Baltimore Sun Sunday

America’s neglected jails ‘a failure of democracy’

- By Andrew Selsky

PRINEVILLE, Ore. — The noise in the tiny jail, built decades ago to house firefighti­ng equipment, is constant. Voices bounce off the walls.

Nothing dissipates the dank smell. There’s no natural light. Fluorescen­t bulbs give the green walls a sickly hue.

If a fire broke out, a jailer notes, each cell door must be unlocked individual­ly and someone would have to run outside to unlock an emergency exit.

“I personally think this is an embarrassm­ent to our community,” Sheriff John Gautney said of the 16-bunk Crook County Jail in central Oregon.

The county has put a $10 million proposal on the November ballot to build a new jail. But such measures are unpopular among voters.

Inadequate and unsafe jails are problems across the U.S., with aging facilities holding an increasing number of people.

They often operate independen­tly with little to no oversight, experts say, and with reluctance to spend public money to build jails it seems unlikely the decrepit structures will see a face-lift anytime soon.

“These are local issues that require local solutions, but the problem is national in its scope,” said Laurie Garduque, director of justice reform at the MacArthur Foundation.

From 1970 to 2014, the average daily number of inmates held in the roughly 3,000 county jails in America increased four-fold, from 157,000 to 690,000, according to a report by the Vera Institute of Justice, which works with government and civil leaders to improve justice systems.

Conditions are often wretched, like in the jail in Prineville.

“It’s pretty much a dungeon,” prisoner Anthony Kinsey, jailed on methamphet­amine charges, said over the phone. “There are four people in each cell; it’s real crowded. The toilet is right by your head.”

David Fathi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union National Prison Project, calls America’s neglected jails “a failure of democracy.”

“Prisoners are a small, powerless and despised minority, unable to protect their rights through the democratic system,” Fathi said.

The Oregon State Sheriffs’ Associatio­n inspects all county jails in the state.

John Bishop, the executive director of the nonprofit associatio­n, said some jails are so old they can’t pass many of the inspection standards.

“Federal law requires so many square feet per inmate,” Bishop said. “That didn’t exist when jails were built.”

Bishop said about half the jails in Oregon can bypass the standards because they were grandfathe­red in.

“Most of the old jails are extreme fire hazards,” he said. “New ones need to have sprinkler systems. Old ones don’t have them.”

Here in the Western Timber Belt where tax revenues from logging on public lands have all but vanished, many counties are hard-pressed to fund services. Items like schools get priority.

“Many counties are vulnerable to fluctuatio­ns in the economy, like the oil industry dropping in Wyoming and North Dakota,” Fathi said. “When every little county is solely responsibl­e for funding its own little jail, that’s going to maximize the impacts.”

As for substandar­d jails, Bishop said: “If certain counties haven’t funded to keep up with those standards, eventually it will be the citizens who pay for that if they have a multimilli­on-dollar lawsuit.”

Fathi said that, given the decentrali­zed nature of jails in America, there’s no database to indicate how many jails are substandar­d.

He said bad conditions more likely go unnoticed at rural jails because they’re generally small and remote, but he added that “there are plenty of dreadful large urban jails as well.”

 ?? ANDREW SELSKY/AP ?? Inadequate and unsafe jails, including the one in Crook County in central Oregon, are problems across the U.S.
ANDREW SELSKY/AP Inadequate and unsafe jails, including the one in Crook County in central Oregon, are problems across the U.S.

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