Any substantive changes in this Legislative Summary that have been made since the preceding issue are indicated in bold print.
Bill C-59: An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (accelerated parole review) and to make consequential amendments to other Acts (short title: Abolition of Early Parole Act) was introduced in the House of Commons by the Minister of Public Safety, the Honourable Vic Toews, on 9 February 2011. It is essentially the same as the former Bill C-531 except that, unlike Bill C-53 which provided for the elimination of accelerated parole review for all offenders sentenced after the coming into force of the bill, Bill C-59 provides for the elimination of accelerated parole review for all those who had not received that review upon the coming into force of the bill. This means that offenders sentenced before the coming into force of Bill C-59 (such as Earl Jones2) and who have not served one sixth of their sentence upon its coming into force will not be entitled to accelerated parole review.
The objective of Bill C-59 is to tighten the rules governing eligibility dates3 for parole (that is, day parole and full parole) in the case of offenders serving their first sentence of imprisonment in a penitentiary and who have not been convicted of a violent offence or a serious drug-related offence where a court order has been made concerning parole eligibility.4 More specifically, the bill provides that these offenders may not be granted:
The accelerated parole review procedure was incorporated into the conditional release scheme in 1992, with the enactment of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act7 (CCRA). One effect of the accelerated parole review (APR) procedure is to accelerate processing of parole applications by offenders serving their first sentence of imprisonment in a penitentiary who have not been convicted of an offence involving violence or a serious drug-related offence for which the court has made an order delaying the parole eligibility date.
APR guarantees that the offender’s case will be reviewed in advance by the PBC so that the offender may be granted parole as soon as possible, that is, on the eligibility date, without the PBC having to hold a parole hearing. An offender who is entitled to APR also benefits from a presumption in favour of parole: the PBC may not refuse parole unless it is of the opinion that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the offender will commit an offence involving violence before the expiration of the sentence.
To benefit from APR, offenders must meet a number of conditions:
From 1992 to 1997, APR applied solely to full parole, that is, after the offender had served one third or seven years of the sentence, whichever was shorter. The CCRA was amended in 19979 to extend APR to day parole10 and shorten eligibility time for offenders who met APR conditions before qualifying for it. Instead of being eligible six months before the full parole eligibility date, like a majority of offenders incarcerated in the federal correctional system, since 1997, offenders entitled to APR have been eligible for day parole after serving one sixth of their sentence or six months, whichever is longer.
The amendment to the CCRA, the effect of which was to accelerate parole for offenders entitled to APR, was probably a result of the fact that the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) had realized that these offenders were less inclined to apply for day parole than others.11 They therefore remained in custody longer than some offenders who were not eligible for APR.
APR was designed to allow non-violent offenders at low risk of reoffending12 to be released as early as possible to serve the rest of their sentences under supervision in the community. By accelerating release of those offenders, APR was intended to enable the CSC and the PBC to focus their efforts and correctional resources on offenders sentenced for offences involving violence or serious drug-related offences and considered to be at high risk of reoffending.13
Application of this measure was supposed to produce significant savings for the correctional system, since the cost of incarceration is much higher than the cost of supervising offenders in the community. In 2006–2007, an offender on conditional release cost the CSC an average of $23,076 per year, as compared to an average of $93,030 for an incarcerated offender.14
The economic aspect was not insignificant when APR was introduced, since other legislative amendments had had the effect of lengthening incarceration periods for violent and dangerous offenders,15 and thus significantly increasing the funds allocated each year to incarceration of offenders in the federal correctional system.
APR involves three elements that distinguish it from the normal parole procedure that may result in day parole or full parole.
The cases of offenders entitled to APR are automatically referred to the PBC for review regarding parole and the PBC makes its decision without holding a hearing.
Unlike the situation for offenders not entitled to APR, offenders who are entitled to APR are not required to apply to the PBC for day parole. The CCRA requires the CSC to refer the cases of offenders entitled to APR to the PBC before their day parole eligibility date so they may be released under supervision in the community as soon as possible.
Although offenders who are not entitled to APR may also be granted day parole, the PBC reviews only the cases of offenders who have informed the PBC that they wish to be granted day parole, generally six months before their full parole eligibility date. Some offenders do not request that review, and prefer to wait until the PBC considers their case for full parole (in the case of full parole, the PBC must review all cases of eligible offenders, unless an offender informs the board in writing that he or she does not wish to be granted full parole).
The PBC is also not required to hold a parole hearing to assess whether offenders entitled to APR may be granted day parole and full parole.16 However, applications for parole by other offenders must be reviewed at a hearing at which they must, for example, persuade the PBC that they are ready to live in society as law-abiding citizens and that they will comply with the conditions imposed on them for release.
The reoffending criterion used by the PBC for granting or refusing parole is less stringent in the case of offenders entitled to APR.
Unlike the case for the usual procedure, the PBC must grant parole (whether day parole or full parole) to an offender who is entitled to APR unless it determines that the offender is likely to commit an offence involving violence before the expiration of the sentence. For all other offenders, the PBC instead uses a general reoffending criterion to grant or refuse release. In those cases, the PBC will grant parole only if it considers that the offender does not present an unacceptable risk of committing an offence before the legal expiration of the sentence, whether or not the offence is violent. The criterion used is therefore more stringent for offenders who are not entitled to APR.17
APR is also different from the usual procedure because of the shorter period to be served by the offender before eligibility for day parole. While offenders who are not entitled to APR are generally eligible for day parole six months before their full parole eligibility date (that is, at one third of the sentence, or a maximum of seven years), offenders who are entitled to APR are eligible for day parole after serving one sixth of the sentence. In both cases, however, the CCRA provides for a minimum of six months’ imprisonment before eligibility for day parole, since the longer of the times referred to is used.
This means that an offender who is sentenced to imprisonment for two to three years who does not meet the APR criteria may also be granted day parole after serving only six months of the sentence. An example is the case of an offender sentenced to serve 30 months in penitentiary for whom the court did not impose a period of ineligibility for parole.18 As noted earlier, what distinguishes the treatment of the two groups of offenders in that case is the more stringent criterion in relation to reoffending that the PBC must apply in the case of offenders who are not entitled to APR.
Application of the one-sixth-of-sentence rule has a greater impact on offenders who are sentenced to imprisonment for longer terms. For example, an offender sentenced to imprisonment for nine years who is entitled to APR could be granted day parole after serving a year and a half of the sentence, while an offender given the same sentence who does not meet the APR criteria could be granted day parole only after serving two and a half years of the sentence.
The crucial element of the bill is the elimination of APR by removing all references to the procedure from the CCRA, which is the foundation of the federal correctional system (clauses 2 to 9 of the bill), and from related statutes (clauses 11 to 13 of the bill), including the Criminal Code, the Anti-terrorism Act and the Criminal Records Act.
If the bill is passed, offenders incarcerated in the federal correctional system will no longer be eligible for day parole after serving one sixth of their sentence. At the earliest, they will be eligible six months before their full parole eligibility date, or after serving six months of their sentence, whichever is longer.
Another result of abolishing APR is that the PBC will no longer be able to grant an offender parole if it considers that there is a risk the offender will commit an offence, even one not involving violence, before the sentence expires. At present, the PBC has no choice but to grant parole to offenders who are entitled to APR if it considers that there are no reasonable grounds to believe they will commit an offence involving violence before the sentence ends.
Finally, in order to be granted parole, whether day parole or full parole, all offenders will now have to satisfy the PBC, at a hearing, that they are able to live in society as law-abiding citizens and that they will comply with the conditions imposed.
The abolition of APR will affect offenders who are sentenced or transferred to a penitentiary for the first time after the bill comes into force and those who, upon coming into force of the bill, have not yet served one sixth of their prison sentence. The bill will not apply to offenders who have already been released upon coming into force.
Clause 14 of the bill proposes amendments to the CCRA in the event that bills C-59 and C-39, An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts, which were introduced in the House of Commons during the 3rd session of the 40th Parliament, are enacted by Parliament. Those amendments are needed because Bill C-39 also eliminates APR (and includes additional provisions to tighten eligibility for parole, improve public safety and enhance victims’ rights). If Bill C-59 were passed before Bill C-39, the provisions of Bill C-59 eliminating APR would come into force, repealing those provisions in Bill C-39.19
The creation of APR in 1992, like the introduction in 1986 of a provision to allow violent offenders to be kept in custody after their statutory release date, is part of a trend in the federal corrections system, which began in the late 1970s, toward treating conditional release differently for two categories of offenders: violent offenders and others.20 The objective is to release offenders who present a low risk to society as soon as possible, while delaying the release of offenders who are considered to represent a high risk. A CSC document states:
The intent of Accelerated parole review is to provide for formal recognition in law that non-violent and violent offenders should not be subject to the same conditional release process.21
That document also states that “the main focus of APR was to address public safety and reintegration” by enabling the CSC and the PBC to focus their resources on dangerous offenders who presented a high risk of reoffending and recognizing that faster reintegration of low-risk offenders is likely to meet the needs of offenders and the community better. Studies have shown that “there is a tendency for lower-risk offenders to be negatively affected by the prison experience.” 22
According to Michael Jackson,23 professor at the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Law, and Graham Stewart, former Executive Director of the John Howard Society of Canada, APR was also intended to solve a problem reported by a number of actors in the system: that federal offenders sentenced to short terms of imprisonment were at a disadvantage in relation to parole as compared to offenders sentenced to longer terms:
Ironically, those who are least likely to be released on parole are those who are serving short federal sentences simply because there is insufficient time to be assessed, placed in an appropriate institution and complete the required programs prior to their parole eligibility date.24
Since APR was created in 1992, however, it has been criticized on several fronts. Some people have questioned the appropriateness of selecting only offenders serving their first sentence in a penitentiary, pointing out that most offenders sentenced for the first time to a sentence of two years or more already have a lengthy criminal record.25 Others have observed that eligibility for day parole at one sixth of sentence distorts the sentence initially imposed by the court, primarily in cases involving offenders sentenced to lengthy terms, who are nonetheless released after serving only a few months in prison. In response to the publicity last fall surrounding the sentencing of certain white-collar fraudsters, all political parties agreed to examine this provision, which permits the speedy release of certain offenders.
Since the changes made to the CCRA in 1997, there have been parliamentary committee recommendations and attempts by individual parliamentarians to change the APR rules. In its report tabled in the House of Commons in May 2000, the Subcommittee on the Corrections and Conditional Release Act of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights made two recommendations in this regard.26 Although the subcommittee considered it “important to retain accelerated parole review, so first time federal offenders considered non-violent need not be subjected to the negative influence of some repeat offenders,” it nonetheless concluded that two amendments to APR were essential:
On 14 September 2009, Member of Parliament Serge Ménard introduced a bill to end APR for granting day parole (Bill C-434: An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act [day parole – six months or one sixth of the sentence rule]). Enactment of that bill would have meant that an offender entitled to APR could have had access to it only for full parole review, as was the case from 1992 to 1997.
Bill C-59 is a response to a recommendation by the Correctional Service of Canada Review Panel, which was tasked by the government in April 2007 with reviewing the CSC’s activities.27 In its report, the panel justified abolishing APR by citing the fact that offenders granted parole under that procedure generally had a higher recidivism rate than other offenders.
In 2007–2008, six of the 831 offenders who were granted full parole under APR had their parole revoked for committing a violent offence, as compared to six of the 527 offenders released under the regular procedure. In the same year, 72 of the 831 offenders granted parole under APR had their full parole revoked for committing a non-violent offence, as compared to 22 of the 527 offenders released under the regular procedure.28
The Correctional Service of Canada Review Panel also considered it necessary to abolish APR in order to emphasize that parole is not a right, and must be earned. It argued that offenders must demonstrate that they deserve parole by actively participating in their correctional plan.29 On the other hand, there are those who fear that adopting this approach will mean that offenders sentenced to short terms of imprisonment will have to serve longer portions of their sentences in custody before being granted parole, as compared to other offenders.30 It has also been argued that the abolition of APR could result in significant increases in workload and costs at the PBC, as the board will be required to hold hearings in every case.31
* Notice: For clarity of exposition, the legislative proposals set out in the bill described in this Legislative Summary are stated as if they had already been adopted or were in force. It is important to note, however, that bills may be amended during their consideration by the House of Commons and Senate, and have no force or effect unless and until they are passed by both houses of Parliament, receive Royal Assent, and come into force. [ Return to text ]
Unescorted Temporary Absenceb (CCRA, s. 115; Code, s. 746.1) | Day Parole (CCRA, 119; Code, s. 746.1) | Full Parole (CCRA, s. 120) | Statutory Release (CCRA, s. 127) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st degree murder | 22 years | 22 years | 25 years (Code, s. 745)c | N/A |
2nd degree murder | 7 to 22 years | 7 to 22 years | 10 to 25 years (Code, s. 745)c | N/A |
Other life sentence | 4 years | Full parole – 6 months | 7 yearsd | N/A |
Dangerous offenders | 4 yearse | 4 years | 7 years (Code, s. 61) | N/A |
Sentence of 2 years or more | 1/6 of sentence (max.: 3.5 years) (min.: 6 months) | Full parole – 6 months (min.: 6 months) OR Accelerated parole review: 1/6 of sentence (min.: 6 months) (CCRA, s. 119.1) | 1/3 of sentence (max.: 7 years) | 2/3 of sentence |
Exceptions (e.g., illness) | (CCRA, s. 115(2)) | (CCRA, s. 121) | (CCRA, s. 121) | Detention: (CCRA, s. 129 et seq.) |
Delayed parolef | 1/2 of sentence (max.: 10 years) (Code, s. 743.6) |
Notes:
a. In this table, CCRA means Corrections and Conditional Release Act, and Code means Criminal Code.
b.Eligibility for work release is identical (CCRA, subsection 18(2)).
c. Application for reduction of parole eligibility after 15 years served (Code, section 745.6).
d. Less time in pre-trial detention (between arrest and conviction).
e. “Maximum security” offenders are not eligible for unescorted temporary absences (CCRA, subsection 115(3)).
f. This procedure covers offences set out in Schedule I (offences involving violence) and Schedule II (serious drug-related offences) of the CCRA and organized crime offences (Code, section 743.6).
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