UMWA files complaint about Fayette Co., Pa. Prison conditions with U.S. Dept. of Justice

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

AUGUST 18, 2016

[TRIANGLE, VA.] The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) International Union on Tuesday filed a complaint with the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) Civil Rights Division on behalf of inmates and employees at the Fayette County, Pa. Prison, pointing out unsanitary conditions, routine maintenance deficiencies that put corrections officers and inmates in severe danger, compromised structural integrity of the facility and more.

 

“This facility is dangerous to the people who are incarcerated there, the people who work there and the entire community,” UMWA International President Cecil E. Roberts said. “I served in combat in Vietnam, and I worked miles underground in a coal mine. I have rarely been in a place that made me more concerned about my personal safety and the safety of those around me than when I toured the Fayette County prison last year.

 

“The fact that this prison is still in use is a gross disservice to the people of Fayette County and a scar on the reputation of the Fayette County Commission,” Roberts said. “We have been pleading with the Commission for years to take action to correct this problem, yet nothing has been done. They won’t even respond to our correspondence.

 

“They will have to respond to the Department of Justice now,” Roberts said. “This is serious business, and the Fayette County Commission has frankly refused to do its job on behalf of the people they represent. They have refused to address the very real safety concerns of the corrections officers who are charged with maintaining order in the prison.

 

“And I’m not a person who believes in coddling prisoners, but the conditions in that facility violate the Eighth Amendment of the constitution prohibiting cruel and unusual punishment,” Roberts said.

 

The UMWA represents the corrections officers at the facility. The union’s complaint focuses on issues of inadequate sanitation; crumbling, unrepaired and unsafe infrastructure, inadequate fire safety infrastructure and overcrowding. The UMWA is asking the DOJ to undertake its own investigation of the facility to determine whether or not conditions in the prison violate the Eighth and Fourteenth amendments of the U.S. Constitution.

 

The Union is also asking the DOJ to require the Fayette County Commission to “either adopt policies and take action to remedy the deficiencies at the jail and any further constitutional violations uncovered by DOJ’s investigation or to begin the process of planning for and constructing a facility to replace the jail.”

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