Houston Chronicle Sunday

Prisons again failing to cool units

Judge scolds agency for temperatur­es over agreed limit

- By Keri Blakinger STAFF WRITER

A federal judge accused the Texas prison system of violating the terms of a settlement in a contentiou­s class-action lawsuit and ordered prison officials to transfer inmates out of a sweltering Beaumont lockup after a failed cooling system led to indoor temperatur­es that exceeded 90 degrees.

The blistering two-page court order issued Friday by U.S. District Judge Keith Ellison is the latest twist in a legal case that started five years ago, when men at the Pack Unit in Navasota sued over dangerousl­y high temperatur­es in the uncooled facility. Last year, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice promised to install air conditioni­ng at the East Texas lockup and to make sure that all the men involved in the lawsuit would be housed in facilities kept under 88 degrees.

But prison officials apparently failed to uphold their end of the bargain when they transferre­d 37 men who were part of the Pack settlement to the 1,200man LeBlanc Unit, where the cooling system faltered. The judge called two emergency hearings in 48 hours before ordering the agency to relocate the men, all while chiding officials for failing to act on their own, given the severity of the heat conditions.

“Uncontrove­rted evidence has been adduced to show that temperatur­es vastly in excess of

the maximum temperatur­es set forth in the agreed settlement of the case have prevailed for an undetermin­ed length of time through an undetermin­ed portion of LeBlanc Unit,” Ellison wrote. “Defendants have shown negligible interest in ascertaini­ng the breadth of the problem, its likely cause or the necessary remedies.”

Officials said Saturday that the prison system has complied with the order by shipping the men back to Pack and trying to fix the air conditioni­ng in the LeBlanc Unit.

“Maintenanc­e crews have been working to repair two airconditi­oning units at the Leblanc Unit and have been for several days,” TDCJ spokesman Jeremy

Desel said. “Those efforts continue. TDCJ continues to work diligently to follow all aspects of the Pack Unit settlement.”

Under the settlement, prison officials are allowed to transfer the more than 1,400 Pack prisoners involved in the case to other units, as long as those facilities are cooled. Most the 37 men who’d been moved to LeBlanc were sent there to attend programs in preparatio­n for release, according to court filings.

Lawyers for the prisoners started fielding complaints last month from some of the men claiming that the LeBlanc air conditioni­ng hadn’t been working for more than two weeks. Attorney Scott Medlock alerted prison officials, who responded by saying the cooling system “has been functionin­g properly and has maintained the temperatur­e just below 85 degrees.”

When the prisoners’ attorneys asked for logs to verify that, prison officials refused to turn over any proof, saying that the settlement didn’t require them to monitor the temperatur­e daily at air-conditione­d units. Eventually, Medlock and his team asked for a site visit to check the temperatur­es.

The next day, according to court filings, prison officials turned over a document alleging that any cooling maintenanc­e issues had been “resolved within hours.”

“It is apparent this document is misleading at best,” the prisoners’ attorneys wrote, “and patently untrue at worst.”

That became clear, the lawyers said, after they showed up last week for the site visit and asked prison officials to measure the temperatur­e and heat index in 15 spots. Fourteen of the areas

measured were over 90 degrees, and one was over 100.

But after their visit, Medlock and his team questioned whether prison officials had been checking the temperatur­es at all.

“Since class counsel reported potential problems at the LeBlanc Unit to TDCJ’s counsel weeks ago, TDCJ has been telling class counsel that indoor apparent temperatur­es were ‘just below 85 degrees’ when, in reality, TDCJ was not actually checking the temperatur­es inside,” the attorneys wrote. “It would be obvious to anyone actually inspecting the conditions that the ‘thermostat­s’ were not reporting the actual indoor temperatur­es.”

In some of the locations, attorneys discovered that regular monitoring would require climbing inside the air-conditioni­ng unit to see the thermostat, which Medlock did. But in the course of the inspection, the attorneys realized that the thermostat­s only reflected the temperatur­e the air-conditioni­ng unit is set to, not the actual temperatur­e in the building; one thermostat read 30 degrees, though the indoor heat index was 97.

After Medlock and his team filed a seven-page emergency motion reporting their findings, Ellison issued an order the same day, requiring the inmate transfers but also mandating that the men not be penalized or held in prison longer because they couldn’t stay in their programs at LeBlanc. Now, Texas prison officials have until Monday to file a response telling the judge what they’ve done to comply with the order.

Gabrielle Banks contribute­d to this report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States