Households and the public
- No change to criminal charges, sentencing ranges, parole eligibility, or community supervision rules. The change is to security classification and placement inside federal prisons (Bill ss.28–30, 115).
- People may see fewer unescorted temporary absences by the affected inmates, because more of them will be classified as maximum security (Bill s.115(3)).
Victims and their families
- Offenders who meet the criteria must be kept in maximum security. This aligns the bill with the Canadian Victims Bill of Rights in the preamble, but it does not change victims’ rights or services in law (Preamble; Bill ss.28–30).
- Fewer unescorted temporary absences for the affected group may reduce contacts in the community (Bill s.115(3)).
Affected inmates (dangerous offenders; more than one first‑degree murder)
- You will be assigned a maximum‑security classification by law, not by an individualized assessment (Bill s.30(1.1)).
- You must be housed in a maximum‑security penitentiary or a maximum‑security area within a penitentiary (Bill s.28(2)).
- You will not be eligible for unescorted temporary absences (Bill s.115(3)).
- Transfers to lower‑security institutions are not allowed while this mandatory classification applies (Bill s.29, s.30(1.1)).
Correctional Service Canada and prison staff
- You must classify and confine the specified inmates at maximum security, regardless of assessment tools or case‑by‑case discretion (Bill s.30(1.1), s.28(2)).
- You may need to adjust bed space and operations to ensure maximum‑security capacity or designate maximum‑security areas within institutions (Bill s.28(2)). Data unavailable on current capacity.