Restorative Justice program celebrates more than two decades in Nanaimo
NANAIMO — For more than 20 years a program has helped criminals reconcile with what they’ve done in a meaningful way.
The Restorative Justice program run by the Nanaimo branch of the John Howard Society works to keep people out of correctional centres. Instead of being sent to prison, those accepted by the program have to admit their guilt and talk through their actions in a group which includes the victims they hurt. The group then works together to decide how to best repair the damage caused.
It was started in 1998 by now-former RCMP officer Randy Munro, born out of efforts at his previous detachment to curb youth offenders and lower the risk of re-offending.
“I’ve talked to parents who had young people go through it and (heard) the success story of turning a young persons life around,” Munro told NanaimoNewsNOW. “Adults have gone through it that shouldn’t have been in the traditional process. They turned their lives around.”