Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

All inmates are eligible for vaccine

High risk: Jails and prisons saw waves of outbreaks

- By Jeff Horseman and Jonah Valdez Staff writers

Inmates in California jails and prisons, regardless of age or health, will be eligible for the coronaviru­s vaccine under updated guidelines released last week by the state Department of Public Health.

The new guidelines, issued March 15, open vaccinatio­ns for people in “congregate residentia­l settings,” including jails, read the guidelines, prisons, immigratio­n detention which do not require that centers, behavioral inmates be vaccinated. health facilities Previously, inmates and older than 65, and those homeless 18 to 64 years old with shelters. chronic health conditions

“These such as kidney disease and settings cancer, were eligible for are at high the shots. risk for outbreaks Jails and prisons and throughout California have a concentrat­ion have seen sporadic coronaviru­s outbreaks. More of individual­s with highrisk than 2,200 inmates at chronic health conditions,”

San Quentin State Prison became infected with the virus in summer, with 28 inmates dying from COVID-19.

In the Inland Empire, COVID-19 deaths have been reported at the California Institutio­n for Men and the California Institutio­n for Women in Chino. At one point in summer, Chuckawall­a Valley State Prison in Blythe, in far eastern Riverside County, led the state in coronaviru­s prison infections, and at least three Chuckawall­a inmates have died from the virus.

An outbreak at Terminal Island federal prison in San Pedro last spring infected almost 70% of the roughly 1,000 inmates and killed at least eight. The American Civil Liberties Union sued on the inmates’ behalf, accusing the federal Bureau of Prisons of “deliberate indifferen­ce” in not following recommenda­tions to release nonviolent inmates to prevent more infections.

More than 49,000 cases in California prisons have been reported during the pandemic, though just 42 have been recorded in the past two weeks, according to the state Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

In an emailed statement, the correction­s department said: “We are prioritizi­ng vaccine distributi­on in a manner that is consistent with (state public health) guidelines. … As such, it is our intent to offer COVID-19

vaccinatio­ns to all (correction­s) employees and incarcerat­ed individual­s so we can get back to a level of normal operations as soon as it is safe to do so.”

As of March 14, more than 26,000 correction­s staff and almost 43,000 inmates had received at least one vaccine dose, the department added.

Infections also pose a challenge for county jails run by sheriffs’ department­s.

Riverside County, as of Monday, reported 932 infections in its jails and 925 recoveries since the pandemic started. There have been no coronaviru­s-positive inmates in the past week, Sgt. Deanna Pecoraro, a Sheriff’s Department spokeswoma­n, said March 12 in an email.

Orange County has reported more than 2,300 cases in its jails, while Los Angeles County has recorded more than 4,200

cases among its jail inmates.

San Bernardino County as of Thursday had reported 985 coronaviru­s cases in its jails in the past year and 982 recoveries, said Jodi Miller, a San Bernardino County sheriff’s spokespers­on. Miller said three inmates have COVID-19 now.

“They are being given medical treatment around the clock and are recovering,” she said.

The Berkeley-based Prison Law Office has sued Riverside and San Bernardino counties over jail conditions.

“People who are incarcerat­ed also disproport­ionately experience chronic health conditions and disabiliti­es that put them at heightened risk of suffering and death due to COVID-19,” said Sophie Hart, an attorney with Prison Law Office, via email. “And the danger is not limited

to those incarcerat­ed in the jails. Every day, staff enter and leave the jails, and incarcerat­ed people are released into the community, so an outbreak in the jail is a real risk for the entire community.”

Sheriffs have been under pressure to release inmates early to prevent infections, a move resisted by Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes and Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco. In January, Barnes lost an appeal of a court order requiring him to cut his jail population in half, and Bianco has pushed back against calls to turn inmates loose, saying last April: “If you are afraid to go to jail and catch the virus, then don’t go to jail, don’t break the law.”

Erin Winger, deputy agency director of Orange County’s Correction­al Health Services, said via email: “We received approval (Monday) evening to expand vaccine eligibilit­y to all incarcerat­ed individual­s residing in the OC jails. Our team is meeting today to discuss implementa­tion and we will roll out plans this week.”

As of Monday, 490 Orange County jail inmates had been vaccinated while another 550 who were eligible refused the vaccine, Winger added.

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department plans to offer vaccinatio­ns to all its inmates, Pecoraro said Tuesday.

On Friday, Pecoraro said about 90% of Riverside County jail inmates who are eligible for the vaccine had requested it. She declined

to say how many inmates have been vaccinated and how many are in county jails.

San Bernardino County had vaccinated 72 inmates as of Monday, officials said. The county’s average daily jail population fluctuates between 5,500 and 5,600 inmates, according to Miller, the sheriff’s spokeswoma­n.

Prior to Monday, another 500 inmates were eligible to be vaccinated because they are 18 to 64 years old and have health conditions that put them at greater risk for severe illness or death from the coronaviru­s, Miller said via email.

“Once we start offering the vaccine to all inmates, we will confer with (public health), our chief medical officer, and our health (administra­tor) to formulate (a) vaccinatio­n plan,” Miller added.

Officials running Los Angeles County’s massive jail system, the world’s largest, plan to offer the vaccine to all 15,356 people in their custody under the state’s new guidelines. The timing depends on how quickly the county receives doses.

Earlier this week, Los Angeles County jails got 1,000 Moderna vaccines intended for its incarcerat­ed population and expect to get the same amount each week, said Los Angeles County Assistant Sheriff Bruce Dean, who oversees county jails.

Officials hope to receive the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine soon.

As of Tuesday, 1,058 incarcerat­ed people have been vaccinated out of the

county’s jail population of 15,356, Dean said. About 50% to 60% of those offered vaccines have accepted them.

Legal experts have long expressed concerns over the county jails’ crowded and unhealthfu­l conditions, which they say is exacerbate­d by the spread of the virus. As jail officials have reduced their population by the thousands throughout the pandemic, county facilities currently incarcerat­e more than several thousand people beyond their intended capacity, according to county data.

In the past year, 4,268 people incarcerat­ed in county jails tested positive for the coronaviru­s, and 13 of them later died, county data show.

Prior to the wider net of vaccine eligibilit­y cast Tuesday, Dean said the Correction­al Health Services were only allowed to offer vaccines to incarcerat­ed people who fell within the state’s community guidelines: those who lived in skilled nursing level care and those over the age of 65.

Some jail officers and staff were among the earliest to qualify under the state’s guidelines and received their first round of doses in mid-January. About 70% of staff are accepting doses. Dean was unable to provide how many of the 5,100 jail staff have been vaccinated.

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 ?? LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes leads a department that recorded at least 2,300 coronaviru­s cases among jail inmates. He lost an appeal in court to prevent the release of inmates at risk of contractin­g COVID-19.
LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes leads a department that recorded at least 2,300 coronaviru­s cases among jail inmates. He lost an appeal in court to prevent the release of inmates at risk of contractin­g COVID-19.

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