Calls grow for inmate releases as COVID-19 cases climb in Canada’s jails and prisons
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Experts and advocates are calling for governments to release some inmates in provincial jails and federal prisons as outbreaks of COVID-19 driven by the infectious Omicron variant spread through the country’s correctional facilities.
People in tightly-packed living facilities are already more vulnerable to outbreaks, and the methods used in corrections to mitigate those risks — such as bouts of prolonged lockdown or time in segregation — are inhumane, said Martha Paynter, a registered nurse and chair of Wellness Within, a group advocating for health equity in Nova Scotia.
Staff also risk contracting the virus in these facilities and spreading it in the community, she said.
“Really, we’ve gotten ourselves into an untenable, unjustifiable and just purely unethical situation,” Paynter said in an interview Tuesday. “It comes back to what we’ve been saying for two years now, which is the only solution is decarceration.”


