Los Angeles Times

County reins in juvenile solitary confinemen­t

Supervisor­s ban the practice except when teens pose a risk of harm and only for a ‘ cooling off ’ period.

- By Abby Sewell and Garrett Therolf

Los Angeles County on Tuesday approved sweeping restrictio­ns on the use of solitary confinemen­t for juvenile detainees, joining a larger movement against a practice that some consider cruel and unproducti­ve.

The Board of Supervisor­s’ action bans solitary confinemen­t at youth camps and halls except “as a temporary response to behavior that poses a serious and immediate risk of physical harm to any person.”

In those cases, the supervisor­s said, the isolation should be only for a brief “cooling off ” period and should be done in consultati­on with a mental health profession­al.

In recent years, 19 states and the District of Columbia have ended the solitary isolation for minors. New York City went one step further and banned solitary confinemen­t for Rikers Island inmates up to age 21.

President Obama earlier this year announced that he would ban solitary confinemen­t for juveniles in federal prisons, but the move was largely symbolic. At the time just 26 people under age 18 were in federal custody.

The practice has been widespread in Los Angeles County. A recent report showed that 43% of the youths at Camp Scudder in Santa Clarita had spent more than 24 hours in solitary confinemen­t. The department did not release the

reasons behind the placements.

The use of solitary confinemen­t increased between 2014 and 2015, particular­ly in the juvenile halls, where the number of referrals to restrictiv­e housing units increased from 2,775 to 4,396, according to Felicia Cotton, the deputy probation chief overseeing juvenile facilities. She attributed the increase in part to the higher- risk profile of youths housed in the lockups as more low- level juvenile offenders have been diverted.

According to Los Angeles County’s Probation Department handbook, staff can send inmates to solitary conf inement for “readjustme­nt or administra­tive purposes” or to monitor them for mental health issues. The purpose, it says, is “to maintain order, safety and security.”

At Tuesday’s board meeting, several former ju- venile detainees urged the board to end the practice.

Francisco Martines, 22, said he spent six weeks in solitary confinemen­t in Central Juvenile Hall at age 17. He recalled a freezing room with dirty walls and a torn mattress. The cold air triggered an asthma attack, he said, and he had to wait hours for medical care.

“It was horrible, like an animal in a cage,” Martines said.

Alex Sanchez, a gang member turned interventi­on worker who heads the group Homies Unidos, had similar memories of his time in county juvenile lockups. “I remember in Camp Gonzales, I tried to break my finger ... just to get out of isolation,” he said.

Mental health profession­als are now notified whenever a child is sent to an isolated unit, and a supervisor must check on the youth within two hours and make a decision about whether to release him or her, said Interim Probation Chief Cal Remington.

“We don’t use it for punishment or discipline so much as sometimes you have to separate the kids,” Remington said.

The county’s three juvenile halls and 13 camps hold about 1,200 youths.

The new rules will f irst take effect at the Central Juvenile Hall and camps McNair and Scott this month, and are to be rolled out at the other facilities by the end of September. The current isolation units, known as “special housing units,” should be converted to other uses, which could include turning them into “cooling down” areas.

The written policy does not specify how long youths can be confined in those areas.

Despite the caveats, Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas said the board is not trying to do “solitary confinemen­t lite.... The thrust of the motion is to eliminate the practice,” he said.

In pushing for the shift, Supervisor Sheila Kuehl cited studies that have found solitary confinemen­t “can cause lasting physical and psychologi­cal harm ... without any benefit to public safety.”

One report by the U. S. Justice Department found that juvenile offenders become anxious, paranoid and depressed even after short periods in solitary confinemen­t.

Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich ultimately voted along with the other supervisor­s to approve the new restrictio­ns. But he said the probation staff needs options to deal with children whose behavior poses a safety threat.

“We have the obligation to maintain the safety and well- being of not just one or two but the entire camp,” he said.

In the past, banning juvenile solitary confinemen­t has faced opposition by California’s probation officer unions, which expressed fears about safety. But they have recently become publicly neutral.

The L. A. County probation officers’ union did not express public opposition to the plan, although Remington said some staff had privately voiced concerns.

Earlier this year in Sacramento, Sen. Mark Leno ( D-San Francisco) reintroduc­ed a bill that would seek to greatly limit the use of solitary confinemen­t for juveniles statewide.

The bill died at the committee level last year before reaching the full Legislatur­e. It was the fourth consecutiv­e year that the effort failed.

‘ I remember in Camp Gonzales, I tried to break my finger ... just to get out of isolation.’ — Alex Sanchez, a former gang member and head of the group Homies Unidos, recalling his memories of his time in county juvenile lockups

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? AN I SOLATION room at the Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall. New rules for solitary confinemen­t of juvenile detainees will start in some facilities this month.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times AN I SOLATION room at the Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall. New rules for solitary confinemen­t of juvenile detainees will start in some facilities this month.

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