In February 2009, Canada’s Public Safety Minister and the country’s
Correctional Service announced a planned closure of all six of the
prison farms owned by the people of Canada and operated by CORCAN - the
branch of the Correctional Service that operates the farm
rehabilitation programs which also provide employment training to
inmates. The excellent syndicated Canadian radio show Deconstructing Dinner, which covers the local food movement, detailed all of this in its July 2nd show, and it’s a fascinating listen.
The proposed closure is a move that’s spawned a national grassroots movement to block the action, Save Our Farms.
Why close the farms, Mr. Minister?
Because, he explains, they’ve lost $4 million (doesn’t that sound like
the cost of a training program, though?) and, worse, prison farms are
training people in skills that are 50 years behind the times - growing
food by hand, milking cows, and such. This guy apparently has no idea
what’s on the horizon for food production, and prefers the model with
the hydroponic aquabots tending to seas of floating produce or
something.
Never mind that Canada’s prison farm
infrastructures are often relied on by small private farms nearby, that
they supply cheap fresh food to large institutions, and the fact that
the inmates interviewed in the story told of enjoying the farm work and
testified to its great therapeutic effects and a desire to continue
this work after release. Add to the picture Canada’s farm succession
problems and its burgeoning local agriculture revival and one would
seem to be mad to close these farms. The one in Kingston, Ontario, is
likely the
largest urban farm in Canada, a last reservoir of open land in a sprawling city.
Where
the prisons plan to get their fresh food from post-CORCAN is my
question, and rumors abound that the farms will either be privatized or
worse, sold for development at a profit. But what a loss that would be:
Canada’s prison farms sit on some of the most desirable agricultural
land in their regions and many are close to urban areas.
And there’s an ironic twist:
Canada’s prison farms are an international model and have been recently
toured by delegations from Japan, Russia, and New Zealand, the latter
hoping to take its own prison farms organic.
In the US, prison farms are also a source of tilth and production. A quick search turns up items like these two:
Nashville prison saves $150K composting all food waste; grows 100 acres of veggies.
And then there’s
New Jersey, whose largest farmer is its prison system, managed by AgriIndustries
- ‘a self-supporting operation without appropriated funds. Annual
revenues total approximately $11.5 million, with substantial savings to
all users. The departments of Corrections, Human Services, and Military
and Veterans Affairs, as well as the Juvenile Justice Commission,
utilize products from AgriIndustries.’
Canada Set to Close Important Asset: its Prison Farms
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By Erik Hoffner
Grist Magazine, Aug 11, 2009
Straight to the Source
