Hartford Courant

DOC concerns

Connecticu­t DOC employees describe staffing shortages

- By Eliza Fawcett

Even as the state Department of Correction significan­tly expands COVID-19 testing of incarcerat­ed people, agency employees say that deep concerns persist about adequate social distancing and medical staffing in Connecticu­t prisons and jails.

Even as the state Department of Correction significan­tly expands COVID-19 testing of incarcerat­ed people, agency employees say that deep concerns persist about adequate social distancing and medical staffing in Connecticu­t prisons and jails.

Gabby Bottino, an LPN at Osborn Correction­al Institutio­n in Somers, called conditions there “a perfect storm,” adding that the facility struggled with staffing shortages even before the onset of COVID-19.

“We are working with an estimated 20 vacant nursing positions at Osborn, even before this pandemic hit,” she said during a video call Wednesday organized by the unions that represent DOC employees.

Collin Provost, the president of AFSCME Local 391 and a correction officer at MacDougall-Walker Correction­al Institutio­n in Suffield, said that the unions representi­ng DOC employees acquired 10,000 masks of their own, due to inadequate supplies from the agency.

“DOC’s failure to properly plan for the COVID-19 pandemic … created volatile conditions within our prisons. The agency was not prepared for the crisis that hit us full in March,” he said.

DOC officials have said that the agency attempted to procure as much protective equipment as possible at the onset of the pandemic but, like many others, faced an internatio­nal shortage. Weekly mask distributi­ons to staff eventually began and incarcerat­ed people working in manufactur­ing facilities produced more than 110,000 nonsurgica­l face masks, which were distribute­d to other incarcerat­ed people.

As of Friday, at least 789 incarcerat­ed

people have tested positive for COVID-19, in addition to 375 staff members, according to data reported by the DOC. Six incarcerat­ed people have died from the virus.

In early April, the DOC began transferri­ng incarcerat­ed people who tested positive for COVID-19 to an isolation unit at Northern Correction­al Institutio­n, a maximum-security prison in Somers. According to the DOC, as of Friday, at least 507 incarcerat­ed people infected with COVID-19 have recovered and returned to their original facilities.

The agency began mass testing of incarcerat­ed people on May 13, starting with Osborn Correction­al Institute in Somers, where 617 people were tested, resulting in 146 asymptomat­ic positive results, according to DOC spokesman Andrius Banevicius. The facility was put on lockdown following the surge of positive results last week.

Testing recently began at the Corrigan-Radgowski Correction­al Center in Montville, where 1,009 people were tested and results are forthcomin­g.

“The agency will successive­ly test offenders at each facility until all incarcerat­ed offenders will have had the opportunit­y to be tested,” Banevicius said Friday.

But many DOC employees and those who are incarcerat­ed fear that COVID-19 is far from under control in the state’s prisons and jails.

“This pandemic is not going away,” Provost said. “Where are the next 10,000 masks and PPE going to come from? Where is the next explosion of positive tests going to pop up and how will the agency respond?”

‘The stress level is high’

Tensions are high in many facilities, several DOC employees said this week. Both employees and incarcerat­ed people are on edge, as fear and confusion pervade prisons and jails. According to some employees, social distancing is often not maintained and some large gatherings are still taking place.

“They’re angry, the stress level is high,” said Steve Wales, a correction officer at Corrigan-Radgowski. He added that there was “no way” that incarcerat­ed people in Radgowski dorms were able to properly socially distance.

“We have 70, 80 of them in a dorm right now. There’s just not enough room for them to all be 6 feet apart,” he said.

Kelly Schafer, a licensed clinical social worker at Carl Robinson Correction­al Institutio­n in Enfield, said that as she left the facility Wednesday, she noticed more than 100 incarcerat­ed people in one of the recreation­al yards, “most of them with no masks on, officers with no masks on.”

“Seemingly we’re supposed to be in a full lockdown, but that doesn’t seem like it’s happening very efficientl­y or consistent­ly,” she said.

Banevicius said in a statement that small-group outdoor recreation, “with strict adherence to social distancing” was being offered at some facilities, though not those with positive cases of COVID-19.

According to DOC data, at least 75 incarcerat­ed people at Carl Robinson have tested positive for COVID-19 and been transferre­d to Northern.

Brock Bacote, 27, was released from Brooklyn Correction­al Institutio­n in early May, after serving 18 months on a charge of carrying a weapon without a permit. He is now living with family in New Haven, he said.

At Brooklyn, he was housed in a dormitory consisting of 19 cubes in a large room, each containing six people, which he said made it challengin­g to socially distance. Face masks arrived long after the pandemic had begun, he said.

“We were given one mask apiece but that was after there was multiple confirmed cases inside our facility,” Bacote said. “And that was way after they had said that the masks should be in place if you weren’t able to social distance.”

According to DOC data released Friday, a total of 19 people incarcerat­ed at Brooklyn who tested positive for COVID-19 were transferre­d to the COVID-19 isolation unit at Northern.

Bacote said he learned about the coronaviru­s through phone calls with family members and television news shows in the facility. Informatio­n about the situation from DOC staff came long afterward, he said.

“Honestly, I knew from staff going in and out that if the corona wasn’t in our area, that it would soon be,” Bacote said. “With no masks, no social distancing, I was nervous. I knew it was just a matter of time.”

Concerns about social distancing extend to administra­tive staff as well.

“I worry about my exposure to the virus,” Lindsey Petralito, a medical records clerk at Hartford Correction­al Center, said Wednesday. “To enter my office in the heart of the facility, I have to walk by correction­al officers, inmates. I also share a bathroom with all of the staff, some of whom have tested positive for COVID-19.”

Petralito questioned why she had not been offered a modified work schedule since many of her tasks, including data entry, could be completed at home through telecommut­ing.

“I am concerned what will happen in the fall and winter when COVID-19 is expected to be much worse,” she said.

Confusion over test results, temperatur­e checks

Correction­al officers described medical staff limitation­s, haphazard hygiene procedures and confusion over COVID-19 tests and temperatur­e checks in many facilities.

At Osborn, which was placed on lockdown last week, incarcerat­ed people who were negative for COVID-19 had to take outdoor showers, six at a time, Bottino said. In the COVID-19 positive unit, they were “getting a bath basin … and instructed to clean themselves like a bird-bath situation.”

DOC has since expanded its showering policy, permitting those in medical or quarantine units showers every other day, according to The Connecticu­t Mirror.

Another source of confusion has been the test results themselves. DOC employees at facilities including Corrigan-Radgowski and Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n said that COVID-19 test results were being released to incarcerat­ed people. But at Osborn, it has been “very hectic,” Bottino said, with limited communicat­ion to incarcerat­ed people about their test results.

“They’ve been just shuffled around the building,” she said. “They don’t know what their results were.”

Incarcerat­ed people housed in Osborn’s separate unit for those who are COVID-19 positive but asymptomat­ic are assessed by medical staff every shift, Bottino added. But no new medical staff has been added to the already-thin team.

In response to concerns about medical staff shortages, Banevicus noted that the DOC has added 71 health services staff members in the past year, with 26 hired since March 1.

He also said that all incarcerat­ed people who are tested are “informed by a healthcare staff member of the results of the test for the presence of the novel coronaviru­s.”

Although the DOC is taking the temperatur­e of all employees entering the building, Sean Howard, a correction­al officer at Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n and president of AFSCME Local 387, raised concerns about the accuracy of the devices.

“I’ve been reporting to work and my temperatur­e has never been above 92 degrees,” he said. “I don’t feel confident in the equipment at all. If they’re going by temperatur­e readings, I’m already dead walking into the facility and they’re letting me right in.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States