Texarkana Gazette

Texas prisoners lock down, make masks to fight coronaviru­s

- By Jamie Stengle and Jake Bleiberg

DALLAS — Two Texas prisons have been locked down to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, while inmates at other facilities are making masks to fight the pandemic.

Nearly 1,000 people have been confined to their cells on medical restrictio­n at the Rufe Jordan Unit, in the Texas Panhandle, along with more than 1,100 at the Dr. Lane Murray Unit, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. As of Monday, one person had tested positive for COVID-19 at Jordan and four had at Murray, a women’s prison about 100 miles north of Austin.

Meanwhile, the number of coronaviru­s cases and deaths continued to grow in Texas, with more than 8,200 infections and 154 deaths, state officials said Tuesday.

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.

Mask manufactur­ing

All Texas prisoners on medical restrictio­n were confined to their cells Sunday, said TDCJ spokesman Jeremy Desel. Restricted prisoners receive medical checks twice a day and can be moved off restricted status based on the time that’s passed since they were potentiall­y exposed to the disease, he said.

America’s largest state prison system has had 19 prisoners and 28 employees or contractor­s test positive for COVID-19. More than 4,800 people were locked in on medical restrictio­n as of Monday.

Inmates in 10 other Texas prison factories are making cotton masks that staff and prisoners can wear to help reduce the spread of the virus, according to the department. About 50,000 masks have been distribute­d from prison factories that typically manufactur­e shoes, clothing, mattresses and furniture.

The prison factories are making up to 20,000 masks a day. They are also producing plastic face masks.

All personnel working at prison units will have to wear the cotton masks. They will be optional for those in administra­tive jobs and parole officers in the field.

Inmates in medical restrictio­n areas also have to wear the masks.

Correction­s officer dies

A 49-year-old state correction­s officer died Monday after testing positive for COVID-19 while hospitaliz­ed for a heart condition.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice said Tuesday that it was investigat­ing whether the disease contribute­d to Kelvin Wilcher’s death. No one else at the Estelle Unit prison in Huntsville where he worked has tested positive, the agency said.

Voting in a pandemic

The Texas Democratic Party filed a lawsuit that aims to ensure any voter can cast a mail-in ballot during the pandemic.

Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa said neither Republican Gov. Greg Abbott nor Secretary of State Ruth Hughs have issued “concrete guidance” to county officials on mail-in ballots.

The lawsuit says a state advisory that envisions more residents voting by mail says a voter must have a qualifying reason. Those reasons include being away from their county, age 65 or older, sick, disabled or jailed. State law says a disability includes a condition that prevents a person from going to a polling place without a likelihood of injuring the voter’s health.

The lawsuit notes that historical­ly most residents have voted in person, but the upcoming primary runoffs and November general elections are “certain” to be influenced by the pandemic.

Marc Rylander, a spokesman for the Texas Attorney General’s Office, said state Democrats are trying “to distract Texas officials from the public health crisis and hoodwink courts into changing Texas election laws.”

He said, “We will vigorously defend against this frivolous lawsuit.”

 ?? Tyler Morning Telegraph via AP ?? ■ Sparkling Clean Profession­al Exterior Cleaning & Restoratio­n owner Carlos Sanchez uses a sanitizing solution Friday on the Woldert Park playground in Tyler, Texas. Sanchez offered to clean the city’s playground­s for free to support the community during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
Tyler Morning Telegraph via AP ■ Sparkling Clean Profession­al Exterior Cleaning & Restoratio­n owner Carlos Sanchez uses a sanitizing solution Friday on the Woldert Park playground in Tyler, Texas. Sanchez offered to clean the city’s playground­s for free to support the community during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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