Deadly South Carolina prison riot exposes
staffing shortage
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[April 19, 2018]
By Ian Simpson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A gang-related melee
at a South Carolina prison that ended with seven dead and 17 injured,
the deadliest U.S. prison riot in a quarter century, exposed the
vulnerability of an understaffed system.
Forty-four guards were on duty overseeing 1,583 inmates at Lee
Correctional Institution in Bishopville, South Carolina, when the
violence broke out, and it took eight hours to put an end to the riot
early on Monday.
Across the country, cuts to state budgets have left state prison systems
understaffed, a reality that prison officials and law enforcement
experts say increases the risk of being unable to contain any outbreaks
of violence quickly.
"We're grossly understaffed at many facilities across the United
States," said Brian Dawe, executive director of the American
Correctional Officer Intelligence Network, a clearinghouse for best
practices and information for corrections officers and others.
The South Carolina riot was sparked by a fight among prison gangs over
turf and contraband around the time of a shift change in three cell
blocks. That meant more staffers than usual were present, but the melee
still went unchecked for hours, Bryan Stirling, South Carolina's prison
director, told a news conference.
About a quarter of South Carolina's state prison guard jobs are
unfilled, Stirling told The State newspaper in January. South Carolina
is far from alone in having double-digit vacancy rates.
There are no national figures on prison staffing, but state records show
that 16 percent of guard jobs are unfilled in Delaware and 31 percent in
Oklahoma, as well as 15 percent of all corrections jobs, including
guards, in Arkansas.
Similarly, 16 percent of guard positions in North Carolina prisons and
14 percent in Texas were unfilled late last year, according to local
media. Missouri had a shortage of more than 400 guards and officers were
being bused from one prison to another on overtime to cover shifts.
The federal system had a ratio of 10.3 inmates per correctional officer
in 2005 and a ratio of 4.9 inmates per prison staff, according to the
Bureau of Justice Statistics. In some states facing staff shortages,
there might be one officer for every 40 or 50 inmates, union officials
said.
The ratio at the Lee Correctional Institution Sunday evening was 35.9
inmates per guard.
Dawe put the ideal ratio at about five to one, but Michele Deitch, a
lecturer on corrections at the University of Texas, said it depended on
layout of the prison and the type of facility, such as whether it was
minimum or maximum security.
"It's not like you can take one number and apply it to every facility,"
Deitch said. "It's not really a great indicator."
Compounding the chaos, when the fighting erupted in South Carolina on
Sunday, all the guards pulled out to await police backup. It took four
hours for officers to move into the first dorm, and their response was
slowed by having to deal with wounded inmates, Stirling said.
Shaundra Scott, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union
in South Carolina, said the mayhem underscored that state prisons lack
personnel to keep inmates safe, as well as protocols to quell unrest.
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A guard tower is seen at the Lee Correctional Institution in
Bishopville, Lee County, South Carolina, U.S., April 16, 2018.
REUTERS/Randall Hill/File Photo
"They don't have the staff to keep things running in the prison,"
she said. Scott added that mixing juvenile with adult inmates, the
use of solitary confinement and a lack of mental health treatment
also fed violence.
South Carolina Department of Corrections spokesman Jeffrey Taillon
declined to comment on Wednesday. He referred a reporter to
Stirling's Monday statement that the state was beginning to retain
staff through extra pay, bonuses and overtime after years of losing
about 150 officers annually.
The number of Americans in state prisons fell to 1.38 million in
2016, down about 4 percent from a decade earlier, according to U.S.
Department of Justice data. But experts say the drop was not enough
to close the guard shortage substantially.
Budgets have been cut for several years, with a survey of 45 states
by the Vera Institute of Justice in New York showing a 0.5 percent
decline in prison expenditures from 2010 through 2015. South
Carolina's spending dropped 2.4 percent over that period, with the
sharpest declines in Nevada, down 14.7 percent, and Michigan, down
12.4 percent.
Oklahoma Corrections Director Joe Allbaugh, citing the South
Carolina violence, said he recognized the risks potentially facing
prisons in his cash-strapped state, which announced a hiring freeze
on corrections officers in February.
"This could have easily been us," Allbaugh, who has been critical of
a funding shortage in a state with one of the highest rates of
incarceration, said on Twitter.
Plagued by high turnover, some prisons are turning to overtime to
make up for staffing gaps as they struggle to fill low-paying jobs
seen as dangerous and undesirable in a growing U.S. economy with a
tight labor market.
Jackie Switzer, a former prison guard and executive director of the
Oklahoma Corrections Professionals lobbying group, said officers
often were asked to work overtime or double shifts.
"They are not as responsive as they would be if they were fresh.
That in turn creates a dangerous situation," he said.
(Additional reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas; Editing by
Dan Grebler)
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