Saskatchewan

Sask. women's organization gets funding to help women reintegrate after leaving custody

The Saskatchewan government has committed $330,000 over the next two years for the Elizabeth Fry Society to provide reintegration supports for female offenders leaving custody.

Elizabeth Fry Society to receive $330,000 over the next 2 years

A chain-link fence is in the foreground with a Pine Grove Corrections Centre sign in the background behind the fence
Pine Grove Correctional Centre in Prince Albert, Sask. (CBC)

The Elizabeth Fry Society of Saskatchewan will be able to add much-needed services for women leaving incarceration after a boost in funding.

The Saskatchewan government has committed $330,000 over the next two years for the organization to provide reintegration supports for female offenders leaving custody. 

Executive director Nicole Obrigavitch said the Elizabeth Fry Society has been speaking with the Ministry of Corrections, Policing and Public Safety about a serious gap in this type of programming for women leaving Pine Grove Correctional Centre in Prince Albert.

"Despite Pine Grove doing their best to make sure certain services are connected prior to release, that doesn't always follow once they are into the community," Obrigavitch said.

Obrigavitch said some women are being released without identification, housing or income assistance.

"Often if women are arrested when they were homeless, then when they get released they are also being released to homelessness," Obrigavitch said.

Part of the plan is hiring a reintegration systems navigator, who will work with women at Pine Grove, the North Battleford Hospital and the White Burch Remand Unit in Regina.

The goal is to make sure the women have ID, housing, and mental health and addiction support before their release.

"Basically just making sure that the day that they're released, they are being released to some structure and some options," Obrigavitch said.

Corrections, Policing and Public Safety Minister Paul Merriman said in a news release that it can be hard for people leaving custody to know about the programs and services available to them.

"Female offenders face additional challenges when securing housing and other support necessary to reunite with their children and loved ones," Merriman said. "This expanded service agreement will ensure more women in our facilities, including those on remand, can be supported by the Elizabeth Fry Society's programming and services."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Louise is a journalist with CBC Saskatchewan since September 2022. She is Nakota/Cree from Ocean Man First Nations. She holds a bachelor of fine arts from the University of Regina.