CT delegation demands answers about Danbury prison conditions
DANBURY — U.S. legislators from Connecticut are demanding answers from Danbury prison officials about two recent gas leaks, as well a COVID-19 testing and quarantining protocols at the facility.
U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy from Connecticut and U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes (CT-5) recently sent a letter to the prison’s warden, Diane Easter, demanding answers following two gas leaks at Danbury Federal Correctional Institution on Nov. 13 and Dec. 26, which they said posed “a significant threat to the safety and security of both inmates and staff.”
During the November incident, Eversource’s Yankee Gas subsidiary responded to the prison, isolated the leak and issued a red tag, indicating a safety concern requiring immediate repair, according to a news release from Blumenthal’s office.
During the December gas leak, however, first responders from Yankee Gas and the Danbury Fire Department were denied access to the prison due to poor communication at the facility, according to the release, and were not allowed access until the next day.
The gas leaks were purportedly in different sections of piping at the prison and repairs were subsequently made on Dec. 28, according to the news release.
In their letter to Easter, Blumenthal, Murphy and Hayes wrote that “one gas leak may be an isolated incident, but two different gas leaks in two different sections of piping in as many months is indicative of a larger, systemic infrastructure problem at FCI Danbury that must be investigated and remedied as soon as possible.”
“Further, it is very troubling that a communications failure within FCI Danbury led the gate staff to turn away Eversource’s response team when a gas leak could pose an incredibly significant and deadly danger,” they added.
As a result of the December leak, heat and hot water were turned off to a portion of the prison’s camp area, resulting in 47 female inmates being relocated to visiting rooms, according to the news release.
“Poor heating and cooling infrastructure poses a danger to both staff and inmates. The recent steam heat explosion (at) the West Haven VA is an example of the very real threat to staff and contract workers from inadequately maintained infrastructure,” Blumenthal, Murphy and Hayes wrote.
COVID concerns
The delegation is also seeking answers regarding COVID-19 testing and health safety practices at the low-security prison on Pembroke Road after family members of inmates raised concerns about turnaround time for COVID test results and quarantining.
Blumenthal, Murphy, and Hayes are asking Easter to “conduct an immediate assessment of the critical infrastructure at FCI Danbury to identify and remedy any emergent health and safety issues for which we would appreciate a report on the results of that assessment.”
They are also requesting that she “take steps to ensure that incarcerated individuals and FCI Danbury staff alike are protected from COVID-19.”
Less than a week after a judge ordered 17 Danbury prison inmates be released over COVID-19 concerns, lawyers representing Danbury FCI inmates have claimed that there have been delays in identifying medically fragile people for release during the pandemic.
The attorneys also allege that a settlement with federal authorities over the issue is not being enforced. A judge will hear a motion Friday afternoon calling out the federal Beaureau of Prisons for roadblocks it has placed in identifing those with conditions that could make them more vulnerable.