished as of Jan. 12.

During a 10th-anniversary celebration in 2019, the association touted the program's success. At the time, the program hadsupported 112 members 67 per cent of whom have not reoffended or been reincarcerated.

The program provides services to inmates with mental illness at Her Majesty's Penitentiary, and case management and community support after release forup to 18 months. Case managers meet inmates at the gate of the penitentiary and begin work to find them stable employment, housing and food. The program arose from the 2008 Decades of Darkness report.

In 2018, the gymnasium inside Her Majesty's Penitentiary was filled with groups promoting programs that help inmates once they're released. The Canadian Mental Health Association was among those groups. (Sherry Vivian/CBC)

The news of the program's end comes on the heels of a report by the auditor general last week thatsaid the provincial government is not doing enough to help offenders reintegrateinto the community.The report statedthe department did not formally plan for the release of offenders in custodyand did not provide adequate rehabilitation for individuals once they were out of custody. The auditor general's findings werebased on information gathered between 2017 and 2019.

The provincial government says funding has not been cut for the justice program. In fact, a spokesperson from the department says it is looking for another organization that can take the program on, and thanked the association for its dedication to the program.

Kennedy said the decision was made after a 12- to 14-week review of all programs in the organization.

"The justice program really has never fit into our original mandate. It is in deficit year over year and consequently the ability for us to deliver our programs of advocacy and education, we're not being able to do that at the level that we should be doing because we are supporting another program."

Kennedy said the justice program would be better suited for an organization that hasa larger staff, more programming and better infrastructure.

The 10 clients that are currently in the program will be transferred to another organization, she said.

"The most critical thing I want to say, and I hope that people hear this, there is help," Kennedy said.

"There's all kinds of help for people who find themselves who mentally unwell, people who find themselves in crisis. And I hope that they will seek out that help if it's needed in our community."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador