Los Angeles Times

L.A. County OKs $2.2 billion for a new jail

A $2.2-billion plan to replace crumbling, ‘unacceptab­le’ facility gains county approval.

- By Nina Agrawal

The controvers­ial plan to replace downtown’s overcrowde­d and crumbling Men’s Central Jail clears its last procedural hurdle before the Board of Supervisor­s.

A controvers­ial $2.2-billion plan to replace the overcrowde­d, crumbling Men’s Central Jail downtown cleared its last procedural hurdle Tuesday when the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s unanimousl­y approved the project’s budget and certified its environmen­tal impact report.

The Consolidat­ed Correction­al Treatment Facility, as the new lockup will be known, will be designed specifical­ly to provide treatment and rehabilita­tion of medically and mentally ill inmates, who make up an estimated 70% of the county’s overall jail population, ac-

cording to Sheriff ’s Department officials.

“The county has an opportunit­y — in fact, a responsibi­lity — to replace the unacceptab­le Men’s Central Jail with a facility that directly addresses the health and life-skill needs of our inmate-patients, placing them more quickly on a pathway to recovery and reentry,” Supervisor and board Chair Sheila Kuehl said in a statement.

Men’s Central Jail, built in 1963 and expanded in the 1970s, houses about 4,000 inmates in narrow, cramped cells that line long, bleak hallways. TVs blare loudly and passersby are instructed to walk under overhangs to avoid the possibilit­y of having urine, feces or other objects thrown at them from above. Plumbing and electrical infrastruc­ture need constant repairs.

“It’s an aging, decrepit facility that’s falling apart structural­ly, and also it’s not conducive to house inmates in 2018,” Cmdr. Joseph Dempsey of the Custody Services Division said after a tour of Men’s Central Jail last week.

Across the street, Twin Towers Correction­al Facility, which houses the majority of the county’s mentally ill inmates, offers more natural light, recreation space and a “pod” cell configurat­ion. But there is no confidenti­al room or clinic to assess the mental health of these inmates, who instead undergo psychologi­cal evaluation­s out in the open while chained to stools.

Dempsey, citing several consent decrees under which the department is operating, said it’s difficult to comply with mandates to reduce jail violence and provide adequate care for suicidal and other mentally ill inmates in the existing facilities.

“And that’s … putting it nicely,” he said.

The Consolidat­ed Correction­al Treatment Facility, to be completed in 2028, will make that compliance easier, sheriff ’s officials said. It will include an “inmate reception center” to speed up intake and assessment, as well as more dedicated medical space and inmate-patient beds for those with acute mental illness.

The facility will also have more space for visits, therapy, educationa­l programmin­g and recreation.

The plan for the new jail, as currently conceived, has been in the works since 2015, when the Board of Supervisor­s signed off on a 3,885-bed replacemen­t for Men’s Central Jail as well as a $137-million women’s jail in Lancaster to replace the overcrowde­d Century Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood. The environmen­tal impact report for the women’s jail was approved in 2016.

Activists have vigorously opposed both jails, saying they represent an unnecessar­y expansion of jails in L.A. County and a misuse of public resources. At past meetings they have staged loud protests and symbolic demonstrat­ions featuring rows of metal jail bunks.

Their protest Tuesday was more subdued, limited to public comment.

“We don’t need another jail,” said Michele Infante with the group Dignity and Power Now. “What we need are programs to help people become healthy, productive persons in our community.”

Others said they agreed with the spirit of a facility focused on inmates’ medical and mental health needs, but opposed putting the jail so close to skid row, where inmates could easily relapse into substance abuse or homelessne­ss.

In a statement, Sheriff Jim McDonnell described the vote as “absolutely the just and right move forward” while also calling for robust diversion and communityb­ased services “to balance justice for the victims of crime and the appropriat­e treatment for our inmatepati­ent population.”

The Department of Public Works will select a contractor to design and build the correction­al treatment facility. The contract award will need the approval of the supervisor­s, likely at the end of this year.

Demolition and replacemen­t will take place in phases, with inmates relocated to other lockups around the county in the interim.

In a separate vote Tuesday, the Board of Supervisor­s decided to support the state’s bail reform effort, Senate Bill 10, which could reduce the number of inmates awaiting trial in the county’s jails.

‘The county has an opportunit­y — in fact, a responsibi­lity — to replace the unacceptab­le Men’s Central Jail with a facility that directly addresses the ... needs of our inmate-patients.’ — Sheila Kuehl, L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s chair

 ?? Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times ?? MEN’S CENTRAL Jail will make way for a lockup with resources for medically and mentally ill inmates.
Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times MEN’S CENTRAL Jail will make way for a lockup with resources for medically and mentally ill inmates.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? THE COUNTY’S jail, built in 1963, houses about 4,000 male inmates in narrow, cramped cells.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times THE COUNTY’S jail, built in 1963, houses about 4,000 male inmates in narrow, cramped cells.

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