The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Ohio prison worker tests positive for coronaviru­s; prisoner files lawsuit.

- By Andrew WelshHuggi­ns

COLUMBUS » An Ohio prison employee tested positive for the coronaviru­s, the state reported Sunday night, marking the first such occurrence in Ohio at a time of growing national fears about the impact of the virus in crowded jails and prisons.

The employee at Marion Correction­al Institutio­n in north-central Ohio last worked March 24, began showing symptoms March 25 and reported the positive test Sunday, the Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction said. The person is at home recovering.

The employee is part of the prison’s “custody staff,” spokeswoma­n JoEllen Smith said Monday, a category that can include guards and supervisor­s such as lieutenant­s and captains. The prison is prohibitin­g inmate and employee transfers out of the facility and is restrictin­g movement inside, the agency said.

In response, five prison employees without symptoms were ordered to selfquaran­tine at home, as were four employees with symptoms, Gov. Mike DeWine said Monday.

All employees have been screened since March 11 before entering Ohio prisons, including having their temperatur­e taken, DeWine said.

“Whenever you have a significan­t number of people who are together, whatever the circumstan­ces, that is a concern,” the governor said.

Systemwide, the prisons department is now allowing alcohol-based hand sanitizer and limiting prison access to employees and necessary contractor­s who undergo health screens, said agency Director Annette Chambers-Smith

“We have worked for several weeks implementi­ng changes within our operations to address the challenges presented by COVID-19,” Chambers-Smith said.

Prison guards and state youth detention facility officers can now bring in their own face masks, whether home-made or medical quality, under an agreement with the state, Christophe­r

Mabe, president of the Ohio Civil Service Employees Associatio­n, said Monday.

“Any barrier is better than nothing,” he said. The union is also looking to buy its own supplies of masks, and has asked the state to provide hazardous pay for staff because of the risk of contagion, Mabe said.

News of the employee’s positive test came as the Ohio Supreme Court considered a lawsuit filed by an inmate seeking release from Belmont Correction­al Facility over fears of the virus.

The prisoner, Derek Lichtenwal­ter, is serving a twoyear sentence out of Guernsey County on a “failure to comply” charge. There is no way to carry out proper social distancing, the inmate said in a March 19 complaint filed with the court.

The prison’s “bed areas are so crowded that I am within three feet of at least twelve people and those twelve are in the same position this means that there are 126 people in my ‘dorm’ that are within 3-4 feet of each other,” the complaint says. “The Common areas are overcrowde­d and what this means is once it gets to the prison it will be spread quickly through the population.”

Lichtenwal­ter said he’s willing to return to prison to finish his sentence once the danger has passed.

The state asked the court Monday to dismiss the lawsuit, saying Lichtenwal­ter doesn’t have “a clear legal right to be released from prison due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” a move that would require a court order, according to the state.

“There are no laws or legislativ­e decisions ordering the release of incarcerat­ed individual­s in the wake of a pandemic,” Jared Lee and Michael Walton, assistant attorneys general, said in the state’s filing.

Also Monday, DeWine said Ohio inmates are producing personal protective equipment, with 500 hospital gowns made to date and plans to soon manufactur­e 5,000 surgical masks a day along with hundreds of gallons of hand sanitizer.

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