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National Plan to Cut Repeat Crime

Full Title: An Act to establish a federal framework to reduce recidivism

Summary#

This bill directs the federal government to create and carry out a national plan to reduce repeat offending (recidivism). It tells the Minister of Public Safety to work with provinces, consult Indigenous groups, and engage non-profits, faith groups, and the private sector to design evidence-based programs and report results to Parliament.

  • Requires the Minister to develop and implement a federal framework with provinces and stakeholders (Development and implementation (1)).
  • Calls for pilot projects and standardized, evidence-based programs (Content (a)).
  • Aims to improve access to resources and job opportunities for people leaving prison (Content (b)).
  • Supports faith-based and community rehabilitation efforts (Content (c)).
  • Requires a public report on the framework within 1 year of the Act coming into force, and ongoing effectiveness reports (Tabling of framework (1); Publication (2); Report (1)).

What it means for you#

  • Households and communities:

    • The federal government must publish a plan to reduce reoffending within 1 year of the Act coming into force (Tabling of framework (1); Publication (2)).
    • Over time, you may see more coordinated re-entry services in communities, depending on how the framework is implemented (Development and implementation (1); Content (a)-(d)).
  • People leaving federal prisons and their families:

    • The plan must include pilot projects and standardized programs that aim to reduce reoffending (Content (a)).
    • The government must promote reintegration by ensuring access to ongoing resources and job opportunities, to lessen the chance of reoffending (Content (b)).
    • Specific services, eligibility, and start dates will be set in the framework. The bill does not list specific benefits.
  • Employers:

    • Government may work with employers to expand job opportunities for people with criminal records as part of the framework (Content (b)).
    • No new mandates or incentives are specified in the bill text.
  • Non-profits and faith-based groups:

    • The Minister must consult “relevant stakeholders,” which includes non-governmental, non-profit, faith-based, and private sector organizations (Development and implementation (1)).
    • The framework will support faith-based and community initiatives that rehabilitate people who have been incarcerated (Content (c)). The bill does not specify funding amounts or eligibility.
  • Indigenous groups:

    • The Minister must consult Indigenous groups when developing the framework (Development and implementation (1)).
    • The bill does not set specific Indigenous program requirements; details will be in the framework.
  • Provinces and territories:

    • The Minister must collaborate with provincial representatives and respect each order of government’s powers (Development and implementation (1); Preamble).
    • No new provincial mandates or costs are specified in the bill.
  • Taxpayers and the public:

    • The framework report will be tabled in Parliament and posted online (Tabling of framework (1); Publication (2)).
    • An effectiveness report is due within 3 years after the framework is tabled, and every year after that (Report (1)-(2)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • The bill contains no dollar amounts or funding authorizations. It directs the Minister to develop, implement, and report on a framework (Development and implementation (1); Reports to Parliament).
  • Potential costs could include consultations, developing pilot projects, standardizing programs, and annual reporting. The bill does not state amounts or funding sources. Data unavailable.
  • Potential impacts on provincial or community partners depend on the framework’s design. Data unavailable.

Proponents' View#

  • Reduces reoffending to improve safety: Nearly 1 in 4 people released from incarceration reoffend within 2 years; a focused framework aims to lower this rate (Preamble).
  • Uses what works: Pilot projects and standardized, evidence-based programs help test, scale, and spread effective practices across regions (Content (a)).
  • Focuses on jobs and supports: Better access to resources and employment helps people reintegrate and reduces the likelihood of reoffending (Content (b)).
  • Leverages community capacity: Supporting faith-based and community initiatives expands reach and can provide culturally or locally grounded supports (Content (c)).
  • Coordinates across governments: Collaboration with provinces and consultation with Indigenous groups aligns services and avoids working at cross-purposes (Development and implementation (1)).
  • Increases transparency and accountability: Public tabling and online publication of the framework and ongoing effectiveness reports allow oversight and course corrections (Tabling of framework (1); Publication (2); Report (1)).

Opponents' View#

  • No explicit targets or metrics: The bill does not set measurable goals (e.g., a specific recidivism reduction), which could weaken accountability for results (Content (a)-(d); Report (1)).
  • No dedicated funding: The bill creates obligations to design and implement a framework but does not provide money, raising concerns about under-resourced pilots or uneven implementation (Bill text; Expenses).
  • Faith-based support concerns: Naming faith-based initiatives may raise equity or neutrality questions if access to services varies by belief or if public support appears uneven (Content (c)).
  • Possible duplication: Correctional and community programs already exist; without clear integration rules, new pilots could overlap or add administrative burden (Preamble; Content (a)).
  • Vague terms: “Evidence-based” and “international best practices” are not defined, which could lead to inconsistent approaches across regions (Content (a), (d)).
  • Slow feedback loop: The first effectiveness report may come up to 3 years after the framework is tabled, delaying evaluation and adjustments (Report (1)).

Timeline

Feb 26, 2020 • House

First reading

Feb 27, 2020 • House

Second reading

Criminal Justice
Social Welfare
Labor and Employment