Your conjecture does not hold in general. Indeed, for $m=5$ and for all natural $n$ we have $$d_{m,n}:=d(J_m^{(n)}, \{i/m\}_{i=1}^{m-1}) =\frac2{mn}. \tag{1}\label{1}$$ To prove this, one can check that 1. if $n\equiv0$ or $n\equiv4$ ($\mod5$), then $\min\{|1/5-y|\colon y \in J_5^{(n)}\}=\frac2{5n}$; 2. if $n\equiv1$ ($\mod5$), then $\min\{|4/5-y|\colon y \in J_5^{(n)}\}=\frac2{5n}$; 3. if $n\equiv2$ ($\mod5$), then $\min\{|2/5-y|\colon y \in J_5^{(n)}\}=\frac2{5n}$; 4. if $n\equiv3$ ($\mod5$), then $\min\{|3/5-y|\colon y \in J_5^{(n)}\}=\frac2{5n}$. On the other hand, one of course has $d_{5,n}\le\frac2{5n}$ for all natural $n$. $\quad\Box$ --- To illustrate \eqref{1}, below is the graph $\{(n,m\, n\, d_{m,n})\colon n=1,\dots,100\}$ for $m=5$: [![enter image description here][1]][1] [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/bfTxX.png