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State, local officials must reform jail and detention practices during COVID-19

Leaders have a moral obligation to protect the millions of lives at risk

 

WASHINGTON – The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and over 150 other groups called upon the National Governors Association (NGA), U.S. Conference of Mayors (USCM), and the National Sheriff’s Association (NSA) to act immediately to help stem the tide of Covid-19. In letters sent to the three organizations, the groups urge them to use their authority to reasonably release people from prisons and jails to protect the lives of the more than 2.2 million people nationwide who are currently incarcerated, including more than 600,000 individuals in local jails.

The groups also offer guidelines designed to keep incarcerated individuals, correctional officers, and their communities as safe, healthy, and virus-free as possible during this time of national and global crisis, including:

 

Each day, people are booked into and released from correctional facilities like prisons and jails, while correctional officers, vendors, and other staff cycle in and out. Worse, the enclosed nature of jails and prisons, as well as the difficulties of maintaining proper hygiene inside these facilities, make them perfect breeding grounds for COVID-19.

 

Access to clean water and showers is limited, and many are forced to share a single bathroom. Hand sanitizer is often banned, and handcuffs can prevent people from covering their mouths when they cough. Moreover, the prison population is more likely to have chronic health conditions. All of these circumstances create a virus tinderbox that threatens all incarcerated individuals and correctional employees, as well as their families and communities at large.

 

Though experts are recommending to physically separate individuals who have been infected from those who are still well, this is nearly, if not entirely, impossible in correctional facilities.

 

The letter addressed to the NGA includes specific recommendations to address these challenges — for the safety and welfare of all of our communities — including:

 

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