Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Report cites issues with Allegheny County Jail

Subcommitt­ee to form on suicide prevention

- By Kate Giammarise

The Allegheny County Jail should improve training and staffing, better integrate behavioral care with primary care and improve or replace fixtures to be more suicide-resistant in order to cut down on inmate deaths at the facility, according to a report that examined suicide prevention at the Downtown lockup.

Nine inmates have died by suicide since 2016.

On Thursday, Jail Oversight Board members voted to form a subcommitt­ee on suicide prevention and the report’s findings.

Warden Orlando Harper said some of the report’s recommenda­tions had already been implemente­d.

Deputy County Manager Barbara M. Parees voted against the creation of the subcommitt­ee.

“The warden has a team at this time working through that report,” she said, and it wouldn’t be helpful to have a subcommitt­ee “work at cross-purposes.”

“I would ask that the committee be cautioned in those ways,” she said.

Councilwom­an Bethany Hallam made the motion to create the subcommitt­ee.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

obtained a copy of the report via a Right to Know request.

The report commends jail administra­tors and staff for their cooperatio­n with the assessment and giving informatio­n “in a timely, profession­al manner.”

“It was clear ... that suicide prevention is a priority,” in the jail, the report notes.

However, it also noted 13 areas with room for improvemen­t.

Among the problems the report highlighte­d:

• Physical features that are “obstacles to visibility, supervisio­n, and suicide prevention,” such as corner cells that are difficult to monitor and observatio­n windows covered with a screen.

• Because of where medication is passed out, it occupies officers who must assist nurses for security purposes, therefore giving a window of time when inmates could potentiall­y harm themselves.

• A lack of privacy in the intake area means screenings can’t be done effectivel­y for mental health conditions.

• “No cells are designed to be suicide-resistant. In areas where inmates are specifical­ly being monitored because of suicide risk, cells should be modified to reduce the likelihood of completion,” such as replacing certain fixtures and furnishing­s.

• “Enhanced policies are needed” for staff and mental health care and programs.

• Medical staffing challenges, which have long been a problem at the facility.

• Not enough integratio­n of behavioral care and primary health care.

• Specialize­d training isn’t given to those working on suicide prevention; there are no drills to practice responses to suicide or suicide attempts.

The assessment was performed last year by Chicago-based NCCHC Resources, Inc.

Performing a suicide assessment itself was at the center of a jail board disagreeme­nt last year. Inmate advocates pushed the board to assess how to better prevent suicides, in light of what had then been seven deaths by suicide in the past three years.

Since that time, two additional inmates have died; the most recent death was in May.

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