The Signal

Plans for Pitchess

Jail set for upgrades as part of major renovation­s for sheriff

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

County supervisor­s voted Tuesday to renovate county jails, approving $2.21 billion to build a new Men’s Central Jail, and $12 million to renovate the Pitchess Detention Center in Castaic.

Citing medical and mental health services urgently needed for a growing number of inmates, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s voted unanimousl­y in favor of a budget set up for jail renovation — called the Consolidat­ed Correction­al Treatment Facility Constructi­on and Renovation Project — and the report detailing its anticipate­d impact on the environmen­t.

The upgrades are also expected to provide additional health services for inmates with mental health and substance abuse

problems, according to officials.

The plan to renovate the jail on Biscailuz Drive at The Old Road in Castaic is called the Pitchess Detention Center East Facility Renovation Project and comes with a budget of $12.6 million.

About 400 inmates of the Men’s Central Jail — specifical­ly, those inmates in the jail’s infirmary — are to be housed temporaril­y at Pitchess, according to the plans.

Accommodat­ing them is expected to be problem-free, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials said this week.

“The total Pitchess Detention Center population will increase by approximat­ely 400,” said Nicole Nishida, community informatio­n officer for the LASD. “These inmates will be housed at East Facility which is currently housing only a fraction of the total available population.”

400 extra inmates

In a letter to county supervisor­s, Mark Pestrella, director of the county Public Works Department, addressed the impact 400 inmates would have on the current jail population.

“Approval of the recommende­d actions will have little or no impact on current services at Men’s Central Jail and the Twin Towers Correction­al Facility,” he said.

“The existing Pitchess Detention Center East (Facility) inmates will be temporaril­y relocated to other vacant on-site facilities prior to the start of selective demolition and hazardous materials abatement,” he said.

“All other administra­tive operations at PDC East will not be impacted,” he said.

Code compliance

About demolishin­g some aspects of the East Facility, Pestrella wrote: “The existing PDC East will require code compliance upgrades to meet Americans with Disabiliti­es Act standards.”

“The proposed constructi­on includes renovation of existing inmate housing, restroom facilities, the visitation area, and first floor clinic space,” he said in the letter dated June 19.

“The existing recreation yard at PDC East would be modified to meet mandated recreation time standards for all the inmates,” he said.

“To expedite constructi­on and address potential unforeseen conditions, Public Works intends to

perform selective demolition for code compliance upgrades and hazardous materials abatement of areas at PDC East that will be impacted by the proposed constructi­on,” Pestrella wrote in his letter to supervisor­s.

The job of updating mental health facilities has been in the works for close to 40 years.

Closed facilities

In the 1980s, mental health facilities were closed throughout the state and left a “vulnerable population” untreated, according to public health officials.

With reduced secure mental health facilities comes limited treatment options for inmates with a mental health diagnosis who are headed to jail, ending up in facilities not equipped to meet their needs.

The Men’s Central Jail was built in the ’60s and ’70s, and wasn’t designed to treat inmates with severe medical and mental health conditions.

As a result, the facility does not have the capacity to meet the needs of the current inmate population, many of whom are medically fragile or suffering from serious substance-use and medical and/or mental illness.

In reaching their decision Tuesday to greenlight the jail overhaul budget, supervisor­s weighed a number of statistics presented to them.

Substance abuse

More than 70 percent of the Los Angeles County inmate population reports serious substance-use and medical and/or mental illness.

With that in mind, the LASD and County Health Agency got together to propose a correction­al treatment facility that would replace the Men’s Central Jail, already more than a half-century old.

County officials hope the renovated jails will become a national model in the way medical and mental health services are provided to the growing inmate-patient population in the criminal justice system.

Tearing down the old and replacing it with a new appreciati­on for how mental health inmates are treated brings with it a change in attitude, public works officials told supervisor­s.

The project summary says: “The proposed facility intends to create a paradigm shift in the way the county cares for in mate patients, with a focus on treatment and rehabilita­tion, rather than just incarcerat­ion. The proposed facility will provide educationa­l, rehabilita­tion and life skills programs that would help rebuild lives, facilitate reintegrat­ion into society, and thus reduce recidivism and enhance public safety.”

 ?? Chris Miller | LASD/Courtesy photo ?? This aerial shot shows the Pitchess Detention Center in Castaic, which is receiving a $12 million overhaul.
Chris Miller | LASD/Courtesy photo This aerial shot shows the Pitchess Detention Center in Castaic, which is receiving a $12 million overhaul.

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