Tracking code caldwell guardian

Friday, March 27, 2009

ACLU Press Release on Canyon County Jail Demands Cleanup And Alternative Sentencing



It looks like the efforts to incite a lawsuit from the ACLU by County Sheriff and Commishes may have backfired! ACLU is not suing for a new jail but to clean up the jail and put the right people behind bars!

ACLU Seeks Immediate Improvement To Grossly Inadequate Conditions At Canyon County Jail

BOISE, ID - The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Idaho today asked a U.S. district court judge to order officials in Canyon County, Idaho to immediately fix a number of serious problems plaguing the Canyon County Jail in Caldwell that have left a number of prisoners physically sick and that threaten the health and safety of prisoners and staff.

Today's motion seeking an immediate order comes a little more than three months after the ACLU first filed a federal class-action lawsuit challenging the indecent, cruel and inhumane conditions at the Canyon County Jail.

"The dangerous conditions that have been allowed to exist are so hazardous to human life that they must not be tolerated any longer," said Stephen Pevar, a senior ACLU attorney. "It is shameful that county officials have allowed such horrendous conditions to persist."

According to the motion, the jail has been overcrowded for more than a decade, and in 2008, more than 20 prisoners a day were forced to sleep on the floor due to lack of bed space. In addition, inspection reports from the Idaho Sheriff's Association show that the jail is poorly ventilated and unsanitary. In October 2008, Sheriff Smith notified the County Commissioners that a "large scale renovation" of the jail was needed, including "deep sanitizing and cleaning" of the housing unit, that sewer pipes inside the jail were leaking, and that the jail has a host of other problems. None of these problems were fixed prior to the filing of the lawsuit.

According to the ACLU's motion, numerous complaints about the sanitary conditions of the detention center have been submitted by prisoners in recent months, including one by a prisoner with severe asthma who said the significant mold in her housing area was placing her health "in grave danger." Another prisoner complained that there appear to be "insects breeding in the stagnant water in the bathroom from the plugged floor drains and cracked floor seals." And a third complaint from a prisoner highlighted the fact that a mattress is not sanitized before it is issued to the next prisoner. These complaints are consistent with findings of the Idaho Sheriff's Association, which has found the jail in violation of its standards.

"The law couldn't be clearer that all prisoners in this country have a constitutional right to live in sanitary conditions," said Lea C. Cooper, staff attorney with the ACLU of Idaho, who is co-counsel on the case. "Simply put, county officials are failing to uphold their constitutional obligations by forcing prisoners to live in the kind of squalor that has existed at the Canyon County Jail for years."

The ACLU filed its federal lawsuit in January, but, due to a technicality, needed to refile it earlier this month. The lawsuit charges that the jail is overcrowded and shower facilities are teeming with toxic mold and rust. The lawsuit also charges that the detention center suffers from inadequate ventilation and temperature control, inadequate sanitation, and inadequate plumbing.

"This case displays the need for us to move away from our state's over-reliance on incarceration," said Monica Hopkins, Executive Director of the ACLU of Idaho. "Implementing policies that emphasize alternatives to incarceration - especially for first-time and non-violent offenders - would be both more humane and fiscally prudent."

A copy of the today's motion for preliminary injunction is available online at: www.aclu.org/racialjustice/gen/39187lgl20090327.html

Additional information about the ACLU is available online at: www.aclu.org

Monica D. Hopkins, CFRE
Executive Director ACLU of Idaho
PO Box 1897
Boise, Idaho 83701

County Officials have offered the following response the the ACLU:

"With respect to the underlying allegations, the county disagrees with the ACLU’s contentions of cruel and unusual treatment of inmates. Many of the allegations are untrue, exaggerated, or misleading. For example, the ACLU falsely alleges that inmates are required to sleep on the floor. To the contrary, inmates are at times issued plastic cots on which to place their mattresses and bedding materials, but do not sleep on the floor.

While the jail is not always comfortable for some inmates, it nevertheless is not constitutionally deficient. Regardless of the fact that the jail is free of constitutional deficiencies, the county is making changes for improvements of the conditions in the jail. Recently, the county has installed a new fire alarm system and will begin the process of renovating the inmates’ bathroom and shower facilities next week.

Moreover, the jail population has decreased in recent months and the county is working on solutions to reduce the jail population without increasing safety risks to the citizens of Canyon County. Next week, the Commissioners anticipate considering a resolution to impose a voluntary cap on the inmate population in the Dale Haile Detention Center and jail annex based on design capacity."

3 comments:

  1. The sheriff and the Commissioners have been trying to get the ACLU to sue them thinking the ACLU would be in their corner to force the taxpayers to build their new jail . The screw turns. They get sued but not to build a new jail. They get sued to clean and maintain the present jail and to be more judicious on who they put into jail. You have to love it. This goes back to the old saying " Be careful of what you ask for" you just might get it!!!

    The jail passed all jail inspections and maintained certification through all the years Nourse was sheriff. It lost certification the first year Smith took office and has not been certified since. Could management be a factor in this mess? The sheriff and the commissioners have been trying to get a new jail built for the past five years and are no closer today than when they started. They thought letting the present jail get run down and getting sued would help them get a new jail. Boy did they get fooled.

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  2. Wasn't Captain Munsey the Jail Commander for both Nourse and Smith?

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  3. This is'nt about who is sueing who, what people don't seem to understand is that no matter who it is that is incarcerated that person goes in an catches a diease...then brings it home and from home to society. I do believe that this issue is of great importance, don't wait until your family member goes into Jail/Prison to find out the hard way.....

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