USA TODAY US Edition

Inmates sue over upkeep, maggots, mice

- Joshua Yeager Visalia Times-Delta USA TODAY

VISALIA, Calif. – Maggots and mice have fallen onto inmates’ dining tables at a Corcoran state prison where holes in the roof also allow rain and bird droppings to seep through and streak the walls, according to an inmate lawsuit that charges the state isn’t moving fast enough to repair deteriorat­ing prisons.

California has committed $260 million over four years to repair leaking roofs and clear dangerous mold at more than two dozen deteriorat­ing prisons where the cost of overdue maintenanc­e is pegged at more than $1 billion.

The lawsuit calls for swifter action and includes examples of the problems in stomach-churning detail.

Mice twice fell onto the dining table in April 2018, testified inmate Marvin Dominguez, who eats twice a day in the dining hall at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility and State Prison in Corcoran. He said a maggot dropped onto his food tray in October.

A guard advised him to sit at a different table, he said.

The disclosure comes amid increased scrutiny over prison conditions nationally. Other reports include a lack of heat in February in federal detention centers in the New York borough of Brooklyn and near Los Angeles, and poor medical care and dangerous conditions at federal immigratio­n facilities.

Inmate Robert Escareno, who filed the California lawsuit, described in court how bird feces paint the dining room wall. He claims the mold and other contaminan­ts aggravate his allergies.

State officials don’t deny the problem but say they’re fixing the roofs as fast as they can. They blame inmates for attracting vermin by tossing food and hiding liquor they make known as “pruno” in the damaged ceiling.

Inmates’ attorneys say the Corcoran prison targeted in the lawsuit is a symptom of a system-wide problem. “Roofs are failing all over the place,” said Don Specter of the Prison Law Office, which is representi­ng Escareno. “They acknowledg­e the need of the roofs, (but) they’re not making arrangemen­ts so people don’t get hurt in the meantime.”

Besides spawning mold, leaking roofs short out electrical systems, including lights and fire alarm control panels, correction­s officials say.

Roofs at eight of California’s 34 prisons have been replaced, but another 20 still need to be done. Gov. Gavin Newsom’s budget includes replacing roofs at two prisons.

Kings County Superior Court Judge Donna Tarter expects to decide by May whether to order the prison to close the dining hall and feed about 800 inmates in their dormitorie­s, a stop-gap measure that officials said would cause considerab­le practical complicati­ons while interferin­g with prison programs.

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