Saskatchewan

'We're heading to a crisis': Sask. non-profit calls for housing to support incarcerated women

Pine Grove Correctional Centre in Prince Albert, Sask., is significantly overcrowded. A Saskatchewan non-profit says it will only get worse if work isn't done to provide housing to support incarcerated women.

The province says Pine Grove Correctional Centre is over capacity by nearly 100 inmates

A blonde woman in a black shirt poses in front of a colourful piece of Indigenous artwork.
Nicole Obrigavitch was once an inmate at Pine Grove Correctional Centre. Today she serves as the executive director of the Elizabeth Fry Society of Saskatchewan. (Travis Reddaway/CBC)

Pine Grove Correctional Centre in Prince Albert, Sask., is significantly overcrowded. A Saskatchewan non-profit says it will only get worse if work isn't done to provide housing to support incarcerated women.

This isn't the first time organizations have sounded the alarm about overcrowding at Pine Grove, but the Elizabeth Fry Society of Saskatchewan  a non-profit advocacy group for incarcerated women — said that alarm must continue to ring, as overcrowding has created unsafe conditions for inmates. 

"People then have the potential to become violent when they're crowded in that way," said Nicole Obrigavitch, executive director of the Elizabeth Fry Society of Saskatchewan and a former inmate of Pine Grove.

The Government of Saskatchewan told CBC News that Pine Grove currently has 263 inmates. It's capacity is 166. Of those 263 inmates at Pine Grove, 156 are on remand, meaning they are in custody pending the result of court proceedings.

"When this capacity is exceeded, Corrections is able to make use of contingency spaces to increase capacity," said the province in an emailed statement. 

Obrigavitch said overcrowding has led to "double-bunking" and a lower quality of care. 

"We did have a report from one woman on Friday. She gave our receptionist a call and informed her that also their food rations were being cut and also even their laundry was being reduced."

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Justice told CBC that there have been no reductions to laundry or meal allotments at Pine Grove Correctional Centre. 

A chain-link fence is in the foreground with a Pine Grove Corrections Centre sign in the background behind the fence
Nicole Obrigavitch, a former inmate at Pine Grove and now the executive director of the Elizabeth Fry Society of Saskatchewan, says there is an ongoing issue of overrepresentation of Indigenous women in the criminal justice system. (CBC)

Obrigavitch said there is an urgent need for housing for women seeking bail or being released. She said safe and affordable housing is at an all-time low and there's an overrepresentation of Indigenous women in the criminal justice system.

According to Statistics Canada, a 10-year study from 2009 to 2018 found 40 per cent of incarcerated women in Canada were of Indigenous ancestry, and that the number of Indigenous women sentenced was getting worse.

WATCH | Saskatchewan non-profit calls for housing to support incarcerated women: 

Saskatchewan non-profit calls for housing to support incarcerated women

1 year ago
Duration 2:16
Pine Grove Correctional Centre in Prince Albert, Sask., is significantly overcrowded. A Saskatchewan non-profit says it will only get worse if work isn't done to provide housing to support incarcerated women.

Obrigavitch said the lack of housing results in women being placed in desperate situations. Some commit poverty related crimes, struggle to get away from abusers, or end up homeless and lose their children, she said.

"If people were released on bail to housing that had a supportive component to it — which had addictions programming, mental health supports, stability, safety and all of those things ... you could help people so that they don't actually have to go back into institution," Obrigavitch said. 

As for doing more for women's housing, the province recently provided $3.6 million to the Saskatoon Tribal Council for Īkwēskīcik iskwēwak, a housing unit in Saskatoon built to help women transition back into the community after leaving jail.

Still, Obrigavitch said government and organizations like Elizabeth Fry need to work together to get serious about finding a widespread solution. 

"Saskatchewan maybe just needs to talk to some other governments in other cities and see what they're doing there. Because we're heading to a crisis."

LISTEN | Advocates say Saskatchewan's women's jail is overcrowded: 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Laura Sciarpelletti

Journalist & Radio Columnist

Laura is a journalist for CBC Saskatchewan. She is also the community reporter for CBC's virtual road trip series Land of Living Stories and host of the arts and culture radio column Queen City Scene Setter, which airs on CBC's The Morning Edition. Laura previously worked for CBC Vancouver. Some of her former work has appeared in the Globe and Mail, NYLON Magazine, VICE Canada and The Tyee. Laura specializes in human interest, arts and health care coverage. She holds a master of journalism degree from the University of British Columbia. Send Laura news tips at laura.sciarpelletti@cbc.ca

With files from Liam O'Connor