Port Moody high school student aims to give inmates life skills through literacy - Action News
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British Columbia

Port Moody high school student aims to give inmates life skills through literacy

A Port Moody high school student says she wantsto improveinmates' prospects for success when released from prisonby providing them with books.

Chloe Chensays she was inspiredby her love of reading and an interest in criminal law

A person sits on a floor with a box of books next to them.
Chloe Chen, Fair Books founder, sorts through prison book donations (Martin Diotte/CBC)

A Port Moody high school student aims to improveinmates' prospects for success when released from prisonby providing them with books.

Chloe Chen's initiative, Fair Books, has donation boxes in Port Moody and Coquitlam, with the books destined for libraries in correctional facilities around the country.

"I've noticed that prisoners are a very underrepresented part of our community. People just kind of ignore the fact that they're there," said Chen.

Chensays she was inspiredby her love of reading and aninterest in criminal law.

After being encouraged by her peers on the Coquitlam Youth Council and receiving support from Coastal Bookstore and the Pinetree Youth Centre,she decided to take her initiative public.Fair Books is mainly advertised through an Instagram account and has been acceptingdonations since the end of June.

This box of books at Coastal Bookstore in Port Moody contains donations for prison libraries. (Martin Diotte/CBC)

Book Clubs for Inmates (BCFI)is another organization that says books and the life skills that come with reading should be prioritized in prisons to reduce the oddsof released inmates falling back into crime.

BCFIruns volunteer-led book clubs where inmates meet monthly to discuss books.It began in 2008 in asmall Ontario penitentiary and has spread tofacilities across the country, including five chapters in B.C.

Joanie McEwen, a BCFI board member, says that reading alleviates some of the pressure of being incarcerated.

"It not only helps your literacy skills, but it expands your knowledge, your imagination. You get to see the possibilities of your life not behind bars," she said.

Twenty-three per centof offenders in Canada in 2011 and 2012 reoffended within two years of being released, according to a federal study from 2019. But when inmates have mentorship and productive pastimes, McEwen said they're better able to rehabilitate to life outside prison.

"If those men and women in prison are reading books, they're less likely to reoffend when they get out,'' she said.

Members of Book Clubs for Inmates discuss books at a monthly meeting (Submitted by Book Clubs for Inmates)

During McEwen's time volunteering for BCFI, she met Kevin Milley, who served 25 years in prison beginning in the early 1980s.

"I wasn't a very nice guy for decades, and rightfully so that they had me locked up," said Milley.

But when he started reading, an activity he thought would be just a way to kill time, he says he experienced a lifestyle shift.

"I think I really discovered the joy of reading when I finally started to kick my heroin habit, my drug addiction. When I knew that I was sick and tired of being sick and tired."

Milleysays he wasinspired by the community of readers he built and by authors like Stephen Reid, who also served prison time.

He remembers how every day for over a decade, his cellmategave him a complex word of the day that Milley would usein his creative writing exercises before handing it back to his neighbour to read.

Milley says books also connectinmates withthe outside world.

One of the functions of BCFI is to help inmateswork toward reintegrationinto society by developing reading comprehension and pro-social skills. He says access to books that inmates can relate to and enjoy is important.

"To get up-to-date books and books that you're interested in is a big thing in there. It keeps people out of trouble, and it educates guys."

Prison security standards mean that new books must be searched for contrabandand restricted themes like violence and racismwhich can be time-consuming.

Chen says initiatives like Fair Books meet thatneed by sorting books beforehand.

"It's really important to establish a love for reading and literature and education in everybody, and why not help these prisoners who one day are going to come back to our community."