FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
OTTAWA, ON – The Mental Health Commission of Canada (the Commission) today released “Finding New Pathways: An action plan for criminal justice and mental health in Canada”. The plan provides an evidence-based roadmap to address systemic gaps in care, coordination, and community supports, recognizing the impact of mental health on the criminal justice system.
Many are working to improve outcomes but needs remain high and progress is uneven. This action plan is a practical pan-Canadian reference point that seeks to contribute to the mental health and wellbeing of all individuals who interact with the criminal justice and forensic mental health systems, including those who work within them.
Developed through a rigorous five-year process, the action plan was shaped by input from national subject matter experts, research, and the lived and living experiences of justice-involved individuals and system workers. The action plan comes at a critical time, as individuals experiencing mental health challenges currently comprise roughly three-quarters of all federally incarcerated people in Canada.
“Meaningful and sustainable transformation is within reach for Canada,” said Lili-Anna Pereša, President and CEO of the Mental Health Commission of Canada. “While these transformative changes cannot be implemented overnight or by one group alone, this action plan serves as a starting point. It centralizes evidence-based approaches designed to break the cycle of recidivism and prioritize prevention, diversion, end-to-end supports and continuity of care.” The action plan stands on three strategic pillars:
- Care, not criminalization: Ensuring all people in Canada have access to supports that help prevent involvement with the criminal justice system, and prioritizing diversion for those with mental illnesses.
- Care during criminal justice involvement: Providing access to high-quality, trauma-informed, and culturally safe health and social supports for those within the system.
- Care after criminal justice involvement: continuity of care and seamless integration into community-based mental health
and substance use services upon release.
“Finding New Pathways” identifies 68 specific recommendations across individual, community, institutional, systemic, and societal levels. It pays particular attention to priority populations, including people from First Nations, Inuit, and Métis, and African, Caribbean, and Black, and other equity-deserving groups who are currently overrepresented in the justice system and face distinct mental health needs.
The action plan further highlights the critical importance of supporting the psychological health and safety of workers within the criminal justice and forensic mental health systems, noting that public safety personnel are significantly more likely to experience symptoms consistent with mental disorders than the general population.
Howard Sapers, current executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, former Correctional Investigator of Canada, and project advisor for the action plan, emphasized the necessity of these reforms: “ or too long, Canada’s criminal justice system has been asked to shoulder responsibilities it was never designed to carry. The over representation of people with mental health needs in police encounters, courts, and correctional facilities is a predictable consequence of systemic gaps in care, coordination, and community supports. The Mental Health Commission of Canada’s National Action Plan offers something we have been missing for years: a coherent, evidence-based roadmap that prioritizes health, human rights, and dignity.”.
Media Contact:
For English requests, please contact Josie Sabatino at jsabatino@summa.ca; 250-649-6856.
For French requests, please contact Carlene Variyan, cvariyan@summa.ca; 613-601-7456.