HMP uniforms: jumpsuits are the new jeans and t-shirts - Action News
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HMP uniforms: jumpsuits are the new jeans and t-shirts

Chances are they won't be bright orange jumpsuits or black and white striped pillbox hats, but inmates at Her Majesty's Penitentiary will soon have to wear standardized uniforms.

Not just a fashion crime. Clothing used to transport drugs, motivation for assaults

Uniforms coming to HMP

9 years ago
Duration 1:17
Prisoners at Her Majesty's Penitentiary will soon have to wear unfiorms

Chances are theywon't be bright orange jumpsuits or black and white striped pillbox hats, but inmates at Her Majesty's Penitentiary will soon have towear standardized uniforms.

An allocation of more than $100,000 tooutfit inmates at Newfoundland and Labrador's largest prison was announcedin Thursday's budget.

Currently, inmates at the highest security jail in the province are allowed to wear their own clothing.

Inmates at Her Majesty's Penitentiary wore uniforms up until the 1990s, as seen in this archival photo from the late 1980s. (CBC)

However, it has beenan ongoing safety hazard for both staff and inmateswith drugs being cleverly stitched into the seams of clothing.

"To give you an example,we've had a pair of jeans come in, the outside seam would bestripped out, lines ofcocaine or crushed pills would beinsertedinside and then using the very same gold-type thread, the jeans would be sown back together," said OwenBrophy,superintendentof prisons.

A large chunk of time is taken up in acorrectional officer'sdaywithhaving to search each individual piece of clothing by hand, then scanned with an X-ray machine.

Once the correctional officers tearup the clothingto search, the department is on the hook to pay the inmate back for the damaged items, Brophy said.

Motivation for prison fights

Prison garb will also resolve the problem of inmates stealing and fighting over expensive pieces of clothing and shoes.

"These articles will be stolen by other inmates, the inmates could end up getting assaulted if they don't agree to give up those articles of clothing," he said.

The decision to discontinue standardized uniforms was made sometime in the 1990s, a spokesperson from the department of Justice and Public Safety said.

Since then, those serving time are allowed to have three or four changes of clothing in their cells at one time.

The issue of inmates wearing their own clothes was raised in the 2008 Decades of Darkness report into conditions inside the province's prisons.

At the time, it was requested that the department review its clothing policy and provide a "basic issue of clothing" to anyone who needs it.

Inmates at HMP have been wearing their own clothes since the 1990s. This surveillance footage from inside the penitentiary's chapel shows current prison apparel. (CBC)

Brophy said meetings will be held withinmate committees to explain why uniforms will be imposed.

"I'm sure they'll accept it," Brophy said.

A tender will be called in the coming weeks for approximately 200 people, enough to clothe those serving intermittent sentencesas well as those serving straight time at HMP.

As for other jails across the province, the department said it may look at providing uniforms in the future.