While the CT DOC has given some incarcerated people credit card-sized bars of soap during the pandemic, others have to buy it through commissary (at a cost equal to about 20% of one week's wages).pic.twitter.com/xkww5DjbyT
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While the CT DOC has given some incarcerated people credit card-sized bars of soap during the pandemic, others have to buy it through commissary (at a cost equal to about 20% of one week's wages).pic.twitter.com/xkww5DjbyT
Some people inside Connecticut prisons and jails ARE given soap but aren’t allowed to shower.pic.twitter.com/SJSNOr4NgR
No cleaning supplies are available for purchase in the commissary. Some people are given supplies to disinfect their cells once per week. Others aren’t. They're left trying to use soap or shampoo to clean themselves, their cells, their masks if they have them.pic.twitter.com/xSRqfCgxIm
In some CT DOC facilities, people are given one bottle of bleach to last a 100-person dormitory for a week. In others, they’re given only diluted bleach or diluted Lemonall. People are left having to choose between cleaning themselves or their living areas.pic.twitter.com/URiz98dKqa
Common areas and showers are shared by tens or hundreds of people. Some are being cleaned only once a day. In some CT DOC facilities, handcuffs are used to move people out of their cells, and the handcuffs aren’t sanitized between uses.
Some people have gotten recommendations from the DOC for sanitizing and cleaning. But DOC conditions make it impossible for them to follow those recommendations.pic.twitter.com/WeDDnIMAlG
When someone tests positive for COVID-19 in a Connecticut prison or jail is transferred, their personal space isn’t cleaned. People living around them aren’t given special cleaning supplies.pic.twitter.com/zMfWxlYVd7
Last week, the DOC said it was going to start spraying disinfectant in some spaces. But it's unclear what chemicals the DOC is using, or if it's taking safety precautions like 1) moving people out of harm's way while spraying 2) thoroughly ventilating spaces after spraying.
The Governor and DOC's response to COVID-19 in Connecticut prisons and jails isn't healthy, safe, or humane. It puts people's health and lives at risk.pic.twitter.com/ZK5iP7tvJ8
@CTCorrections seems to think that inmates will drink it because it has alcohol in it. They would have to boil it down to even do that and I’m sure doc can at least keep it in common areas for inmates if it’s a concern
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