Become a member
Membership is a very important part of PASAN. Members contribute input into the planning and delivery of our programs and services. They also play an essential role in our accountability to those we serve and the community.
You can be a member if you are:
You can be a member if you are:
- a present or former client of PASAN (automatically entitled to be members)
- a donor
- a volunteer who has provided at least 10 hours of service to PASAN, or who's helped out with our events or programming
- a corporation (profit or non-profit), unincorporated association or other legal entity; you will be entitled to appoint one representative to act as your member, and that representative can be changed from time to time
- a PASAN staff person
- a member of PASAN's Board of Directors
- a lawyer or other legal practitioner
- a member of the general public whom agrees with PASAN’s Basis of Unity (see below)
- Align yourself with PASAN's work to provide community development, education and support to prisoners and ex-prisoners in Canada on HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C virus (HCV) and other harm reduction issues through:
- Advocacy, education and public policy,
- Pre and post-release planning,
- Individual counselling,
- Emergency financial assistance,
- A publication that features works by people currently inside prisons, those who were formerly imprisoned and their families as well as news, resources, health and harm reduction information.
- Agree with PASAN’s Basis of Unity
- Will be kept informed through our annual reports and annual general meetings
Basis of Unity
PASAN is a community-based AIDS Service Organization that strives to provide community development, education and support to prisoners and ex-prisoners in Ontario on HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C virus (HCV) and other harm reduction issues. PASAN formed in 1991 as a grassroots response to HIV/AIDS in the Canadian prison system. Today, PASAN is the only community-based organization in Canada exclusively providing HIV/AIDS and HCV prevention education and support services to prisoners, ex-prisoners, youth in custody and their families.
Our goal is social change. As an agency, we take risks in our work. We strive to work for all prisoners and against all forms of discrimination and oppression. We work to ensure that the fundamental human rights and dignity of prisoners are protected. We listen to and value the opinions of prisoners because they understand their life circumstances better than anyone else. We strive to continually update our knowledge and understanding of the prison movement, the HIV/AIDS movement, and other information relevant to our work. We believe that through our work and in partnership with other organizations we can make a significant change in the quality of life for all prisoners, people living with HIV/AIDS and/or Hepatitis C, and society as a whole. PASAN works towards promoting justice, equity, and compassion in human relations using democratic processes and with respect for the worth and dignity of every person.
STATEMENT OF BASIC AND FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS
In all our efforts, PASAN works to affirm the basic and fundamental human rights of prisoners and people living with HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C. We define these rights to include:
i) Every person's right to make informed choices and decisions about their own body.
ii) Every person's right to the sexual practices of their choice with informed and consenting people of equal power. Rape, in or out of
prison, is a violation and an assault - not a sexual act between informed, consenting equals.
iii) Every person's right to protect themselves from HIV infection, Hepatitis C and other communicable diseases, and to have access to the education and materials necessary for that protection.
iv) Every person's right to anonymous HIV testing without punishment. Everyone should also have the right to refuse HIV testing.
v) Every person's right to choose to end their own life. PASAN supports the right of every person to ask someone for assistance in doing so.
vi) Every person's right to reduce the negative consequences of their own drug use. This includes the right to informed choice and access
to treatment options for those who wish to stop or reduce using, and the right to access information and materials to reduce the harm and
the transmission of HIV, Hepatitis C, and other infections for those who choose not to stop using.
vii) Every person living with HIV/AIDS and/or Hepatitis C and any incarcerated person has a right to the same access and quality of health care as any other person in society.
viii) Every person's right to terminate or continue pregnancy, regardless of HIV status or prison status.
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
Given these basic and fundamental rights, PASAN maintains five guiding principles which inform our approach to questions concerning HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C in the prison system.
1) Prisoners with HIV/AIDS and/or Hepatitis C have a basic right to maintain their health.
2) Prisoners have a right to protect themselves against HIV, Hepatitis C and other infection.
3) Prisoners have a right to keep their health status private. This means that HIV-antibody testing should be done anonymously. PASAN opposes mandatory HIV testing in all forms either inside or outside of prison, as it violates these basic principles and criminalizes people living with HIV/AIDS. It also violates their constitutional rights and is illegal.
4) Prisoners have a right to informed consent with respect to HIV-antibody testing and HIV/AIDS treatment, and have a right to pre and post-test counselling as followed in “Best Practice Models”.
5) Prisoners have the right to access support, education and treatment programs of their choice. HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C support, education and treatment programs should be available from community-based organizations brought into the institutions, rather than by correctional staff alone.
PERSPECTIVES ON PRISON AND HARM REDUCTION
In all our efforts, PASAN's approach and the decisions we make on program and public policy initiatives are informed by the following
perspectives:
i) A person's treatment under the law depends upon their relationship to systems of privilege (race, class, gender, etc.). The law is used to
disproportionately punish people who are socially marginalized from systems of privilege - those who are poor rather than rich, Indigenous people, Black people and people of colour, women, queer, trans and non-binary people, youth, sex workers, immigrants and refugees, people who use drugs, psychiatric survivors, and disabled people. People in these communities are arrested more often, charged more harshly, have disproportionately more lethal encounters with police and imprisoned more often than are people who enjoy greater access to various privileges.
ii) Prisons are places of punishment and degradation. They are not places of rehabilitation. Prisoners and youth in custody rehabilitate
themselves through their own efforts and need to be supported for doing this.
iii) We recognize the sex-trade as a legitimate means of employment, and we view people working in the sex-trade as workers. Therefore, we
support the decriminalization of sex work.
iv) PASAN uses a harm reduction approach to inform our program development and implementation. We understand that drug use can
result in effects that are either beneficial (as in the case of life-saving medication), neutral, or harmful. Assigning a positive or negative value to such effects is subjective. Our harm reduction approach recognizes that:
¨ Drug use is a health concern, not a criminal one. Those using drugs should be provided with the appropriate medical and social supports they need to deal with their situation. We recognize that abstinence may be neither a realistic nor a desirable goal for many, especially in the short term.
¨ People who use drugs have a right to access the same level and quality of medical and social supports as do non-users. This includes the right to access information and materials to reduce the possible harm to themselves through their using, such as Naloxone, sterile injection equipment, crack kits etc., to avoid overdose deaths, HIV and hepatitis infection.
¨ Repressive drug laws cannot and will not affect the level of drugs and drug-use in society. Such laws only stimulate an underground
economy in drugs which results in community problems such as crime, violence, rising prison populations, and health problems.
Strict drug laws, not drug use, are the root cause of those problems. In order to effectively reduce societal harms caused by this situation,
law and public policy must move towards a harm reduction model which increases supports for users and decriminalizes drugs and stop the criminalization of people who use drugs.
The Basis of Unity reflects the core beliefs and philosophies which underlie the work we do at PASAN. We recognize that implementing
these principles in our daily work can at times be challenging. However, we do adhere to these principles as much as possible and welcome input from our clients and community members about how we can continue to provide services that are valuable and useful.
Our goal is social change. As an agency, we take risks in our work. We strive to work for all prisoners and against all forms of discrimination and oppression. We work to ensure that the fundamental human rights and dignity of prisoners are protected. We listen to and value the opinions of prisoners because they understand their life circumstances better than anyone else. We strive to continually update our knowledge and understanding of the prison movement, the HIV/AIDS movement, and other information relevant to our work. We believe that through our work and in partnership with other organizations we can make a significant change in the quality of life for all prisoners, people living with HIV/AIDS and/or Hepatitis C, and society as a whole. PASAN works towards promoting justice, equity, and compassion in human relations using democratic processes and with respect for the worth and dignity of every person.
STATEMENT OF BASIC AND FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS
In all our efforts, PASAN works to affirm the basic and fundamental human rights of prisoners and people living with HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C. We define these rights to include:
i) Every person's right to make informed choices and decisions about their own body.
ii) Every person's right to the sexual practices of their choice with informed and consenting people of equal power. Rape, in or out of
prison, is a violation and an assault - not a sexual act between informed, consenting equals.
iii) Every person's right to protect themselves from HIV infection, Hepatitis C and other communicable diseases, and to have access to the education and materials necessary for that protection.
iv) Every person's right to anonymous HIV testing without punishment. Everyone should also have the right to refuse HIV testing.
v) Every person's right to choose to end their own life. PASAN supports the right of every person to ask someone for assistance in doing so.
vi) Every person's right to reduce the negative consequences of their own drug use. This includes the right to informed choice and access
to treatment options for those who wish to stop or reduce using, and the right to access information and materials to reduce the harm and
the transmission of HIV, Hepatitis C, and other infections for those who choose not to stop using.
vii) Every person living with HIV/AIDS and/or Hepatitis C and any incarcerated person has a right to the same access and quality of health care as any other person in society.
viii) Every person's right to terminate or continue pregnancy, regardless of HIV status or prison status.
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
Given these basic and fundamental rights, PASAN maintains five guiding principles which inform our approach to questions concerning HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C in the prison system.
1) Prisoners with HIV/AIDS and/or Hepatitis C have a basic right to maintain their health.
2) Prisoners have a right to protect themselves against HIV, Hepatitis C and other infection.
3) Prisoners have a right to keep their health status private. This means that HIV-antibody testing should be done anonymously. PASAN opposes mandatory HIV testing in all forms either inside or outside of prison, as it violates these basic principles and criminalizes people living with HIV/AIDS. It also violates their constitutional rights and is illegal.
4) Prisoners have a right to informed consent with respect to HIV-antibody testing and HIV/AIDS treatment, and have a right to pre and post-test counselling as followed in “Best Practice Models”.
5) Prisoners have the right to access support, education and treatment programs of their choice. HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C support, education and treatment programs should be available from community-based organizations brought into the institutions, rather than by correctional staff alone.
PERSPECTIVES ON PRISON AND HARM REDUCTION
In all our efforts, PASAN's approach and the decisions we make on program and public policy initiatives are informed by the following
perspectives:
i) A person's treatment under the law depends upon their relationship to systems of privilege (race, class, gender, etc.). The law is used to
disproportionately punish people who are socially marginalized from systems of privilege - those who are poor rather than rich, Indigenous people, Black people and people of colour, women, queer, trans and non-binary people, youth, sex workers, immigrants and refugees, people who use drugs, psychiatric survivors, and disabled people. People in these communities are arrested more often, charged more harshly, have disproportionately more lethal encounters with police and imprisoned more often than are people who enjoy greater access to various privileges.
ii) Prisons are places of punishment and degradation. They are not places of rehabilitation. Prisoners and youth in custody rehabilitate
themselves through their own efforts and need to be supported for doing this.
iii) We recognize the sex-trade as a legitimate means of employment, and we view people working in the sex-trade as workers. Therefore, we
support the decriminalization of sex work.
iv) PASAN uses a harm reduction approach to inform our program development and implementation. We understand that drug use can
result in effects that are either beneficial (as in the case of life-saving medication), neutral, or harmful. Assigning a positive or negative value to such effects is subjective. Our harm reduction approach recognizes that:
¨ Drug use is a health concern, not a criminal one. Those using drugs should be provided with the appropriate medical and social supports they need to deal with their situation. We recognize that abstinence may be neither a realistic nor a desirable goal for many, especially in the short term.
¨ People who use drugs have a right to access the same level and quality of medical and social supports as do non-users. This includes the right to access information and materials to reduce the possible harm to themselves through their using, such as Naloxone, sterile injection equipment, crack kits etc., to avoid overdose deaths, HIV and hepatitis infection.
¨ Repressive drug laws cannot and will not affect the level of drugs and drug-use in society. Such laws only stimulate an underground
economy in drugs which results in community problems such as crime, violence, rising prison populations, and health problems.
Strict drug laws, not drug use, are the root cause of those problems. In order to effectively reduce societal harms caused by this situation,
law and public policy must move towards a harm reduction model which increases supports for users and decriminalizes drugs and stop the criminalization of people who use drugs.
The Basis of Unity reflects the core beliefs and philosophies which underlie the work we do at PASAN. We recognize that implementing
these principles in our daily work can at times be challenging. However, we do adhere to these principles as much as possible and welcome input from our clients and community members about how we can continue to provide services that are valuable and useful.