Prison inmates to make Remembrance Day poppies - Action News
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Manitoba

Prison inmates to make Remembrance Day poppies

Some federal prison inmates in Canada's Prairie provinces will soon be making poppy pins for Remembrance Day 2014, but the plan doesn't sit well with the union representing prison guards.

Groups of inmates in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta to help assemble poppies for 2014

Prison inmates to make Remembrance Day poppies

11 years ago
Duration 2:02
Some federal prison inmates in Canada's Prairie provinces will soon be making poppy pins for Remembrance Day 2014, but the plan doesn't sit well with the union representing prison guards.

Some federal prison inmates in thePrairie provinces will soon be making poppy pins for Remembrance Day next year, but the plan doesn't sit well with the union representing prison guards.

CBC News has learned that CorrectionalService Canada, through its CORCAN job-training program, is teaming up with a private printing company to produce and assemble poppies for the Royal Canadian Legion in time for Remembrance Day in 2014.

A spokesperson for Correctional Service Canada told CBC News about 69 inmatesat 10 sites in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Albertawill help assemble the poppies, a task that involves putting the red "flower" and black centre together with a bent steel pin.

The poppy parts will be supplied by Trico Evolution, the private company that has the agreement with CORCAN to produce the poppies.

"I've got no problem with it," said Andy Fialski, a retired master corporal living in Winnipeg."It's putting them to work doing something good for a change."

Sally Orchard, whose father served in the navy during the Second World War, said she hopes the inmates assemblingthe poppies will "maybe think about the guys that gave their lives for our country."

"Maybe it'll change their attitude," she added.

Safety concerns

But James Bloomfield, the Prairies region president with the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, said he's concerned about inmates gainingaccess to the metal pins used to hold the poppies together.

"If it's going into the mediums and maximums [prisons], there has to be security measures put in place," he said.

The CORCAN program provides federal prison inmates with employment skills trainingin manufacturing, textiles, constructionand business services such as laundry operations and printing, according to the correctional service's website.

A spokesperson for the Royal Canadian Legion told CBC News it is agreeable to CORCAN's involvement in making its poppy pins.

"As Canada's largest veterans and community support organization, the legion recognizes that rehabilitation programs help assist yet another part of our communities," Scott Ferris, the legion's director of marketing and membership, said in an email.

"The legion cannot turn its back on these individuals. Helping Canadians in all communities is at the heart of the legion's mission."

Inmates working onCORCANprojects are "screened for their suitability prior to starting their work and are under supervision while assembling poppies," saidthe correctional service spokesperson.