Ontario extends contract to jail migrants for another year - Action News
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Ottawa

Ontario extends contract to jail migrants for another year

The province will continue imprisoning foreign nationals held for immigration purposesdespite promising to end the practice, Radio-Canada has learned.

Province promised to end the controversial practice in July

Barbed wire and a Canadian flag.
Human rights advocates and immigration lawyers have for years campaigned against the imprisonment of migrants in Canada, whichthey say violates international law. (Chris Corday/Radio-Canada)

Ontario will continue to imprisonforeign nationals held for immigration purposesdespite promising to end the practice, Radio-Canada has learned.

Human rights advocates and immigration lawyers have for years campaigned against the imprisonment of migrants in Canada, whichthey say violates international law.

They believed their efforts had borne fruit when, beginning in 2022,all 10 provinces agreed they would no longer incarceratemigrants on behalf of the federal government and gave Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) one year's notice, as required by some of their contracts.

To see Ontario extend its agreement with the federal government for many months, we consider that to be really problematic.- Stphanie Valois, Quebec Association of Immigration Lawyers

But Ontario, the province with the most immigration detainees each year,keeps pushing back its deadline.

After initially announcing it would stop incarcerating migrants as of June 15, Premier Doug Ford's government agreed to extend its contract with the federal government until July 31.

It has now decided to maintain the controversial practice for another year, according to information obtained by Radio-Canada.

"Following a request from the federal government, Ontario has granted an extension until September 2025 to allow more time for the federal government to update necessary infrastructure to hold immigration detainees,"confirmed Brent Ross, a spokesperson for Ontario's Ministry of the Solicitor General.

A jail is surrounded by wire fencing
Immigration detainees are routinely held at Maplehurst Correctional Complex in Milton, Ont. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

'It's really disappointing'

"It's really disappointing," saidlawyer Stphanie Valois, co-president of the Quebec Association of Immigration Lawyers.

"We said that imprisonment of migrants was contrary to international standards, that it had serious consequences on the mental health of migrants, and this was recognized by the provincesbecause we saw them end their agreements one after another," she said.

"To see Ontario extend its agreement with the federal government for many months, we consider that to be really problematic."

Quebec has decided not to renew its contract with the federal government, despite discussions in June between Premier Franois Legault and Prime MinisterJustinTrudeau about extending the agreement.

All the other provinces but one have confirmed to Radio-Canada that they have ended their agreements.

Newfoundland and Labrador, which was the last to signal its intention to stop incarceratingimmigration detainees, intends to cease the practice completely as of March 31, 2025.

A woman in black stands and smiles.
Stphanie Valois is co-president of the Quebec Association of Immigration Lawyers. (Facebook)

Government turns to penitentiaries

In reaction to the provinces' decision, the Trudeau government has opted to use federal penitentiaries to detain migrants it deems "high-risk."

This proposal, buried within the federal budget in April, provoked angry reaction from former Liberal ministers Lloyd Axworthy and Allan Rock, both withthe World Refugee and Migration Council.

Despite strong opposition, however, the federal government is moving forward.

CBSA announced that the Regional Reception Centrelocated in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines, about 50kilometres north of Montreal, has been identified as a holding facility for immigration detainees, starting next year.

The penitentiary has housed some of Canada's most notorious criminals includingserial child killer Clifford Olson and HellsAngelsQuebec chapter bossMaurice "Mom" Boucher.

"The space being explored is separate from any federal inmates and will have approximately 25 beds," CBSAstated in a news release earlier this month. "This location would only be used to detain adult males who present a significant risk to public safety."

Two white prison towers behind a fence.
The Regional Reception Centrelocated in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines, about 50kilometres north of Montreal, has been identified as a holding facility for immigration detainees, starting next year. (The Canadian Press)

Treated like criminals

Immigration detention is administrative in nature, but immigration detainees who find themselves behind bars are subject to the same treatment as convicted criminals, Valois said.

"They are handcuffed, they are subject to strict routines, they have great difficulty getting in contact with the outside world, including with their lawyers."

Under Canada'sImmigration and Refugee Protection Act, CBSA can detain foreign nationals and permanent residents for three main reasons:

  • If their identity hasn't been well enough established.
  • If they're deemed a danger to the public.
  • If they're considered a flight risk, meaning the agency believes they won't appear for immigration processes including removal.

Since 2012, CBSA has detained an average of 6,410 migrants per year, the vast majority for flight risk.

The agency could choose to send them to one of its three immigration holding centres, or to provincial jails across the country when agreements with those provinces remained in effect. On average, 1,784 migrants were jailed each year.

CBSA said as of Sept. 13, just 21 immigration detainees remained in provincial jails.

Valoissaid she's pleased CBSA is giving greater priority to alternatives such as community supervision and the use of sureties, but she worries that progress will be lost when the federal agency begins using penitentiaries. CBSA has "sole prerogative" over where immigration detainees are held, she said.

A Canadian Red Cross vest.
The Canadian Red Cross is the only non-government organization that visits immigration holding centres and provincial jails on a regular basis to report on the condition of migrants held there. (Radio-Canada)

Red Cross reports unavailable

The Canadian Red Cross is the only non-government organization that visits immigration holding centres and provincial jails on a regular basis to report on the condition of migrants held there.

In 2017, when the contract between the Red Cross and CBSA was enhanced to allow a greater number of monitoring visits, the federal agency committed to publishing the organization's annual reports. However, that hasn't happenedfor the last three years.

In the past, the Red Cross reports have highlighted concerns whereimmigration detaineesand convicted criminals are held together, includingover punitive measures such as strip searches and lockdowns.

The Red Cross has confirmed it submitted its last three annual reports to CBSA.

"If the agency has nothing to hide, why shouldn't we have access to these reports?"Valoisasked.

In response to questions from Radio-Canada, CBSA saidit intends to publish two of the Red Cross's three most recent annual reports this fall.