Record temperatures in much of the U.S. threatening more people in prisons.
Sweltering doesn’t even describe it.
Less than an hour from the city is Louisiana State Penitentiary, better known as Angola prison, where the state
set up a temporary youth jail last fall, in a building that once housed adults awaiting execution.
A federal court filing this week from the Louisiana American Civil Liberties Union alleges that the youth at Angola face inhumane conditions, in large part because they are
regularly kept in non-airconditioned cells for up to 72 hours. In a statement to the court, medical expert Dr. Susi U. Vassallo called the practice “foolhardy and perilous,” and said, “I would not dare to keep my dog in these conditions for fear of my dog dying.”
In 2021, Louisiana
spent $2.8 million to study what it would cost to cool all of its prisons with air conditioning, but
it is still waiting on results. In the meantime, adults at Angola — the state’s largest facility — struggle for relief. “It’s over 100 degrees in there. I lie on the floor. I barely can breathe. God, it feels like it’s suffocating!” an unidentified person told The Advocate.
The Texas prison system does have a program for sorting out which people are most sensitive to the heat and transferring them to so-called “cool beds” at prisons with air conditioning, largely because of lawsuits. Those left behind
describe the conditions as torture.
In a powerful essay earlier this month for Prism Reports, Kwaneta Harris, who is in prison in Texas, writes that
women in her unit regularly engage in self-harm just to be transferred to the air-conditioned psychiatric unit, a tactic that guards try to dissuade with threats of tear gas. She also notes the
dramatic increase in the cost of bottled water in the prison store in the depths of the heatwave. “I guess price gouging is legal when the state is the gouger and prisoners are the customers. This all contributes to desperation,” Harris writes.
Corrections officers don’t spend as much time in prisons as incarcerated people, but many still face punishing conditions from the heat. It’s not uncommon for guards to work 12- or 14-hour shifts outfitted in a bulky stab-proof vest,
the head of an officer’s union in Texas told KXAN-TV. “It’s comparable to if you go buy the heaviest coat possible, put that coat on and go to Texas Memorial Stadium and run up and down the stairs constantly,” Executive Director Jeff Ormsby told the station.
Corrections officials and lawmakers
throughout the South have cited non-airconditioned prisons as a
major impediment to hiring officers. As my colleague Maurice Chammah
recently told PBS News Hour, “Part of that is that they don't want to live through the heat, but part of it is also the corrections officers don't want to live with the increased levels of violence, of suicide, and other problems that are in a prison during these hottest summer months.”
Even facilities with air conditioning can face dangerous heat when those systems fail. That was the case on Tuesday at the Perryville women’s prison complex in Arizona, where some evaporative coolers failed.
Indoor temperatures quickly climbed as high as 98 degrees (36.6 C), and women there told KPNX that the cells were like “concrete coffins.”
Source:
themarshallproject.org, Jamiles Lartey, July 22, 2023
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
FOLLOW US ON:
"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde