Washington state to furlough some prisoners in bid to limit coronavirus outbreaks
Published 3:36 pm Monday, April 13, 2020
- The Monroe Correctional Complex, where a disturbance due to coronavirus concerns occurred last week.
OLYMPIA — Facing pressure over how they are responding to the new coronavirus inside Washington’s correctional facilities, state officials today announced they would set free as many as 950 prisoners to provide more physical distance and limit any potential outbreaks.
To do that, Corrections Secretary Stephen Sinclair will grant emergency furloughs to inmates in minimum custody settings who meet certain criteria, according to a news release from the agency.
Some prisoners will be freed through the commutation process, while others will be released through a graduated reentry program, according to Gov. Jay Inslee’s office.
“This will help allow for increased physical distancing throughout the Department of Corrections’ system, reducing the population by up to 950 people to continue to reduce the risks to incarcerated individuals while balancing public safety concerns,” Inslee said in a news statement.
The response comes after the state Supreme Court on Friday evening ordered Inslee and Sinclair to take “all necessary steps” in order to protect inmates in state prisons from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Monday’s decision was announced at roughly the same time state officials filed a 153-page report ordered by the court to describe how they are working to keep prisoners safe from outbreaks of COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus.
The report outlines steps that the DOC has taken to limit any outbreaks of COVID-19. The agency described its efforts to follow guidelines set by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to try to implement social distancing, as well as setting up isolation and quarantine units.
That ruling — which came after an emergency motion filed on behalf of inmates by Columbia Legal Services — required a report from the state by today on steps they are taking to protect prisoners and to show their “emergency plan for implementation.”
The justices’ unanimous opinion did not require the immediate release of prisoners to free up space for social distancing, nor did it grant a request to appoint a “special master” to help oversee corrections officials’ response to the outbreak.
That emergency motion was prompted by a mass disturbance at Monroe Correctional Complex after fears of a COVID-19 outbreak there.
As of today, seven prisoners and five corrections staffers at Monroe Correctional Complex had tested positive for COVID-19, according to the agency’s website.
The original lawsuit by Columbia Legal Services was filed late last month on behalf of five prison inmates with medical conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease, which leave them vulnerable to serious harm or death if they become infected by the coronavirus.