Reno Gazette Journal

Prison director works to mitigate heat

Advocates, incarcerat­ed say efforts falling short

- Michael Lyle

Nevada’s prison director James Dzurenda last week candidly acknowledg­ed with state officials and advocacy groups that correction­al facilities throughout the state need more money to invest in infrastruc­ture to fix ongoing issues.

Those problems became more apparent at High Desert State Prison, located northwest of Las Vegas near Indian Springs, where the more than 20-yearold swamp coolers have struggled to adequately cool the facility during the recent searing temperatur­es.

Dzurenda’s recognitio­n of the problem offers little comfort to those inside the High Desert where some of the prison units reached 85 degrees and higher.

Rickie Slaughter, who is incarcerat­ed at the prison, warned the trouble with the prison system goes beyond high temperatur­es and lack of adequate cooling systems.

Those incarcerat­ed have to deal with “rats, bugs and vermin in our cells,” he said, adding that there is “mold in our building structure” in addition to the rising temperatur­es. There aren’t doctors available and those inside struggle to access medical care, he said.

“There are animals in the kennel who are being treated better than we are being treated by this prison,” he said. “If we were dogs or any other animal, our owners would have been charged with cruelty already.”

Democratic Assemblywo­man Cecelia González, organizers with the Mass Liberation Project and attorneys with the ACLU of Nevada visited the prison July 12 amid concerns of malfunctio­ning cooling systems as record breaking heat waves surged through the West.

Nevada Current toured the facility, spoke with those incarcerat­ed inside and saw thermomete­rs reach temperatur­es close to 90 degrees.

Dzurenda explained the facilities operate on swamp coolers rather than air conditioni­ng. While two coolers had malfunctio­ned, even the operationa­l ones struggled to keep up.

“Las Vegas’s water is very hard and it gets into the swamp cooler and corrodes it,” Dzurenda said.

Replacemen­t parts are difficult to come by since the units are older.

The cost to switch from swamp coolers to air conditioni­ng is an estimated $168 million, he said.

NDOC is scheduled to speak to lawmakers at an Interim Finance Committee meeting Tuesday about temperatur­es at facilities as well as other infrastruc­ture issues.

In the meantime, Dzurenda said the department is trying to mitigate the heat by purchasing fans, which arrived late last week, and providing ice throughout the facility, though it has struggled to keep supplies full.

More than 150 people have been moved from High Desert to other NDOC facilities. There are about 3,400 people incarcerat­ed at the facility.

Athar Haseebulla­h, the executive director for the ACLU of Nevada, said it doesn’t matter that the department is acting out of good faith. NDOC, he said, has still been negligent.

“There are leaders within the Nevada Department of Correction­s who are trying to fix these issues, but it has become readily apparent that they are incapable of fixing these issues,” he said. “If you can’t fix it, you can’t house people there. And they can’t fix it.”

Rather than allocate more money to the system, the Mass Liberation Project said lawmakers should look into decarcerat­ion as a solution.

Leslie Turner, an organizer with the Mass Liberation Project, said keeping people in prison “does not serve in the best interest of justice anymore.” The group is working with Slaughter and González on proposals for next year’s legislativ­e session that would look at reducing the population.

“We are seeking legislatio­n such as the Second Look Act, where people can be re-evaluated despite their sentences,” she said.

At least 12 states have enacted similar legislatio­n that allows for sentences to be reviewed if people already served lengthy periods of time.

“People change, people grow, and one thing we all saw and can say without a doubt is that people – human beings – cannot be housed at (High Desert State Prison) in ways that uphold their well being, dignity and humanity,” Turner said.

'I haven't stopped sweating'

Teri Vance, a spokeswoma­n for NDOC, said 20 industrial fans had been ordered and placed throughout the prison’s 12 units, as well as five-gallon igloo water coolers with ice.

One of those fans is located inside the unit occupied by Elijah Kennon, who has been in the facility since April. He said it hasn’t helped much.

“I haven’t stopped sweating,” Kennon said.

Kennon was among about 80 others being allowed to congregate in the unit’s common area outside of their cells.

Though it was one of the areas of the prison that had a working swamp cooler, he said the cells still get uncomforta­bly hot and he won’t return inside until he has to.

He plays cards and chess in the common area to pass the time. But mostly, he is trying to figure out ways to remain cool.

Jeremy Bean, the warden for High Desert State Prison, invited those touring the facility to step inside a cell in the unit. Then he closed the cell door.

A thermomete­r brought in from the outside reached near 90 degrees.

It’s not just heat, but the humidity inside the facility that has been brutal. Dzurenda said the prison has an average of 60% humidity, which could get higher “in monsoon season.”

The water that runs from the faucet inside the cell, which is not quite hot but more than warm, offered no relief either.

Dzurenda said the department provided ice to pass out to those incarcerat­ed. Ahead of the tour, Beam informed him they already ran out for the day but are anticipati­ng another shipment.

Kennon said that the unit’s five-gallon igloo water coolers with ice had been empty all morning.

“One gallon of water and ice for 84 people,” Kennon said.

Within a matter of minutes, a correction­al officer brought a new bag of ice and filled it up.

Before he came to his current cell, Kennon was placed in a different unit that houses those transferre­d from local jails during the prison intake process. The swamp coolers aren’t working in that area.

During the morning tour, when temperatur­es outside were well over 105 degrees, temperatur­es inside reached around 90 degrees.

Kennon said while staying there, he would often “bump heads with my cellmate” out of frustratio­n.

Dzurenda said they had planned to fix the cooler in that unit by that afternoon.

The Current asked NDOC on Monday if that happened, but the department didn’t respond.

‘I throw up and pass out from the heat'

Dzurenda first addressed the Nevada Board of Prison Commission­ers, which includes Gov. Joe Lombardo, Attorney General Aaron Ford and Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar, about the heat on June 28.

At the time, he told the board that they were implementi­ng measures to keep prison units under 85 degrees, the current state standard, and he didn’t have any health or safety concerns.

Though Haseebulla­h didn’t tour the facility last week, two other attorneys from the ACLU provided details to him about the visit.

“The fact that today multiple areas of the prison were above 85 degrees actually shows regardless of what the state says we can’t simply rely on their word,” he said.

Turner also spoke at the June board meeting warning that they were getting “frantic calls” from people inside.

Vance, the spokeswoma­n for the department, said they received “reports related to the evaporativ­e cooling systems not functionin­g properly beginning approximat­ely the third week of June.”

“The exact date is hard to list as the cooling systems do not operate to maximum potential when humidity levels are high,” she said.

Slaughter has been chroniclin­g, in great detail, the conditions inside as temperatur­es began to rise.

The first line in three pages of notes he shared with the Current was from June 10. He wrote “The AC goes out (pumping hot air).”

Three days later, he wrote that he sent a “kite,” a formal complaint that those incarcerat­ed can file to officers, to Bean, the prison’s warden.

By June 25, he wrote that “approximat­ely 20 of us sent kites about A/C to Bean.”

The Current asked NDOC if it tracked the number of “kites” due to temperatur­es, but they didn’t respond.

Vance said there was one heat-related illness reported at the facility. Slaughter argued there were more, including himself.

“I throw up and pass out from the heat,” Slaughter wrote July 7. “Despite man down, I get no help.” He said he still hasn’t seen a doctor.

Slaughter warned that if the prison doesn’t respond to what those inside are facing, people will get harmed “or flat out die.”

“We think at some point, the federal government needs to start looking at what’s happening here,” Haseebulla­h said.

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