Floods exposed weaknesses in California prisons’ emergency plans — but they still aren’t ready

FILE Growing Tulare Lake cuts off th Avenue south of Corcoran in Kings County Courtesy DWR In amid record-breaking rain and snow two prisons in the southern San Joaquin Valley faced a serious threat of flooding But neither prison California State Prison Corcoran or the Substance Abuse Recovery Facility had a robust evacuation plan on hand and ready for the looming mishap Instead the prisons developed a joint plan to transfer roughly incarcerated people to other state prisons within to days or longer Wheelchair-bound individuals the plan stated would take six days to evacuate And department buses intended to shuttle people to safety could take up to a day to arrive The floods that year ultimately did not reach the prisons but the threat they posed illustrated how California s -prisoner corrections system has failed to prepare for natural disasters That s according to a summary issued this month by an independent agency that oversees the department s disciplinary process and internal investigations While California s prisons are vulnerable to wildfires floods and earthquakes we ascertained they are not adequately prepared to respond to emergencies posed by natural disasters stated the document by the Office of Inspector General which reviewed emergency plans for state prisons after fielding concerns about the department s tragedy response The review detailed deep fractures in the department s urgency preparedness including issues of transportation varied threat assessment methodologies lacking mutual aid agreements timely evacuations and prison overcrowding As of December California s prison system was operating at roughly or people over its designed limit according to the summary Not only are a few prisons overcrowded but the department is unable to evacuate the incarcerated population and staff at the bulk prisons within the first critical hours of an crisis the analysis noted Without the ability to fleetly evacuate prisons it is likely that wildfires floods and earthquakes will outcome in loss of life within the incarcerated population Notably the inspector general detected that none of the prisons included a plan to evacuate incarcerated people outside their gates but rather focused on moving the incarcerated population to and from locations within the prison The summary concluded with a list of recommendations including ones that would bring the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation into compliance with California regulations around urgency planning Carlee Purdum an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Houston who researches how disasters impact incarcerated people explained the record is a first step in identifying more information to encouragement prisons and corrections agencies as they plan and prepare I ve never seen anything like this before Purdum mentioned Prisons and corrections agencies are very marginalized and isolated in the crisis and accident planning space The important takeaway should be that we have not engaged in these kinds of discussions and put forth the kind of state level tools and accountability into these institutions Advocates for years have been sounding the alarm over the solutions in which California prisons are ill-equipped to confront surroundings hazards due to issues such as overcrowding and aging infrastructure A review by the UCLA Luskin School of Inhabitants Affairs and the nonprofit organization Ella Baker Center for Human Rights chronicled those concerns and urged the state to implement safeguards People inside have a fear that the actual plan is to abandon them in the circumstance of an crisis It is deeply troubling stated James King director of programs for the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights In these inhabitants wellness crises it s not just going to affect the people in the prisons either incarcerated there or working there It s going to impact the entire county the entire region Trucks driving through the flooded intersection on Highway near Corcoran on March The flood was caused by rising water levels on the Tule River after a series of storms Photo by Larry Valenzuela CalMatters CatchLight Local Those concerns were echoed by Dax Proctor statewide coordinator for Californians United for a Responsible Budget a statewide coalition of organizations that view environment hazards as a key reason to close prisons The number one method to address these issues at hand is to reduce the number of people locked up in California prisons as rapidly as achievable Proctor reported A good starting place would be those the majority vulnerable to context hazards Administrators from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and the California Governor s Office of Emergency Services answered questions about the description before lawmakers at a hearing Thursday They assured lawmakers that the department would not work alone in a large-scale urgency California has a vast amount of information and we would rely heavily on our federal state and local partners to assist us with the evacuation of an entire prison disclosed Melissa Prill special agent-in-charge at the corrections department s Office of Correctional Safety But Sen Laura Richardson a Democrat from Inglewood announced that in an unpredictable situation those partners may be busy assisting other people To assume that these other agencies are going to be available to help you or to help us in a prison circumstances is not something going forward we have the freedom to assume Richardson stated I would give this office of inspector general s analysis of your organization I would consider it an F frankly Sen Kelly Seyarto a Republican from Murrieta noted he wasn t extremely critically concerned I think we re getting a little overboard in terms of thinking that we are going to have to evacuate entire prisons Seyarto reported It s just not a practical thing to think that somehow the whole prison is going to catch on fire In a message to CalMatters department spokesperson Mary Xjimenez reported prisons take an all-hazards approach to crisis planning and that it coordinates its plans with the Governor s Office of Crisis Services The department follows the FEMA National Circumstance Management System which is the national doctrine that provides all federal state and local response agencies with a consistent set of principles management structures and a systematic approach to crisis response King explained the department has a history of being unprepared for context hazards and instead reacts to them once they inevitably occur These are purely facts King mentioned The department could accept these facts and do something about them or they could try to manage their response to the record Disappointedly it seems like they ve chosen the latter This is an opportunity to improve their response to see the gaps and to create plans that address the gaps Cayla Mihalovich is a California Local News fellow CalMatters is a constituents interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California s state Capitol works and why it matters