The Denver Post

Prison virus cases hit 238

- By Elise Schmelzer

A Colorado prison is now the site of the state’s largest confirmed COVID-19 outbreak as mass testing confirms that 238 inmates at Sterling Correction­al Facility have the virus.

The number of positive cases at the facility spiked as more results from the 472 tests administer­ed last week became available. Of those tested, half were positive. Sixteen tests were inconclusi­ve, 216 were negative and two were still pending Tuesday afternoon, Colorado Department of Correction­s spokeswoma­n Annie Skinner said in an email.

Four of the sick inmates were in the hospital Tuesday afternoon, Skinner said.

The coronaviru­s outbreak at the Sterling prison is the largest known in the state, according to data collected by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t. The existence of large outbreaks in prisons across the country are coming to light as more states conduct mass testing in their facilities. Thousands of prisoners have tested positive nationwide, including many who showed no symptoms.

The round of testing last week is the first time the Colorado Department of Correction­s has completed mass testing in one of its facilities. The broad testing began

eight inmates tested positive for the coronaviru­s at the Sterling prison, which is the largest in the state system. Outside of the mass testing conducted last week, the Department of Correction­s has tested 38 inmates. Of those, only one inmate outside of the Sterling prison tested positive and has since recovered.

The department is now working with state health officials to determine next steps regarding further testing, Skinner said.

Families of the men incarcerat­ed at the facility have watched with anxiety as the testing results became public. Some have struggled to find out whether their loved one has the coronaviru­s. Restrictio­ns on inmates’ movements have made it difficult for them to communicat­e with the outside world.

Before the pandemic, Kim White talked to her 22-year-old son, Dustin Logan, at least once a day and visited him at the prison every two or three weeks. In March, the Department of Correction­s canceled visitation in an effort to prevent the introducti­on the coronaviru­s into state prisons. Then, even calls between inmates and their families ceased as the facility was put on lockdown. She had no communicat­ion from her son for a week and a half before receiving a call from him Monday.

When the news broke Friday that 138 inmates at the prison had tested positive for COVID-19, White franticall­y called the Department of Correction­s to see if her son was one of the positive cases. They wouldn’t give her an answer, she said.

“It’s very heartbreak­ing,” she said. “I can’t hear his voice. I can’t see him. I can’t hug him every two or three weeks when we go see him.”

Monday night, Logan called White to tell her that he had tested positive for COVID-19. White said her son had been experienci­ng body aches and piercing migraines, but he thought the issues were connected to being locked in his cell for 23 hours a day with little room to move.

She worries about him and whether he’ll receive adequate care in the prison. He had pneumonia less than six months ago and has other underlying health issues, White said.

Carmen Covert has experiafte­r enced the same lack of answers when calling for informatio­n on her boyfriend who is incarcerat­ed at Sterling. For two weeks, the couple was only able to communicat­e through letters.

“It’s torture. It’s physical, emotional torture,” she said. “Only being in contact through mail — I’m grateful for that — but it’s hard not being able to hear their voice and knowing the day to day, or how they’re being treated.”

Covert finally received a phone call from him on Monday afternoon. He told her that he still hadn’t received the results of the COVID-19 test administer­ed to him on Wednesday. He said that while correction­al officers were required to wear masks, not all of them were doing so.

She feels helpless. She can’t keep him safe.

“My back’s against a wall, there’s nothing I can do to help him,” she said. “These men are already in a compromise­d position, there’s nothing they can do to get away from it. If they get it, you just have to pray that they’ll be okay.”

That stress is also felt by the correction­al officers who work in the prisons, said Hilary Glasgow, executive director of Colorado Workers for Innovative and New Solutions, the union that repreof sents state workers, including those at the Department of Correction­s. The department was understaff­ed before the coronaviru­s pandemic, she said.

“It’s just so exhausting,” Glasgow said. “You’re not just working with your coworkers who are freaked out about the virus, they’re working with freaked out inmates too.”

The union has communicat­ed with correction­s unions across the nation to talk about best practices for preventing coronaviru­s in prisons, Glasgow said.

“We’re kind of on the cutting edge of addressing it before it became a massive problem,” Glasgow said.

So far, the staff at Sterling Correction­al Facility have been minimally impacted by COVID-19, said Michelle Pemberton of the Northeast Colorado Health Department.

“Steps taken by the Sterling Correction­al Facility have been effective in protecting staff members thus far,” Pemberton said in an email. “Sterling Regional MedCenter has a Surge Plan in place but have had no unusual concern about the effects they may see as a result of the outbreak at the Sterling Correction­al Facility.”

The testing at the prison has caused rural Logan County’s rate of coronaviru­s cases to skyrocket to the top of the list of worst-hit counties. Logan County has 266 cases amid its 21,854 residents and its rate of 1,217 cases per 100,000 residents triples the rate seen in Denver, according to state health data.

The Department of Correction­s needs to conduct more mass testing across the prison system before it can adequately prevent more spread, attorney Gail Johnson, whose clients include incarcerat­ed people, said.

“It’s impossible to address the problem until they know the scale of the problem,” she said.

Medical care in Colorado’s prisons were substandar­d even outside the pressures of a pandemic, Johnson said. More releases from the system are necessary both to allow more space for social distancing and so those released can access better health care outside prison walls.

“There’s no reason to expect things to get better,” she said of prison health care. “On the contrary, there’s reason to believe deaths will occur.”

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