From Prison Policy Initiative <[email protected]>
Subject Incarcerated people are particularly vulnerable to environmental injustices
Date April 20, 2022 3:03 PM
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Society’s calls for a healthier environment rarely extend to incarcerated people

Prison Policy Initiative updates for April 20, 2022 Exposing how mass incarceration harms communities and our national welfare

Prisons are a daily environmental injustice [[link removed]] As Earth Day approaches, many people contemplate past and future demands for clean air, clean water, and protected landscapes. But society’s calls for a healthier environment rarely extend to incarcerated people, many of whom are confined in toxic detention facilities. [[link removed]]

by Leah Wang

No one is spared from reckoning with human-induced environmental change, like pollution from industrial emitters and increasingly severe natural disasters. Yet in correctional facilities, incarcerated people have no agency over almost any aspect of their lives, including their exposure to harmful and even potentially lethal conditions. Prisons fail to provide a basic standard of livability [[link removed]], while climate change and extreme weather test the ability of prison administrations to carry out contingency plans for the hundreds of thousands of people in their care. The ways in which environmental hazard and risk maps onto other unsafe conditions of confinement amounts to a human rights crisis that has persisted for decades.

Prisons are sited on uninhabitable, toxic wastelands

The rural geography of many of our nation's prisons isn't just unfortunate for those having to travel far from home [[link removed]] to visit; prisons are too often built near (or directly on) abandoned industrial sites, places deemed fit only for dumping toxic materials. One-third (32%) of state and federal prisons are located within 3 miles [[link removed].] of federal Superfund sites, the most serious contaminated places requiring extensive cleanup. Research warns against [[link removed]] living, working, or going to school near Superfund sites, as this proximity is linked to lower life expectancy and a litany of terrible [[link removed]] illnesses [[link removed]].

The ways in which environmental hazard and risk maps onto other unsafe conditions of confinement amounts to a human rights crisis that has persisted for decades.As a result of being on or near wastelands, prisons constantly expose those inside to serious environmental hazards, from tainted water to harmful air pollutants. These conditions manifest in health conditions and deaths that are unmistakably linked to those hazards.

In western Pennsylvania, for example, a state prison located on top of a coal waste deposit has done permanent damage, causing skin rashes, sores, cysts, gastrointestinal problems, and cancer, with symptoms often appearing soon after arrival. A scathing report [[link removed]] from 2014 exposed these patterns of illness and neglect, but the prison — SCI Fayette [[link removed]] — remains open.

And the devastating health outcomes at one prison in Louisiana was a smoking gun for environmental injustice — or a smoking tire, in this case. Laborde Correctional Center [[link removed]]'s neighbor, an abandoned tire landfill, caught fire and burned [[link removed]] for four days before the prison decided to evacuate. The state's environmental agency and the tire company are on the hook for failing to address compliance issues, but the damage had already been done to the health of the people trapped inside the prison's walls.

Indeed, no region is more of a poster child for harmful prison siting than Appalachia, where new prisons have served [[link removed]] as a failed economic replacement for the waning coal industry. For example, devastating mining and mountaintop removal activity in Kentucky has left residents — and now, many incarcerated people — with high rates of cancer and warnings against drinking or bathing in the tap water. With these day-to-day health hazards in mind, the promise of stable prison jobs and related economic development in Appalachia is hampered by its appalling environmental legacy.

This is not just a rural phenomenon. The Rikers jail complex in New York City is sited squarely on a landfill [[link removed]], making it a particularly cruel metaphor; the leaching of toxic fumes from poorly decomposing trash has caused anguish to the point where correctional officers have sued the city [[link removed]]. It's clear that those who set out to build these prisons care no more about the people inside than they do about garbage.

Bad water and bad air: Incarcerated people are forced to drink and breathe contaminants

Whether the result of terrible prison siting or run-down infrastructure, poor water quality plagues prisons nationwide, but little has been done. At one of the older state prisons in Massachusetts, incarcerated people fear for their health because their water has been " dark in color [[link removed]]," bad-smelling, and clogging filters with sediment for years. Testing showed dangerous levels of manganese, which can lead to neurological disorders. Meanwhile, a Texas facility was providing water with elevated levels of arsenic [[link removed]] for ten years before the courts got involved, and an Arizona prison's water [[link removed]], smelling foul and causing rashes, tested positive for a "petroleum product." The list truly goes on and on, with a wide range of toxic substances swirling around the water supply of prisons.

In addition to heavy metal and oil, water with unacceptable levels of bacteria has caused outbreaks [[link removed]] of Legionnaires' disease — a potentially fatal type of pneumonia — at prisons in California, Illinois, New York and other states. Not only are prison administrations hesitant to replace the aging, corroded pipes that may have contributed to this horrendous bacterial growth, but staff enjoy free bottled water or bring in their own to avoid illness, leaving incarcerated people's concerns largely unheard and unaddressed.

In the 1970s and 80s, the U.S. government took a firm stance against radon, an invisible, odorless gas known to cause lung cancer in indoor environments, launching an all-out eradication initiative in homes across the country. Yet in prisons, testing for and mitigation of radon has not been a priority. In 2018, a court found that a Connecticut prison was " knowingly and recklessly [[link removed]]" exposing its incarcerated population to alarming levels of radon, in violation of the Constitutional right to an environment free from toxic substances. Incarcerated people have the right [[link removed]] to clean air and water no less than anyone else, yet these and other basic necessities are routinely denied to them.

Over 1 million people are locked up in prisons, environments almost guaranteed to make them sick, while medical copays [[link removed]] in many prisons only disincentivize treatment, making illness worse and in some cases more likely to spread. Often, correctional staff are also exposed to dangerous levels of pollutants, and concerns about health and safety are ignored by prison officials. This glaring cruelty of confinement makes it hard to believe that these "correctional" facilities make anyone better off.

Eleven miles of sewers: New prison and jail construction threatens human and environmental health

Over the years, we've offered several reasons not to build or expand [[link removed]] prisons and jails, but siting new correctional facilities brings up questions of ecological and health impacts. For example, when residents of Otsego County, Michigan voted against building a new county jail in late 2021, they prevented more than just a fiscally wasteful campaign to over-incarcerate people. The budget in the county and engineering firm's feasibility study [[link removed]] made an assumption that the site would require "no hazardous material mitigation," even though government documents from four years prior declared the very same site to " contain hazardous substances [[link removed]]," in this case petroleum. Either the proposed "justice complex" would have required millions of dollars in soil remediation, or the damning document could have been rescinded or even ignored, allowing the county to do what too many other jurisdictions have done — knowingly incarcerate people on toxic land.

The plan to build a new jail in Otsego County, Michigan, would have been on an undeveloped site. According to a a public document from 2016 (top) [[link removed]], the site had contaminated soils that would have required extensive clean-up before any digging and construction could take place. That fact was conveniently ignored by Otsego County public safety officials, who made an assumption of "no hazardous materials mitigation," in their 2020 feasibility study (bottom) [[link removed]], creating the illusion of an environmentally and financially viable location.

And next to Great Salt Lake in Utah, a massive new prison is under construction, despite great concern [[link removed]] about its decidedly bad location and environmental impact. An engineering industry magazine even admitted it: The forthcoming Utah State Prison and its outbuildings, sited on a "remote wetland area" in a "sensitive environment," is more like " a small city [of] 7,000 people [[link removed]]," more than half of those incarcerated. The city-sized project, requiring six miles of new roads and 11 miles of new sewer lines, is built upon soils that are known to "liquefy" when rattled by an earthquake (which would not be unusual, as this region sits upon on a network of geological fault lines). Plus, the new facility is located next to a closed, unregulated landfill; how long will it be before the untreated medical issues [[link removed]] in Utah's prisons are exacerbated by toxic landfill fumes?

Prisons refuse to respond to climate change-related emergencies

With their unwillingness to prepare for disasters due to global climate change, prisons (and other parts of the criminal legal system) stand to endanger or delay justice for people charged with a crime. For example, when Hurricane Harvey tore through the greater Houston area in Texas in 2017, several thousand incarcerated people were evacuated, but just as many were forced to wait out the storm [[link removed]] in their facilities, with no plumbing and dwindling supplies. Not far away, Harvey caused flooding that put courtrooms out of commission [[link removed]] and forced people detained pretrial to wait in jail longer for their day in court.

And in Louisiana, a state known both for its high incarceration rate [[link removed]] and for its vulnerability to storms, hurricanes Katrina and Ida exposed serious shortcomings in disaster planning for its prison and jail populations. Trapped in dilapidated, flooding buildings and cut off from communication with loved ones, incarcerated people in Louisiana were simply left behind [[link removed]] when evacuation was ordered for parish residents. In California, where wildfires are the primary environmental threat, evacuation plans are rare [[link removed]] and unpracticed; the large populations in many prisons present a logistical nightmare — a disincentive to move incarcerated people out of harm's way. In the words of Loyola University professor Andrea Armstrong, incarcerated people unwillingly stand " on the front lines of climate change. [[link removed]]"

In many regions, scorching temperatures spurred on by global climate change are an active threat to incarcerated people with no access to relief. While the prevalence of air-conditioned homes [[link removed]] in U.S. cities has skyrocketed, according to recent Census data, prisons have been slow or downright unwilling to respond to increasingly unbearable conditions, as we found [[link removed]] in a 2019 investigation of the hottest parts of the country. Intolerably hot environments are worse for people on certain medications or with medical conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure, which incarcerated people tend to have at higher rates [[link removed]] than the general population.

Experts have already warned that climate change will impact the criminal legal system in profound ways beyond adapting correctional facilities to a warming world. An entire generation of climate migrants [[link removed]], people forced to flee where they live due to extreme weather, may ironically become ensnared in the U.S. " crimmigration [[link removed]]" system, finding themselves locked up and even more defenseless in the face of disaster. As the climate changes, so must prisons and other confinement facilities — and not in ways that expand the massive footprint of the criminal legal system.

As research overwhelmingly shows, people in prison tend to come from disadvantaged, criminalized communities [[link removed]] — the same communities bearing the burdens [[link removed]] of environmental injustice. Moving people from the environmental hazards deliberately imposed where they live, to similar or more extreme hazards in prison through the criminal legal system, is an inane practice with enormous moral and fiscal costs. Decarceration efforts (like changing sentencing laws and accelerating compassionate release) will move people out of these death traps back into their home communities, where funding saved can be directed to where it should have gone all along.

* * *

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Other news: Beyond the count: A deep dive into state prison populations [[link removed]]

The walls and restrictions that keep incarcerated people out of public life also keep them out of the public eye: most of what we know about them comes from the prison system itself.

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Our work is made possible by private donations. Can you help us keep going? We can accept tax-deductible gifts online [[link removed]] or via paper checks sent to PO Box 127 Northampton MA 01061. Thank you!

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