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Toronto South Detention Centre

Toronto South Detention Centre
Location Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Status Operational
Security class Maximum/Medium
Capacity 2700+320
Opened 2014
Managed by Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services

The Toronto South Detention Centre is a correctional facility in the Etobicoke district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is a Government of Ontario-operated maximum-security correctional facility for adult male inmates serving a sentence of 2-years-less-a-day or less, and offenders who have been remanded into custody while awaiting trial. It is built on the site of the former Mimico Correctional Centre, which closed in 2011 and whose origins dated back to 1887. The Toronto South Detention Centre officially opened on January 29, 2014 replacing the Toronto Jail, the Toronto West Detention Centre, and the demolished Mimico Correctional Centre. The Toronto South Detention Centre is the second-largest jail in Canada; The Edmonton Remand Centre being the largest.

The new facility consists of two parts; A maximum security building that can house up to 1,650 remanded offenders awaiting trial, and a medium security building, known as the Toronto Intermittent Centre (TIC) that can house up to 320 inmates serving primarily weekend or other intermittent sentences. The maximum-security building is the first in Ontario to be constructed from prefabricated concrete cells that can be stacked with a minimal support structure. Designed by Zeidler Partnership Architects, the modular cell units were built and shipped from Tindall Corporation facility in Atlanta, Georgia.

An intermittent sentence (often called a weekend sentence) is one in which an offender serves his/her sentence on weekends. Courts will only order an intermittent sentence if it is 90 days or less and the crime is of low risk, i.e. non-violent/sexual. Typically, the offender would report to the correctional facility by a certain time on Friday evening and be released by a certain time on Monday morning allowing the offender to continue to attend work or school during the week. Reporting and release times can be varied if an offender works unusual hours or shifts such as nights or weekends. An offender who fails to report on time would be declared unlawfully-at-large and an arrest warrant would be issued. An intermittent sentence is also accompanied by a probation order that imposes other conditions such as reporting to a probation officer, performing community service, or abstaining from drugs or alcohol.


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