Los Angeles Times

ICE detainees await vaccines

State and federal officials are passing the buck over who should give the shots, advocates say.

- By Andrea Castillo

Immigrants rights advocates say state and federal officials are waff ling over responsibi­lity.

When Ruperto Robles, 60, came down with COVID-19 in early January, he spent days with fever, muscle aches and fatigue, isolated from others at the Yuba County Jail.

Robles is being held there by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, facing deportatio­n. An uncle and cousin in Mexico died of complicati­ons from COVID-19. With diabetes and high blood pressure, Robles worried it could lead to his death, too.

“I would like to get the vaccine to block the possibilit­y of getting sick again,” he said. “It’s sad to see on television how many people are dying from the coronaviru­s.”

Advocates for immigrants say state and federal officials have waffled over who is responsibl­e for vaccinatin­g the roughly 1,500 detainees in the care of ICE.

ICE spokesman Alexx Pons said in a statement that the number of vaccine doses needed for detainees was reported to Department of Homeland Security planners earlier in the pandemic, but the department did not receive any direct allocation of vaccines for detainees. Vaccines received by detention facilities could be administer­ed by medical personnel contracted or employed by ICE.

Pons said vaccines for ICE detainees are being allocated by local and state health department­s and were incorporat­ed into the vaccine shipments distribute­d by the federal government to each state.

“At this time, a limited number of ICE detainees have begun to receive the COVID-19 vaccine based on availabili­ty and priorities for vaccinatin­g individual­s in the state where they are currently detained,” he said.

California’s seven immigrant detention centers collective­ly can hold about 6,000 people. But the facilities have been operating at a fraction of that capacity as a result of court orders stemming from lawsuits over safety hazards amid the pandemic. All but one are managed by private prison companies.

As of Wednesday, 573 people at facilities in California had tested positive for the coronaviru­s. The first person known to die in ICE custody from the virus was 57-year-old Carlos Ernesto Escobar Mejia, a Salvadoran who was detained at the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego in May. Nationwide, more than 9,500 detainees have tested positive for the virus and nine have died.

ICE detention centers have struggled to cope at every stage since the pandemic broke out. Outbreaks have plagued nearly every facility in the state. Detainees have responded to what they considered unsafe and unsanitary living conditions with hunger strikes and peaceful protests, leading in some cases to crackdowns by guards including use of force. Numerous lawsuits were filed over the lack of social distancing and testing.

All of this serves as a backdrop to the criticism over this latest phase of the pandemic: vaccinatio­ns.

In a court declaratio­n Feb. 11 responding to a classactio­n lawsuit alleging that the federal government has failed to provide appropriat­e medical and mental healthcare for immigrant detainees, Dr. Ada Rivera, medical director of the ICE Health Service Corps, said the agency is relying on the vaccine distributi­on prioritiza­tion processes in each state for detainee allotments.

The ICE Health Service Corps provides healthcare to 13,500 detainees in 20 detention facilities across the country. ICE contracts with outside providers for its other facilities.

“As of this declaratio­n, no vaccine has been made available to detainees at IHSCstaffe­d facilities,” she wrote.

State officials said last month that they aren’t sure who is responsibl­e for vaccinatin­g immigrant detainees because they are in federal custody.

“There are some real complex jurisdicti­onal issues that are at play,” California Surgeon General Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, who co-chairs the state’s vaccine advisory committee, told committee members Wednesday.

At a vaccinatio­n clinic in Coachella the same day, Gov. Gavin Newsom deflected a question about immigrant detainees, saying he could talk only about vaccinatio­n efforts in the state prison system. About 40% of state inmates have received a COVID-19 vaccine.

“Federal detention facilities operate uniquely and distinctiv­ely from the state,” Newsom said.

On Feb. 16, 19 members of the California Legislatur­e, led by Sen. Maria Elena Durazo (D-Los Angeles), signed a letter requesting that state officials clarify their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n plans for immigrant detainees. The letter followed an announceme­nt by ICE that individual states “will determine when ICE detainees are vaccinated.”

“One of the six indicators put forth by the [Newsom] administra­tion to reopen the state is the ability to prevent COVID-19 outbreaks in facilities which are vulnerable to infection, including detention facilities,” the letter says. “It is imperative that our state has a plan in place to vaccinate individual­s in congregate settings.”

Health department­s in counties with immigrant detention centers have approached detainee vaccinatio­n with varying degrees of responsibi­lity.

Some detainees inside Otay Mesa have been vaccinated by ICE, advocates said. CoreCivic — the forprofit corporatio­n that runs Otay Mesa — is a registered COVID-19 vaccine provider, said Sarah Sweeney, a spokeswoma­n for the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency. Sweeney confirmed that the agency has provided vaccines to Otay Mesa, but did not respond to a question about how many.

But in San Bernardino County, public health officials are awaiting instructio­ns from the state on when detainees at the Adelanto ICE Processing Facility and annex will become eligible for vaccines. David Wert, a spokesman for the San Bernardino County Public Heath Department, said that’s “very much up in the air right now.”

In January, when an advocate with the Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice asked San Bernardino County health officials when detainees at Adelanto would have access to vaccines, assistant director Joshua Dugas responded by removing her from the email string.

“We are not at a point that we are vaccinatin­g this group of individual­s,” he said, according to a copy of the Jan. 28 email shared with The Times. “We are currently offering vaccines to employees only.”

The Yuba County Jail is the only public facility in California that holds immigrants for ICE. Spokeswoma­n Leslie Williams said only jail inmates and staff who meet eligibilit­y guidelines have been vaccinated. ICE detainees have not been vaccinated, she said, and the allocation of vaccines for detainees will be dealt with separately from inmates.

“They answer for their own housed population,” she said. “Anything for ICE detainees would be up to ICE.”

Dr. Stephen Munday, health officer for Imperial County, where the Imperial Regional Detention Facility is located, said the county is following the tier system laid out by the state, focusing on county residents and population­s that are able to receive both doses of the vaccine.

“If the federal government would like us to assist them with immunizing people in the detention facilities and if they are able to provide us with additional vaccine, we would certainly be more than happy to help do that,” he said.

It is unclear why detainees at Otay Mesa have been vaccinated while others have not. ICE did not respond to a question about the disparity.

Detention centers are required to comply with state and local health orders and coordinate with public health authoritie­s to develop COVID-19 mitigation plans. But some counties have said they don’t believe they have the authority to intervene when facilities fail to follow local guidance.

In January, state legislator­s introduced Assembly Bill 263, which would clarify that state and county health officials have authority to enforce health orders in privately operated detention centers.

Lisa Knox, legal director of the California Collaborat­ive for Immigrant Justice, said every agency is passing the buck on responsibi­lity for vaccinatin­g detainees in California. On Thursday, she said, someone held at the Mesa Verde ICE Processing Facility in Bakersfiel­d tested positive for COVID-19.

“We’re still seeing more COVID cases all the time in detention,” she said. “More people are going to die of COVID in detention if there’s not some action taken. The state can’t wait on the federal government to act.”

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune ?? SOME DETAINEES at the Otay Mesa Detention Center in south San Diego, above, have been vaccinated, but those in custody at other facilities have not. The state surgeon general blamed “complex jurisdicti­onal issues.”
Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune SOME DETAINEES at the Otay Mesa Detention Center in south San Diego, above, have been vaccinated, but those in custody at other facilities have not. The state surgeon general blamed “complex jurisdicti­onal issues.”

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