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News / Northwest

State prison may miss target for reforms

Report: Inmates need more time out of cells

By TOM JAMES, Associated Press
Published: April 13, 2018, 10:52pm
2 Photos
This Nov. 18, 2011, photo, shows the Oregon State Penitentiary, in Salem, Ore. Disability rights leaders say men incarcerated in the behavioral health unit at the Oregon State Penitentiary spent nearly 23 hours a day confined to small cells last year.
This Nov. 18, 2011, photo, shows the Oregon State Penitentiary, in Salem, Ore. Disability rights leaders say men incarcerated in the behavioral health unit at the Oregon State Penitentiary spent nearly 23 hours a day confined to small cells last year. (Danielle Peterson/Statesman-Journal via AP) Photo Gallery

SALEM, Ore. — An Oregon prison facility housing mentally ill inmates isn’t fixing problems fast enough to meet a timeline agreed to by the state, according to a report released by a watchdog group.

While some of the worst conditions have been fixed, and officials point to recent gains, advocates say the state isn’t making enough progress to complete a top priority: Ending de facto solitary confinement for mentally ill inmates by allowing them at least 20 hours per week outside of their cells within four years.

“If you average out all the ups and downs … there’s never been a 12-month period with a trajectory sufficient to reach that goal,” said Joel Greenberg, an attorney with the nonprofit Disability Rights Oregon and main author of the report.

The group, a federally-designated advocate for disabled people in the state, released the report Tuesday.

At the center of the controversy is the Behavioral Health Unit, part of the Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem.

In 2016, officials agreed to a memorandum of understanding after the Oregon group exposed problems and made clear they were prepared to sue the state.

Chief among the issues cited in the original report were violent incidents called cell extractions and inmates being confined to their cells without the opportunity to go outside, exercise or get mental health treatment.

When the group first looked into the facility, Greenberg said, mentally ill prisoners often spent 23 hours per day locked in single-person cells.

In response, Department of Corrections Director Colette Peters signed the memorandum, which included agreements to work toward reducing both over the next four years, and specified 20 hours per week of out-of-cell time, or just under three hours per day, as a key target. The agreement also required the state to share data with the group so that advocates could monitor state progress.

In the first year, Greenberg said inmates appeared to be getting no more than five hours out of their cells per week. In the second year, the average appeared to climb only to about six, putting the state on course to fall short of its goal.

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