Daily Press

Hampton Roads Regional Jail loses accreditat­ion over ‘continuous deaths’

- By Margaret Matray Staff Writer Margaret Matray, 757-222-5216, margaret. matray@pilotonlin­e.com

PORTSMOUTH — A national group revoked its accreditat­ion of the Hampton Roads Regional Jail, citing “continuous deaths” and a U.S. Department of Justice consent decree among its reasons.

In a letter this week, a copy of which was obtained by The Virginian-Pilot, the American Correction­al Associatio­n said its accreditat­ion commission met earlier this month and decided to revoke its backing of the jail.

The organizati­on “does not make decisions such as this without clear informatio­n,” Thomas Stickrath, chair of the accreditat­ion commission, wrote in the letter — which was addressed to the jail’s interim superinten­dent and also given to the jail’s board.

“While the ACA’s decision is unfortunat­e, the DOJ consent decree and correction­al standards provide a pathway to make Hampton Roads Regional Jail a role model facility,” Col. Jeff Vergakis, the interim superinten­dent, wrote in an email. “HRRJ will continue to abide by ACA standards as we have since accreditat­ion.”

Accreditat­ion through private groups is common for jails and police department­s.

It’s voluntary — agencies are not required to have it to operate. But many tout their accreditat­ion as an outside seal of approval, proof they’ve met a set of independen­t national standards.

The American Correction­al Associatio­n is not a government oversight agency. On its website, the group lists the Hampton City Jail and several state prisons as facilities it has accredited in the Hampton Roads area. Other local city jails are not listed, which does not mean they were rejected for accreditat­ion — but likely means they never sought it.

In its letter, the nonprofit also lists its own audit and monitoring visit of the regional jail and “various actions” by the state as reasons for the revocation.

The jail is under DOJ oversight and a federal consent decree — the only jail placed under one during the Trump administra­tion. This follows a 2018 report that found conditions at the jail violated the Constituti­on’s prohibitio­n on cruel and unusual punishment and the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. Under the decree, the jail has to make changes, including reducing its use of solitary confinemen­t for inmates with serious mental illness and hiring more medical, mental health and security staff.

The regional jail also has a severe staffing shortage, with more than 100 positions — over a third of its jail officers — vacant. To alleviate the shortage, the jail’s board voted in November to move 255 inmates, about 30% of the jail’s population, back to the city jails from where they came.

 ?? STEPHEN M. KATZ/STAFF FILE ?? The American Correction­al Associatio­n decided earlier this month to revoke its backing of the Hampton Roads Regional Jail.
STEPHEN M. KATZ/STAFF FILE The American Correction­al Associatio­n decided earlier this month to revoke its backing of the Hampton Roads Regional Jail.

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