The Day

Defense lawyers, ACLU seeking court hearing

COVID-19 becoming a pressing concern for correction community

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

Connecticu­t defense attorneys joined with the American Civil Liberties

Union on Friday to file a lawsuit seeking an emergency court order to release prisoners vulnerable to serious illness and those who are being held on low bond, eligible for home confinemen­t or within six months of the end of their sentence.

Also Friday, three unions that represent more than 6,000 front-line employees in the state prisons are calling for the issuance of personal protective equipment, or PPE, particular­ly masks, and to further limit access to the facilities to key staff members.

The Department of Correction, which has been working to reduce the prison population, is reporting that as of 2 p.m. Thursday, 16 staff members and eight inmates at its 14 facilities have tested positive for COVID-19. Locally, that includes one staff member and three inmates at the Corrigan-Radgowski Correction­al Center in Uncasville and two staff

members at the Janet S. York Correction­al Institutio­n in East Lyme.

“People who are incarcerat­ed in Connecticu­t are in imminent danger from COVID-19,” said attorney Dan Barrett, the ACLU of Connecticu­t’s legal director. “The longer Connecticu­t fails to act to protect them, the closer our state comes to a deadly and unconstitu­tional disaster. Connecticu­t’s courts did not sentence people to suffer and potentiall­y die from a pandemic.”

The Connecticu­t Criminal Defense Lawyers Associatio­n said the case should be considered a priority matter by the state Judicial Branch, which has consolidat­ed courthouse­s, reduced hours of operation and limited business to all but the most pressing matters.

The lawsuit names DOC Commission­er Rollin Cook and Gov. Ned Lamont as defendants.

“The administra­tion is reviewing the lawsuit and will not comment on pending litigation at this time, Max Reiss, Lamont’s director of communicat­ion, said in a prepared statement. “All measures taken during this public health emergency have been to maximize public health outcomes wherever possible, especially inside our correction­al institutio­ns in the interests of both staff and incarcerat­ed individual­s.”

DOC has implemente­d an operationa­l response plan restrictin­g outside access to the facilities and reducing group activities. Staff are undergoing medical checks, including having their temperatur­e taken before entering. Cleaning and disinfecti­ng are ongoing, according to the DOC, and newly admitted prisoners are being isolated for 14 days. Also, the DOC said meals are being served within housing units and only one housing unit at a time is allowed to go to the gym for recreation.

But both the ACLU and the unions complain that the policies are not consistent from prison to prison and are not stringent enough to protect staff and inmates.

“We are already seeing the rapid spread of COVID-19 in the DOC,” said Rebecca Simonsen, lead organizer for SEIU District 1199, which represents 600 front-line health care personnel in the prison system, including doctors, nurses, psychiatri­sts, social workers and others. “The consequenc­es of an inadequate response to the outbreak will be devastatin­g for workers, people who are incarcerat­ed, and our communitie­s. Union members in DOC are united in demanding the administra­tion take decisive action by marshaling every possible resource to protect the safety of all workers, inmates, and our communitie­s across the state.”

The Day has been speaking with family members of prisoners, as well as those concerned that correction officers and other front-line staff are working in unsafe conditions.

Correction staff say a policy that allows up to 50 inmates to partake in recreation­al activities together and includes wiping down exercise equipment between use does not comply with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommenda­tion for social distancing and should be curtailed.

Family members say inmates have reported being isolated without being told why and that some who have underlying health conditions have not received the proper medical care.

“They still have rights, and they have a right to know what’s going on,” said Brooke Barnes of Montville, whose boyfriend is incarcerat­ed at Corrigan-Radgowski.

Commission­er Cook has said the DOC is working to reduce the prison population while ensuring inmates have a safe place to live upon their release.

As of Thursday, there were 3,241 people in pretrial detention, and 8,580 sentenced prisoners, according to the ACLU lawsuit, which also says the prison population contains disproport­ionate numbers of black and Latino people.

Southeast Area Transit announced a series of service changes, some already in effect and some that will go into effect today, during the coronaviru­s pandemic. People are boarding through the rear door on all buses.

All Sunday service is canceled.

Route 1 Saturday: No 7 a.m. Norwich departure (effective today).

Route 1: Service ends at 7:55 p.m.

Route 1 Weekday: No 6 a.m., 8 a.m., 4 p.m. or 6 p.m. New London departures; no 7 a.m., 3 p.m. or 5 p.m. Norwich departures.

Route 108 Saturday: Service begins at 8 a.m. and ends at 6 p.m. (effective today).

Route 108 Weekday: Service ends at 7:55 p.m.

Route 108: Foxwoods by request.

Route 15: Service ends at 7:55 p.m.

Route 7 Saturday: Service starts at 7 a.m. (effective today).

Route 7: Service ends at 7:55 p.m.

Route 8 Saturday: Service starts at 7:25 a.m. Service ends at 6:25 p.m. (bus continues to Norwich Transporta­tion Center) (effective today).

Route 8 Weekday: Service ends at 7:25 p.m. (bus continues to Norwich).

Route 8: McClugagge Manor - catch bus at driveway/Taylor Hill

Route 8: No Aspinook/ Mathewson

Route 8: No Indian Ridge (catch bus at Monroe/E. Main)

Route 9 Saturday: Service starts at 7 a.m. at NTC (no 7:25 a.m. trip from Lisbon). Service ends at 5:55 p.m. at NTC (effective today).

Route 9 Weekday: Service ends at 6:55 p.m.

SEAT said people should limit trips to essential purposes only, practice social distancing when waiting and riding, and should not ride the bus if they are

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