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This petition is closed
Make our streets safe, save tax dollars and restore dignity to released prisoners.

Make our streets safe, save tax dollars and restore dignity to released prisoners.

This petition is closed
50 Supporters

Don C.
started this petition to
The Honorable Steven Blaney, Minister of Public Safety
Circles of Support and Accountability is an organization that has proven results in preventing re-offences of sexual predators. Unsupervised sexual offenders are almost certain to re-offend when they are released. Not only does CoSA have proven results in this regard, it also saves the government up to 100,000 dollars/year for each offender because the cost to incarcerate them is much more than the cost to supervise them into a community of volunteers where they are helped to re-establish themselves as contributing citizens.

CoSa currently has 700 volunteers working with 155 offenders nation wide.The Correctional Services of Canada (CSC) recently informed all 18 Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA) projects in Canada that their contracts will be terminated at the end of March 2014. The Correctional Service of Canada says it does not have the $2.2-million budget to support CoSA. We believe the government must provide CSC with the means to support CoSA to offset the threats to public safety.
To date, four studies demonstrating the effectiveness of the CoSA model have been published in peer-reviewed journals, all of them showing the same outcome: dramatically reduced rates of sexual and other reoffending among CoSA participants. These findings have encouraged the US federal government to support CoSA project development in many communities; the UK and other international jurisdictions are following suit.
We, the undersigned, are asking for your assistance in raising this issue with the Hon. Steven Blaney, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness.
CoSA has been supported by the federal government since 1994. This partnership in risk-management between CSC and the community, where ordinary citizens, supported by local professionals volunteer their time to accompany high-risk sex offender as they return from prison, has become a best-practice model for jurisdictions in the United Kingdom, the United States, and several countries in the European Union. In fact, US-based research has assessed projects according to their fidelity with the original Canadian CoSA model.
Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA) began in 1994 when a community of concerned Canadians responded to the release of Charlie Taylor, a notorious child sexual offender. Taylor was surrounded with a group of volunteers committed to supporting him while holding him accountable for his actions. Taylor died 12 years after his release with no more victims – one of CoSA Canada’s goals. CoSA continues this approach today with 700 CoSA volunteers nation-wide supporting 155 sexual offenders.
On the recommendations of CSC, the Parole Board of Canada holds many of the highest-risk sexual offenders beyond their statutory release date to the last day of their sentence. At that point, these high-risk sexual offenders are released to the community with no access to follow-up services or formal support and little chance to develop accountability. Left unsupported, offenders’ risk of reoffence escalates. Local citizens have stepped into this gap to provide crucial support and to foster accountability. Community members are willing to do their part to enhance public safety and protect the most vulnerable. But they need the support of their federal government.
The National Crime Prevention Centre, an arm of Public Safety Canada, is nearing completion of a $7.5 million evaluation of CoSA nationally. It concludes September 2014, but the CSC, also an arm of Public Safety Canada, has decided not to wait and is pulling its support in March.
At the same time the government is unable to secure a $2.2million budget for CoSA, it is spending nearly $80 million launching measures such as the, “Safer Streets and Communities Act.” Research shows that such measures are unlikely to work, whereas many experts in Canada and internationally are convinced CoSA is an approach most likely to work.
We hope you agree that this is an important public safety concern. We need your assistance by raising this issue with your caucus, on the floor of the House during Question Period, and when the recently announced changes to the sex offender Registry are debated in Committee, as well as with and with Mr. Blaney.

Posted (Updated )