http://www.justtalk.blog/index.php/2021/01/11/got-covid-get-punished/
Got COVID? Get Punished
Suspected of COVID? You get punished. That’s the rule at the Broome County Jail. Under the current administration it can’t be otherwise. There are too many persons in the unsanitary jail, on too many minor charges. Too many persons are kept locked up due to untreated substance use and mental health illnesses. Too many are awaiting trial, often for over a year; refuse to plead guilty and accept a punishing criminal record, and you will stay seemingly forever. And above all too many are housed, in crowded COVID conditions, for other counties, the state, and the federal system–all to make money for the county, from $100 to $300/person per day.
Mass Solitary
What happens if someone reports they are ill? They are dispatched to isolation in the medical unit, a fate worse than formal solitary. There they lose all communication with the outside world, access to regular exercise, conversation and contact with other human beings. Test positive, if you are tested–for very few tests have been administered and the county refuses to release positivity rates–and you remain in super-solitary for 10 to 14 days. After that period in medical solitary, you are sent to an intake “pod” or section of the jail, to quarantine for another 10 to 14 days with more restrictions. Facing a month of solitary, quarantine, and restriction, is it any wonder that so few will admit to being ill?
And it’s group punishment: your friends and fellow incarcerated in your home pod are deemed as threats, ill or not, and put in lockdown. For most people that means being locked in your cold cell alone for 23 hours and 15 minutes a day—you will have 45 minutes at best to phone someone to tell them you are still alive, shower, exchange a book, grab a very short conversation. It’s simply solitary on a mass basis. Its so widespread that correctional officers have regularly been forced to deliver food across the facility, facilitating even more spread out into the community.
It’s a cold fate literally, for cells, especially in the women’s sections, are by multiple accounts very very cold. Persons inside report the heat seems to have been turned off and they have been provided an extra blanket as compensation.
There is one exception to the solitary rule: there is a big dormitory room, now split into two quarantine sections, one for men and one for women. There you sleep and live on a bunk bed, less than 3 feet from everyone else, sharing communal showers and toilets.
Pain and Protest
To people inside and friends and family outside, unable to help, these are painful times.
Is it any wonder that women speak out from inside the jail at inhumane conditions, the lack of basic hygiene, privacy and clothing needs, the inability to access any programs? What official decided to stop friends and family, even before COVID times, from sending in from Amazon s bras and basic Christian crosses? Should it surprise anyone that threats of retribution and more are meted out regularly to grievances over food by teenagers and diabetics, the lack of masks and sanitizer, the failure to provide adequate time out of cells and access to phones and tablets to contact loved ones? Or that hunger strikes have now broken out in the jail?
So many persons are suspected of infection, and so few tested, that most of the jail has been in COVID solitary conditions for weeks on end. People inside have called out to multiple community organizations, the press, their lawyers, and the courts for relief. Protests occur regularly still outside the jail and county offices. To date, to no avail: our elected officials and health department see no evil, hear no evil, fail to act at every turn. Meanwhile the pain, and protest, build.