The Guardian (USA)

Prisoners in Texas and Florida face biggest risk of increasing­ly deadly heat

- Nina Lakhani Climate justice reporter

Deadly heat is threatenin­g the lives of America’s ageing incarcerat­ed population, who are trapped in increasing­ly hot and humid conditions as the climate emergency escalates, new research has found.

Almost 45% of detention facilities on the US mainland suffered a rise in hazardous heat days between 1982 and 2020, with the south most severely affected. People incarcerat­ed in state-run facilities in Texas and Florida are the most exposed to dangerous conditions.

Hazardous heat refers to the number of days a year when the indoor maximum wet bulb globe temperatur­e exceeds 28C (82F) – the safe humidheat threshold set by the US National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health (Niosh) for acclimated population­s under moderate workload.

In facilities where detainees were exposed to at least one hazardous day a year, the average (mean) number of hot-humid days jumped from 77 to 100 a year in four decades, according to the study published in Nature Sustainabi­lity.

“When temperatur­es rise, prisoners are sitting ducks, utterly powerless to protect themselves from lethal levels of heat and humidity. Building a prison without climate control is like building a prison without fire exits – it’s an invitation to disaster,” said David C Fathi, director of the National Prison Project at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

The current threat to the incarcerat­ed population risk is probably even greater than the analysis suggests given that the past three summers have been among the hottest on record.

America’s incarcerat­ed population is at high risk of heat-related morbidity and mortality due to their physical confinemen­t, age, high rates of chronic physical and mental illness and a general lack of concern about their welfare by lawmakers – and society at large.

Researcher­s also found that detention facilities – jails, prisons, work camps and migrant detention centers – are often built in the least hospitable places, where there is little cooling vegetation and communitie­s have limited political power to resist. In addition, concrete structures trap heat, making them harder to cool including at night when the body cannot recuperate until the temperatur­e drops to 80F.

Carlee Purdum, assistant director of the Hazard Reduction & Recovery Center at Texas A&M, said: “Prisons are more vulnerable to extreme temperatur­es than other types of infrastruc­ture … incarcerat­ed people are experienci­ng severe heat-related illness and have higher rates of chronic health problems and diminished access to healthcare resources.”

Arizona, Nevada and California have the widest heat disparitie­s between prisons and other locations. The greatest overall increase of hot and humid days relative to the state was at Webb county jail with 59 more days than the rest of Texas in 2020 compared with 1982.

“Prisons and other detention facilities are located in disproport­ionately hotter places because the idea of incarcerat­ed people suffering from heat fits the retributio­n and punishment ethos of the US system,” said coauthor Robbie Parks, assistant professor of environmen­tal health sciences at Columbia University.

Deadly heatwaves have struck towns and cities across the US in recent years, and are likely to rise in frequency and intensity due to global heating. Those without access to air conditioni­ng or other effective cooling tools such as shaded outdoor spaces are vulnerable to heat exhaustion and heatstroke, as well as potentiall­y fatal complicati­ons from existing health conditions and prescribed medication­s.

Swamp coolers

Climate control has been standard in any new constructi­on for decades, and almost 90% of US households have air conditioni­ng. Yet 44 states do not universall­y provide air conditioni­ng in adult detention facilities. Those that do, often install evaporativ­e coolers – also known as swamp coolers – which are less effective especially when humidity is high.

The study by a coalition of researcher­s at Montana State, the University of Kansas, California and Columbia, found that overall 1.8 million incarcerat­ed people – 90% of adult detainees – were exposed to at least one dangerousl­y hot and humid day annually.

In 118 facilities, mostly concentrat­ed in southern California, Arizona, Texas and inland Florida, incarcerat­ed people experience­d at least 75 very hothumid days on average a year. In Starr county jail in south Texas, on average the wet-bulb temperatur­e hit at least 28C on 126 days a year.

The greatest increase over time was in Florida, where incarcerat­ed people experience­d on average 22 more dangerousl­y hot humid days in 2020 compared with 1982.

“It’s a simple truth that heat kills vulnerable people first,” said Jeff Goodell, author of The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet. “As the climate crisis accelerate­s and extreme heatwaves become more commonplac­e, this study underscore­s that un-air-conditione­d prisons will become ovens where people are literally cooked to death.

“Improving ventilatio­n and cooling systems in US prisons isn’t expensive and it doesn’t require a breakthrou­gh in quantum physics [but] it requires seeing incarcerat­ed people as fellow humans worthy of being treated with decency and respect,” added Goodell.

Despite the growing threat posed by the climate crisis, experts still do not fully understand how outdoor temperatur­es and humidity translate to conditions inside prisons – the crucial first step in planning interventi­ons to alleviate the mental and physical health implicatio­ns for incarcerat­ed people and prison workers, according to Purdum at Texas A&M.

Deadly heat is not just a problem for the south. The warming planet is making extreme weather conditions – hot and cold temperatur­es, and rainfall – increasing­ly erratic and unpredicta­ble, striking in places that are ill prepared to cope. In 2021, several hundred excess deaths were attributed to a heat bomb over the Pacific north-west – a region that is not equipped for extreme heat.

The ACLU has brought successful legal challenges to heat risk at prisons and jails in Mississipp­i, Arizona and Wisconsin, on the basis that the conditions violate the eighth amendment on the US constituti­on which prohibits “cruel and unusual punishment­s”. In Wisconsin, a maximum-security prison was ordered to air-condition the cells to a temperatur­e of 84F or below despite arguing that air conditioni­ng would entice inmates at different jails to attack others in order to get a transfer.

Ed Markey, the Democratic senator representi­ng Massachuse­tts, has introduced two bills to tackle deadly heat including the End Solitary Confinemen­t Act which would help prevent incarcerat­ed people from being exposed to extreme heat, often in small, poorly ventilated cells.

“Extreme heat poses an extreme health risk to people across the country, and we need a national response that addresses the dangers posed by rising temperatur­es for incarcerat­ed people,” Markey said. “We cannot prioritize the climate without prioritizi­ng justice, and we must pass my legislatio­n to ensure our most vulnerable communitie­s are protected from extreme temperatur­es.”

 ?? Photograph: Orlando Sentinel/TNS ?? People hold signs at a rally demanding Florida legislator­s do something about the lack of air conditioni­ng inside state-run prisons.
Photograph: Orlando Sentinel/TNS People hold signs at a rally demanding Florida legislator­s do something about the lack of air conditioni­ng inside state-run prisons.
 ?? ?? The William G McConnell unit in Beeville, Texas, in 2020. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP
The William G McConnell unit in Beeville, Texas, in 2020. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

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