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Ontario pumping $500M into corrections to hire staff, upgrade facilities

Ontariowill infuse $500 million into corrections over the next five years as it hires hundreds of frontline staff and updates aging jails, the province announced Tuesday.

Province will hire 500 new staff while modernizing facilities to reduce overcrowding, says solicitor general

A person's hands hold prison bars.
The province will hire 500 new staff while modernizing facilities to reduce overcrowding, Solicitor General Sylvia Jones said. (Shutterstock)

Ontariowill infuse $500 million into corrections over the next five years as it hires hundreds of frontline staff and updates aging jails, the province announced Tuesday.

The province will hire 500 new staff while modernizing facilities to reduce overcrowding, Solicitor General Sylvia Jones said.

"Our government heard from corrections staff across the provinceabout the challenges they face each and every day," Jones said in a statement.

"These investments will create a better, safer environment forour hard-working frontline staff and will help strengthenOntario's corrections system."

Chris Jackel, a spokesman for theOntarioPublic Service Employees Union, which represents about 9,000 correctional workers, said he's ecstatic.

"For years we've been asking for help," Jackel said. "At the end of the day, an investment in corrections like we've always said becomes an investment in education and health care by default. So we're very, very, very happy."

Hires will mean more guards, social workers, nurses: union

He said more than 400 of the new hires will be"boots-on-the-ground" staff, including social workers,mental health workers, correctional officers and nurses.

"That will improve thementalhealth and addictions needs of the inmate population," Jackel said.

"And with such an influx of full-time staff members, it will help current staff by reducing the workload, which will really help with burnout."

The province said the new staff will help facilities meet theirobligations around the use of segregation, which require that inmates have four hours outside their cells each day.

Jackel said under current staffing levels, that's a nearlyimpossible standard to meet.

"You just don't have enough hours in the day or bodies in the building to accommodate those four hours," he said.

"With this new influx, it will be much easier to accommodatethat four-hour minimum time out of the cell."

Money will also go toward fixing outdated buildings with the goal of reducing overcrowding, the province said.