The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Prison sees sharp decline in inmate population

- By Kelan Lyons

The air trapped in the narrow, windowless hallways of Northern Correction­al Institutio­n feels thick and tense. The Somers facility seems like it’s undergroun­d, its inmates even further isolated from the outside world than those incarcerat­ed in other prisons around the state.

The gray concrete floors and cinderbloc­k walls give Dan Barrett, the ACLU of Connecticu­t’s legal director, the impression he’s in a mortuary, not the state’s most secure penitentia­ry.

“It’s so quiet. It’s so desolate. The footsteps echo,” Barrett said. “The place is like a tomb.”

Another reason the prison feels like a mausoleum: its rapidly declining population.

The number of inmates held at Northern — a levelfive maximum security facility that at one point could hold up to 584 sentenced prisoners — has fallen precipitou­sly since January. According to the Department of Correction, there were 270 inmates at Northern on Jan. 1. By Aug. 23, shortly after two of its housing units were closed, there were just 76, a 71.8 percent decrease in just seven months.

Northern’s numbers mirror declining prison population­s across the state, but the maximumsec­urity correction­al institutio­n stands out because its average daily population count is the lowest of Connecticu­t’s 15 prisons so far in 2019.

“We don’t have any concrete plans to close a facility,” said Karen Martucci, DOC spokeswoma­n. The department frequently moves inmates around, Martucci said, attempting to solve a jigsaw puzzle whose pieces are constantly changing shape according to other facilities’ security and capacity. “We’re always looking to utilize our space in a way that makes sense.”

According to figures provided by DOC, there were 139 correction­s officers and supervisor­s for 78 inmates one day last month. That does not include medical or mental health staff assigned to the facility.

Martucci admitted that closing a prison saves money, but most of the cash spent on correction­al institutio­ns goes toward staffing. State employees will not be laid off if a facility closes, Martucci said, so the cost savings would not be as steep as convention­al wisdom would suggest.

“You just kind of shuffle the money from one facility to another,” she said.

But it does cost more to run a higher security facility. When you have more security officers assigned to a housing unit, it’s more expensive to operate. Restrictiv­e status housing units are staffed more heavily, Martucci said.

Northern shuttered two of its six housing units in May and June, slashing its population to 76 inmates as of Aug. 23. Those prisoners were not just released because they left Northern; they were sent to DOC prisons across the state. Those who remain at Northern are people who were sentenced to death before Connecticu­t abolished the death penalty and then resentence­d to life in prison without the possibilit­y of release, some gang members, and individual­s who assaulted staff or fellow inmates when they were incarcerat­ed in other DOC prisons.

Correction officers received a 9.3 percent raise between the state’s 2012 and 2019 fiscal years. Prices associated with sewer, water, food, and facility maintenanc­e and cleaning supplies all rose, too, as did the cost of providing health care to inmates and administer­ing care to aging prisoners, mirroring rising health care costs across the country.

‘Monument’ to another era

A relic from an era of high crime, long sentences and harsh punishment, Northern has housed inmates since 1995, when the state’s prison population was much greater and officials were having a hard time managing behavioral infraction­s occurring throughout the prison system.

“We had no control,” Martucci said, noting that DOC put its most problemati­c inmates there. “Northern came at a time when it was needed.”

The correction­al institutio­n was created as a lockbox for people deemed “the worst of the worst,” in Barrett’s words, who needed to be kept separate from general prison population­s.

“Northern reflects that philosophy, and really is a monument to the failure of that thinking,” he said.“I see Northern as the apex of a failed model.”

Northern’s warden, Giuliana Mudano, took over the prison’s top job in April. She said she hopes to change its culture and provide more meaningful programmin­g for its inmates, to help them get to a space where they can be housed with the majority of DOC’s inmates.

Until then, Mudano said, Northern offers its inmates something valuable: “It kind of gives the offender almost like a timeout from the hustle and bustle of the general population.”

Northern’s low population gives staff the time to focus more intensely on those who are still incarcerat­ed there, Mudano said. “It has to be baby steps, with small successes.”

Changing times

Northern’s population has been in flux before.

Officials removed the Chronic Discipline Program from the prison in March 2012, closing one of the facilities’ housing units. Later that spring, DOC began transferri­ng inmates to MacDougall­Walker, leaving Northern with a projected population of 75 inmates, comprised of people on death row, held in administra­tive segregatio­n, or in need of special care. On April 1, 2013, there were 88 inmates at Northern. The previous February, there were 226.

Northern’s population swung up in July 2013, when the prison started to house presentenc­ed individual­s who had been issued large bonds. “This was part of an extensive restructur­ing plan of the entire agency, in an effort by the administra­tion to utilize its infrastruc­ture and available bed space to operate on a more efficient basis,” the facility’s website says.

The population stayed consistent from 2013 until this year, when the number of inmates at Northern decreased by 62 percent between May 1 and July 1, after the two units were closed.

Northern’s declining population might be partially due to a bill passed in 2017 that scrutinize­d the use of administra­tive segregatio­n, a type of restrictiv­e housing that keeps inmates separate from their peers.

“The threshold is fairly high to be placed in administra­tive segregatio­n,” Martucci said. “We do take a much harder look than maybe we did years ago.”

According to numbers provided by DOC, 28 of its 76 inmates were held on administra­tive segregatio­n status on Aug. 23.

Transferri­ng those who remain at Northern to other prisons could prove particular­ly vexing, Semple said, because the facility houses the system’s most challengin­g and dangerous inmates.

“You have people there that have murdered other incarcerat­ed people. You have people there who have committed very, very heinous acts. You have people that say, ‘When I get out of here I am going to do this again,’” Semple said. “To put these folks in a general population environmen­t probably is not the best thing from a safety perspectiv­e.”

Northern also houses a small number of inmates who will never again live outside the confines of a cell: those who were on death row before the state nixed capital punishment.

State statute dictates those originally sentenced to die must be incarcerat­ed in very specific ways. They must be kept separate from other inmates, their movements monitored, and relocated to a new cell at least every 90 days. They’re also allowed no more than two hours of recreation­al activity each day.

Those conditions were recently deemed unconstitu­tional by a federal judge who ruled that treatment amounts to cruel and unusual punishment. According to figures provided by DOC, there were nine inmates held under such “special circumstan­ces” as of Aug. 23.

Barrett, who is representi­ng an inmate who is suing the DOC over alleged substandar­d care of Northern inmates who suffer from mental illness, said the prison can exacerbate mental health problems.

“That has a tremendous effect on people,” Barrett said. “I think in an ideal situation there would be nobody at Northern.”

 ?? Kelan Lyons / CTMirror.org ?? The population at Northern Correction­al Institutio­n, a maximumsec­urity prison in Somers, has dropped significan­tly since January following the closure of two housing units.
Kelan Lyons / CTMirror.org The population at Northern Correction­al Institutio­n, a maximumsec­urity prison in Somers, has dropped significan­tly since January following the closure of two housing units.

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