The Coronavirus Could Spark a Humanitarian Disaster in Jails and Prisons [View all]
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/03/coronavirus-civil-rights-jails-and-prisons.html?fbclid=IwAR3mcMK40JTrGVQ7GI_smSqb_cfepsQkDviv5HP0fn9sh9Yc940LCfu9dPs&utm_source=The+Appeal&utm_campaign=0a31827f48-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_08_09_04_14_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_72df992d84-0a31827f48-58434119
The pandemic may shut down courts and leave people languishing in cells.
By PREMAL DHARIA
MARCH 11, 20203:50 PM
As the number of people diagnosed with the coronavirus starts to creep up in states around the country, fears are rightfully sparking about the impact of this outbreak on a critically vulnerable group of people: those incarcerated in our jails and prisons. The danger of infection is high in these crowded, unsanitary facilitiesand the risk for people inside and outside of them is exacerbated by the churn of people being admitted and released at high rates. For example, in Florida alone, more than 2,000 people are admitted and nearly as many are released from county jails each day.
These concerns are very real and should be urgently addressed. But there is another danger that is getting lost as we start to address them: that jails, prisons, and court systems may, in response to the pandemic, reflexively heighten restrictions on the people they have incarcerated, thereby worsening their conditions, and also chilling the criminal justice process by which their rights could be vindicated and their freedom granted.
Early statements and responses to the coronavirus from our carceral facilities are cause for alarm. Courts are ordering that the temperatures of people in jail be taken so that they can be held back from court if they have fevers. Visitation between those incarcerated and their family members is being rescinded; trials are being delayed. Lawyers are being encouraged to decrease the amount of visits they make to see clients who are incarcerated, and prisons are putting people on lockdownlocking them inside their cells, sometimes in solitary confinement.
When H1N1 hit in 2009, many jails and prisons reacted in precisely this way: by trying to impose segregation, isolation, and lockdown. When there was a mumps scare in New Jersey last year, the whole facility was placed on lockdown. These reactions are not new. But the spread and scale of COVID-19 are already different from other outbreaks. Jails and prisons, which are generally congregate settings, simply do not have the infrastructure to contain it. And even if they wanted to try, the growing understanding of the grave mental and physical impacts of solitary confinement on peopleincluding long after they are releasedmakes it clear that we need to consider new options.
Keeping people trapped inside facilities under heightened restrictions will do less, not more, to protect the greater community. Movement between people on the inside and on the outside is ceaseless. And because carceral facilities cannot operate without staff, who move in and out of these spaces every day, heightened restrictions are largely futile. The only meaningful way to keep the most people safe is to decrease the number of people incarcerated.
. . . more. Worth a read and a share with your local and state officials.