One thing we could do about segregation is follow the law as it's currently written. Segregation is already supposed to be used minimally, as a last resort. The focus is always supposed to be on returning people to the general population as quickly as possible and eliminating any alternatives before segregation placement is maintained.
The framework around administrative segregation already calls for reviews at five days, 15 days, 30 days, 60 days, etc., and we've already seen just this year that if you pay attention to those provisions in law and policy, you can reduce segregation placement. Therefore, the first thing we can do is use segregation more closely to the way it was imagined to be used when Parliament passed the Corrections and Conditional Release Act and its regulations back in 1992.
That's a starting point. Enhancing that policy framework by including things like hard caps on continued segregation, ensuring robust review—