Times Standard (Eureka)

Life behind bars: Pandemic devastated learning programs

- By Aaron Morrison

CHOWCHILLA >> Joseph Sena has spent nearly half his 27 years in prison for manslaught­er. For almost as long, he’s been striving to make himself a better man than when he first arrived.

He has taken courses in creative writing, addressed his addictions, and attended school in prison, hoping to be judged fit for parole and ready to return home to Los Angeles if he ever becomes free.

But when the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, tearing through prisons and killing thousands, it severely disrupted or shut down the very programs prisoners most desperatel­y need to prepare them for eventual release.

Trauma counseling, training in carpentry, masonry and barbering, and college courses were slow to adjust to pandemic learning. Isolation and uncertaint­y replaced creative outlets and mental health therapies, for months on end.

Sena grew depressed and anxious — he began to doubt that he’d be known for anything other than taking a life when he was 15.

He remembered the words of a poem he wrote to the man he was convicted of killing.

“I know you’re not here. I’ll remember your name. For you I will live. For us, I will change.”

He was afraid he’d never get the chance.

In a nation that incarcerat­es roughly 2 million people, the COVID pandemic was a nightmare for prisons. Overcrowdi­ng, subpar medical care, staffing shortages, and the ebb and flow of prison population­s left most places unprepared to manage the spread of the highly contagious virus. At least 3,181 prisoners and 311 correction­al staff died of virus-related causes through mid-January of this year, according to a COVID tracking project by the law school at the University of California in Los Angeles.

The 10 largest state prison systems suspended or severely curtailed in-person visitation for an average of 490 days before such restrictio­ns were lifted, based on informatio­n and records obtained by The Associated Press. That meant no family visits, and no volunteers coming in to lead rehabilita­tion programs.

At the worst of times, prisoners said they were locked in their cells for weeks on end, their otherwise normal activities like phone calls to loved ones left up to the whims of correction­al officers.

It’s hard to overstate the positive impact of educationa­l and skills training on prisoner rehabilita­tion, said Margaret diZerega, who directs the Vera Institute of Justice’s Unlocking Potential initiative, which is focused on expanding college in prison. Given that 90% of people who are incarcerat­ed in the U.S. will return to their communitie­s, prisoner access to rehabilita­tive programmin­g should matter to everyone, she said.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joseph Sena, 27, reads a document in his cell at Valley State Prison in Chowchilla on Nov. 4. Sena spent years trying to make himself a better person after spending nearly half of his 27 years in prison for killing a man.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joseph Sena, 27, reads a document in his cell at Valley State Prison in Chowchilla on Nov. 4. Sena spent years trying to make himself a better person after spending nearly half of his 27 years in prison for killing a man.

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