IV. Response to Proposed Amendments
A. Increased Youth Court Sentences for Murder
CAEFS does not support the proposed increases in the maximum sentences for
young people convicted of first and second degree murder to ten and seven
years respectively. The Minister of Justice has indicated that such amendments
to the YOA are designed to address public concerns regarding the inadequacy
of the Young Offenders Act in dealing with serious violent crime. The added
rationale postured is that longer sentences would also allow additional
time for rehabilitation and treatment, thereby providing greater protection
to the public.
This was the same argument employed in 1992 to justify the increase of sentences
from three to five years. Clearly, the future of this sort of approach is
highlighted for us in other jurisdictions, most certainly in many of the
United States of America. Resorting to more of an approach that has already
proved ineffective and extremely costly seems wholly irresponsible. Not
only does it feed public fears and misperceptions, it has the potential
to increase the social and systemic costs overall, particularly those related
to custodial expenses.
The Minister of Justice has clearly indicated that there are no additional
resources for the juvenile justice system. This, combined with the reality
of the limited availability of institutional treatment and other programming,
as well as the current disproportionate amount of spending upon juvenile
incarceration versus community-based options, does not hold out great hope
for the future. CAEFS must unfortunately conclude that longer prison sentences
are most likely to result in further warehousing of young people, rather
than increase constructive intervention or community safety.
B. Transfer to Adult [Ordinary] Court
Like many other youth-serving and social justice groups, CAEFS does not
support the transfer of young people to ordinary courts, presumptively or
otherwise. Bill C-37 proposes that all 16 and 17-year-old youth who are
charged with serious violent offences should be transferred to the ordinary
court to be tried as adults unless they can demonstrate that public protection
and their own rehabilitation could be achieved in the young offender system.
It is difficult to imagine how it is perceived that this amendment might
facilitate the achievement of either objective, let alone do anything beyond
substantially increasing the costs of the juvenile justice process.
In addition to the obvious due process implications and CAEFS' questions
regarding the Charter implications of the reverse onus provision, we find
especially problematic the presumption that the manner in which adults are
dealt with by the criminal justice system is in any manner a preferred means
of addressing the impact of crimes committed by young people. The most likely
result of a presumption of transfer is that more 16 and 17-year-old youth
will be tried in adult court, and that this would in turn lead to more youths
receiving longer sentences which will be served in more isolated and destructive
environments.
In addition to being costly and counterproductive, mistaken premises about
deterrence theory and practice abound in relation to the use of incarceration
for both youths and adults alike. In order to be deterred by something one
must first comprehend, not to mention apprehend, that thing or consequence,
as well as the certainty of its occurrence. With all due respect to the
views of the Supreme Court of Canada in J.J.M., rarely does an adult, much
less a young person, think that s/he will be apprehended; rarer still is
the individual who knows what the result of an apprehension will be.
Rather than see young people transferred out of the youth justice system,
we would prefer to see the enhancement of services for young people within
the context of the youth justice system. By making transfers easier, it
also arguably limits the pressures on the provinces to enhance and/or implement
sufficient youth correctional, mental health and child welfare services
for young people. Rather than wasting limited resources on financing larger
prisons and longer terms of incarceration, CAEFS believes that the government
should invest in more preventative strategies.
It is CAEFS' submission that more interest and investment should be directed
toward earlier identification of and support for youth at risk, particularly
for children who are victimized, who live in poverty, without adequate shelter,
education and personal/familial support. Universal health care, emergency
shelter and crisis intervention assistance for women and children, community
housing, educational and employment equity policies, as well as other means
of identifying and addressing systemic and individual contributors to youth
involvement in the criminal justice system, would be far more deserving
recipients of our collective efforts, energies and resources in general.
Our communities as well as individual youth are best served by a juvenile
justice system which ensures that the staff, facilities, services and programs
therein are specifically directed towards young persons' levels of physical,
cognitive and psychological development. Abandoning young people to the
same system that currently institutionalizes and brutalizes adults cannot
be presumed to augment societal protection.
Transferring young people to adult court violates the approach fundamental
to, indeed introduced by, the YOA; namely, that youths should not be treated
in the same manner as adults, but must be held accountable and responsible
for their actions in accordance with their specific levels of development
and maturity. By permitting easier transfers of youth to the adult system,
these amendments also serve to excuse the lack of full implementation by
the provinces of the pre-existing provisions of the Young Offenders Act,
particularly those related to community-based services and treatment options.
Moreover, it removes all incentive for the fulfilment of their responsibilities
to provide sufficient youth-centred rehabilitative programming and services
in the juvenile justice, mental health and child welfare systems.
CAEFS is clearly of the view that young people are best served with supportive
and proactive measures as opposed to punitive measures. While popular in
the short term, attempts at quick fix criminal justice responses cannot
hope to address what are fundamentally social justice issues. It is far
too simplistic and short-sighted to presume that the off-loading of scapegoated
youth onto the adult system will solve youth crime. Youthful offending cannot
and will not be resolved by an examination of the Young Offenders Act in
isolation. Broader based social reform is a fundamental prerequisite to
further youth justice revisions.
Alternatively, future federal-provincial funding negotiations could revolve
around the redistribution of the some $170 million in annual transfer payments
for youth justice away from custodial expenses to the development and enhancement
of community-based correctional and mental health resources. CAEFS is firmly
of the opinion that this would be a far more fiscally, morally and ethically
responsible approach to addressing youth justice issues, rather than continuing
current strategies which have only served to feed public fears and misconceptions
regarding the nature and extent of youth crime, by further eroding the juvenile
justice system jettisoning yet more children into our most expensive and
inefficient adult system.
Finally, CAEFS wishes to remind our elected representatives that Canada
is a signatory to international covenants which speak against the imposition
of criminal responsibility prior to the age when most other adult rights
and responsibilities accrue.
C. Information Sharing and Records
Bill C-37 provides for the sharing of information about young people among
service providers. CAEFS does not support the publishing of identities of
young people, regardless of the offence(s) for which they are convicted.
Via paragraphs (1.1) through (1.4) of subsection 38(1) of the YOA, provision
is already made for the lifting of the ban on publication in circumstances
where it is deemed necessary in order to assist in the investigation and
apprehension of a young person who is deemed dangerous to others.
In at least one circumstance of which CAEFS is aware, despite the contravention
of these provisions by the media, no charges were ever laid pursuant to
subsection 38(2), the penalty provisions regarding violation of the stipulations
against the publication of the identities of young people. We have little
faith that any relaxing of these provisions will benefit individual youth.
Rather, such a move would further erode the principles of the Young Offenders
Act and therefore have significant likelihood of bringing the administration
of justice for young people into disrepute.
In any circumstances where the sharing of information might be beneficial,
the consent of a youth would allow such sharing to occur. Few young people
would refuse to consent to such information sharing, given the option of
allowing release of information in order to provide or facilitate access
to community-based and youth-positive services or programs, as opposed to
secure custody detention or other restrictive sanctions. Contrary to popular
misconceptions, most young people are painfully well aware of the inability
and inadequacy of the justice system to meet their needs and simultaneously
address public protection concerns.
We encourage a revisiting of the original rationale for the YOA ban on publication.
CAEFS is very concerned about the increasing interest in identifying offenders
in general and young people in particular. CAEFS contends that rather than
facilitate proactive and preventative work in communities, such moves are
more likely to result in the labelling, as well as encourage scapegoating
of youth. Furthermore, given the information that is known with respect
to the number of offences and perpetrators that go undetected, CAEFS is
extremely troubled by the potential of these sorts of provisions to result
in the creation of false senses of security. Such moves also unfortunately
have the tendency to be simplistic and diminish the pressure to create more
proactive and preventative means of addressing complex issues and concerns.
The likelihood of short as well as the long term risks of harm increasing
are far greater once such basic principles as this one are diminished. As
we have witnessed in the case of the media violations, there is significant
concern regarding the abuse of such provisions and the consequent deleterious
impact upon the lives of young persons. There are bona fide concerns of
educators and others who work with youth, with respect to the presence of
perpetrators of violence amongst the youths in their care and/or with whom
they work. Given the aforementioned reporting realities, and corresponding
prospect of undetected as well as detected perpetrators, we would argue
that the protection of all would be best served by proactive and preventative
youth-positive approaches, rather than by reliance upon increased detection
and apprehension.
D. Declaration of Principle
The proposed injection of statements in support of the need for crime prevention
and rehabilitative approaches to section 3 of the Young Offenders Act exemplifies
the faulty logic and misguided premises based upon which the proposed amendments
are presented throughout Bill C-37. Most simply stated, if it were not for
the presence of the additional propositions for amending the YOA in Bill
C-37, there would be no need to examine s. 3. Unfortunately, the evisceration
of the fundamental principles and underlying philosophy of the Act which
will be occasioned if Bill C-37 achieves passage would necessitate the sort
of pseudo-balancing attempt suggested in s. 1 of Bill C-37.
The original purpose of section 3 of the YOA was to provide guidance to
the interpretation, application and implementation of the YOA. The rationale
was to emphasize the fact that offenders should be held accountable for
their actions but not in the same manner as adults. The intent was to keep
youths out of the justice system as much as possible, and within the juvenile
justice system, as opposed to the adult system, in situations where criminal
justice sanctions were deemed necessary.
CAEFS believes that the proposed amendments to s. 3 speak directly to the
misguided and illogical nature of the entire Bill. But for the provisions
that follow it, the amendments to section 3 would be moot at best, as they
merely restate the obvious. It seems somewhat trite to be articulating that
the primary objective of the juvenile justice system is the protection of
the public, without recognizing that youth rehabilitative processes whereby
the needs of young people are met are ultimately the most effective means
of stemming the tide of youths as victims and/or perpetrators into the criminal
justice system. Consequently, the presence of the proposed amendments merely
underscores the continued slide of the YOA towards an ever increasing focus
on punitive sanctions and regressive crime control methods, as opposed to
concentrating our efforts on justice models that recognize the need for
fundamental community changes and constructive and individualized interventions
for and with young people.
E. Victim Impact Statements
By introducing Victim Impact Statements to the juvenile justice system,
Bill C-37 yet again raises artificial and unrealistic promises to the Canadian
public. Our criminal justice system is premised upon objective and impersonal
standards and concepts which do not recognize the needs or interests of
offenders, much less victims. Rather than meet the needs of or otherwise
provide tangible assistance to people who have been victimized, Victim Impact
Statements all too often merely create a sense of entitlement and participation
which victims eventually recognize is ethereal at best. Such realizations
consequently tend to compound and exacerbate frustration and dissatisfaction
with the ability of the court system to meet their needs.
F. Medical and Psychological Assessments
CAEFS is extremely concerned about the appalling lack of adequate assessment
and treatment options available for young people. We are similarly concerned
about the alacrity with which proposals to facilitate court-mandated medical
and psychological assessments are being proposed. Committee members must
recognize that assessments are not particularly useful if the treatment
needs identified cannot be met in the final analysis. Accordingly, it would
be imprudent to presume that the facilitation of treatment might currently
be achieved by the enactment of the proposed provisions.
It is imperative that community-based treatment options in particular be
developed and enhanced. Thus, discussions that focus on the development
of greater flexibility for youth to get access to treatment or the ability
of the Youth Court to mandate assessments and/or treatment tend to divert
attention from the fundamental problem. Rather than being seduced into discussions
that focus on amending the YOA, CAEFS continues to call for the enhancement
and development of the requisite assessment and treatment resources.
Finally, in keeping with earlier discussion regarding consent, as well as
prevailing views within the therapeutic community that consensual consumer-driven
treatment is more likely to produce positive results than, and is therefore
preferable to, limited and mandated treatment, CAEFS supports the retention
of provisions in the Young Offenders Act that require consent to treatment.
G. Alternatives to Custody for Less Serious
Crimes
CAEFS is very much in favour of limiting the use of custody for youth. Indeed,
CAEFS views the importance of limiting the use of custodial dispositions
as a fundamental tenet of the YOA. Let us not forget that s. 3(1)(f) calls
for the least possible interference with freedom that is consistent with
the protection of society.
Given this reality, we consider it rather curious that we are now seeing
particular emphasis on the importance of using alternatives to incarceration
such as compensation and community services. CAEFS is of the opinion that
these have always been implicitly understood and explicitly stated in relation
to the Act. If community services are available and not used, it is a fair
expectation that judges justify why they are not used.
Arguably, the judiciary has always had a responsibility, therefore, to provide
a cogent and considered assessment of the appropriateness of the disposition
chosen in any given case. Again, rather than being truly designed to encourage
restraint in the use of custodial sanctions, it would appear that, as in
the case of the proposed tinkering with s. 3, the introduction of this provision
is axiomatic to the introduction of other repressive measures, most particularly
the proposals to amend the sentencing and transfer provisions.
Where existing programs and services are inadequate to address the needs
of young people or the protection of society, the first priority must be
to address such service or programming deficits. Rather than resort to the
"adult" criminal justice context at ever earlier ages, CAEFS supports
the development and enhancement of youth-positive community-based dispositional
options, as well as the development of improved educational and psycho-social
programs and services both in community and institutional settings.
This is particularly true for young women, since they are disproportionately
disadvantaged in terms of access to open custody settings. The majority
of young women who receive open custody dispositions must serve their sentences
in secure custody and/or co-correctional facilities. Consequently, they
tend to have more limited access to the community as well as institutional
services and programs. In many of the young offender centres across the
country, incidences of sexual assault and/or pregnancies have led to the
further segregation of young women within co-correctional facilities.
More community-based dispositional options and fewer custodial beds should
exist throughout the country for all youth, but the need is particularly
acute for young women. CAEFS would support the cessation of federal transfer
of resources to provinces for custody beds, provided there was a corresponding
increase in the transfer of monies for community resource development for
young people. Furthermore, provinces must be encouraged to develop more
gender-specific and culturally appropriate services and programs for young
people. Too frequently, services and programs which do exist are ill-equipped
to deal with such intersecting issues as gender, race, class and sexual
orientation.
H. Young Offender Statements to Persons in
Authority
As a function of not having reached full cognitive, emotional and physical
maturity, youth are correspondingly limited in their capacity to understand
the legal system. Empirical evidence has consistently shown that young people
charged pursuant to the YOA frequently are unable to understand legal terms,
much less legal concepts. Young people are not able to appropriately exercise
their rights in circumstances where they do not understand the role and
function of counsel, much less the legal concepts and mechanisms within
which they become enmeshed in the juvenile justice system.
Many young people cannot, and therefore do not, understand the youth, much
less the "adult" system. For example, research such as the study
by Rona Abramovich, Karen Higgins-Biss and Stephen Biss, regarding young
people's general lack of understanding of police cautions and waivers, raise
very serious questions with respect to the ability of young people to exercise
their rights, much less their responsibilities, pursuant to the YOA. Consequently,
CAEFS would oppose any and all attempts to remove the current safeguards
available for young people with respect to statements to persons in positions
of authority in relation to them.
YOA Recommendations
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