Albuquerque Journal

NM cannot trust private prisons to administer vaccine

- BY EMMA KAHN DETENTION & ASYLUM PROGRAM COORDINATO­R, N.M. IMMIGRANT LAW CENTER

Over the last year, while New Mexican communitie­s have banded together to fight COVID-19, some of our most vulnerable neighbors, including hundreds of immigrant detainees, in the privately run Torrance County Detention Facility, Cibola County Correction­al Center and Otero County Processing Center have been screaming for help inside soundproof walls. As of March 24, ICE had confirmed 10,408 positive cases of COVID-19 across 124 detention facilities since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. In my job at the New Mexico Immigrant Law Center (NMILC), I speak with asylum-seekers facing this reality every week.

ICE detention centers across the country have been hotbeds for the uncontroll­able spread of COVID-19. A recent report found the rate of coronaviru­s infection among ICE detainees was about 13.4 times the rate of the U.S. population each month between April to August. This infection rate, which has wreaked particular havoc in New Mexico’s Otero County Processing Center, is a direct result of the inhumane conditions of ICE detention. This includes neglectful and abusive medical care, close quarters without quarantine infrastruc­ture, limited access to personal protective equipment and hygiene supplies, and unnecessar­y and circular transfers between facilities.

ICE’s consistent disregard for the health and safety of those in its discretion­ary custody throughout this pandemic, especially bad in the detention facilities that contract with private prison management corporatio­ns, is unforgivab­le.

Anticipati­ng the danger of COVID-19 in ICE detention, NMILC and other local partnering advocates wrote a letter to Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham at the onset of the pandemic urging her to pressure ICE to release those held in its custody here in New Mexico. Though state agencies have had limited authority regarding releases from ICE custody, ICE has recently stated it will defer to state officials for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n operations within ICE detention centers. This is New Mexico’s make-or-break moment for ICE detainees facing the threat of COVID-19. Rather than handing vaccine doses over to private prison operators such as CoreCivic and MTC, the state must continue pressuring ICE to release those in its custody and facilitate the safe vaccinatio­n of our immigrant neighbors, both inside and out of detention. This can be achieved through partnershi­ps with community-based health care providers.

We know private detention centers evade transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in their medical practices, frequently failing to comply with basic CDC guidelines. As evidenced by the Irwin County, Georgia, Detention Center’s ghastly sterilizat­ion operation of detained immigrant women, private corporatio­ns are consistent­ly keeping important, comprehens­ive informatio­n about their medical practices from their ICE detainees and state officials. This is on top of already-murky structures of consent in detention, where ICE and private prison officials often force immigrants — especially those who do not speak English or Spanish — to sign legal and medical documents that they do not understand. As the vaccine has become more widely available, immigrants across the country have explicitly cited a fear of detention medical staff in their pleas for the vaccines to be administer­ed by local, immigrantf­riendly health care profession­als.

In New Mexico, we are fortunate to have dozens of culturally competent, community-based health care organizati­ons who are trusted partners of our immigrant communitie­s. Immigrants of color — especially Black and Brown immigrants — have long-faced simultaneo­us exclusion and exploitati­on in the American public health care system. It is now our obligation to implement vaccinatio­n plans that repair and strengthen relationsh­ips between those population­s and the systems that are supposed to protect them.

At NMILC, we believe this is the state’s duty: to ensure immigrants both inside and out of detention receive comprehens­ive, culturally appropriat­e informatio­n about the vaccine so they can make informed decisions about their health. We cannot outsource this to private contractor­s. Not only is it the state’s responsibi­lity to ensure the health and safety of those in ICE custody; it should be a welcome opportunit­y for New Mexico to show its power as a state that values all residents, regardless of immigratio­n status.

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