
At 11 am Tuesday morning, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown approached a podium in a Portland government building to deliver an update to the public on the stateโs response to COVD-19. In a crowded room just six miles north of Brownโs press conference, at least a hundred men incarcerated at Columbia River Correctional Institute (CRCI) sat quietly around communal TV sets watching her speak.
In the weeks and days prior, these inmates, their families, their lawyers, and their supporters had sent numerous messages to Brownโs office asking for her to reduce the population size of Oregonโs 14 prisons to prevent the spread of COVID-19. A group of civil rights attorneys had also filed a federal lawsuit demanding Brown release Oregon inmates who were nearing the end of their sentence. In the past week, more than a dozen inmates and prison staff in Oregon had tested positive for the virus.
โThe question was, do I plan to early release adults in custody as a result of the COVID-19 crisis?โ Brown said, responding to a reporter’s question. โThe answer is no.โ
Joshua Hedrick was one of the forty inmates in his unit watching Brownโs announcement. After hearing the news, Hedrick said, there was โa violent reactionโ in the group.
โWe feel abandoned… Weโre scared,โ he said. โIโm scared.โ
Weeks of growing uncertainty and fear bubbled over last week at CRCI, a minimum security menโs prison in Northeast Portland, after a corrections officer brushed off inmatesโ questions about their lack of facemasks and reliable access to soap. For many whoโd had their questions about health care and safety related to COVID-19 repeatedly ignored by prison staff, it was the final straw. The inaction ignited a verbal protest within two 80-person housing units.
“We feel abandoned… Weโre scared. Iโm scared.โ
This pushback inspired CRCI administrators to set up meetingsโthe first of their kind at the prisonโbetween leadership and two inmate representatives from each of the prisonโs eight housing units, where inmates can air their concerns, have their questions answered, and then relay information to other inmates. CRCI Superintendent Nichole Brown says these meetings are meant to act as a sort of โtown hall.โ
โIt gives us structure to have meaningful dialog between adults in custody and leadership representatives,โ Brown said.
But prison officialsโ attempt to calm the anxious group of incarcerated men seemed to only worsen many inmatesโ fears. The Mercury spoke on the phone with five men who serve as inmate representatives in these meetings. All of them expressed disappointment and anger with how their pressing concerns have been received.
โIt wasnโt serious to them, they treated us like kids who didnโt know better,โ said inmate Skyler Floro, whoโs representing CRCIโs Unit 5. โIt was demeaning. They called us in to ask for our questions, but they didnโt want to give us any answers. It was such a disappointment.โ
In preparation for their first meeting, the 16 inmate representatives put together a list of eight concerns and requests related to how the prison was addressing COVID-19. The list included asks for access to reliable cleaning supplies, an easing on punishments for petty infractions (like penalties for not wearing a belt, or walking on the wrong side of the hall), and allowing prisonersโwho sleep two feet apart from one another in an open, 80-person dormitoryโto adhere to social distancing guidelines.
One inmate representative, who asked the Mercury to remain anonymous, said he was interrupted multiple times by administrators while he was reading the list aloud in the meeting. Two other inmates also told the Mercury they observed this happening.
โWe felt unheard, but also disrespected,โ said the anonymous inmate. โAs far as feedback, we basically were told, again and again, โI donโt need to explain this to you, just know that it is being handled.โโ
CRCI has addressed some of the requests. As of Saturday, all CRCI inmates had been given cloth face masks, sewn by CRCI prisoners. Brown said that administrators are now holding pre-shift meetings with prison correctional officers, to ensure that they have the most up-to-date information about rules related to COVID-19โsomething the prisoners had requested after being penalized by officers who didnโt know about policy changes. And, Brown added, staff have added new protocol to make sure the facility doesnโt run out of soap or cleaning supplies.
“It was demeaning. They called us in to ask for our questions, but they didnโt want to give us any answers.”
Inmates mention a few other changes, like staff giving them a Playstation 4 and access to new movie channels.
For prisoners who fear a serious COVID-19 case could kill them, these small offerings sting.
โTheyโre giving us things we didnโt ask for in place of the urgent changes weโve requested,โ said Christopher Schneider, who represents Unit 4 in the group. โItโs easy to put a rat in a maze with cheese at the end… but we have to ask why weโre in a maze in the first place. We arenโt trying to play a game.โ
Schneider suffered a collapsed lung twice this year already, a result of injuries sustained from a stabbing. He knows his health issues make him an easy target for COVID-19. And working in the prisonโs laundry facilityโwhere he isnโt given gloves or a medical mask to wear while handling dirty laundryโonly underscores that risk. Schneider hoped that meeting with prison staff would fix some of his concerns.
โIt only made me more anxious, really,โ said Schneider. โIt was purely cosmetic. Itโs meant to make the inmates in our units feel better, that their voices are being heard. But Iโm having to go back and tell them that theyโre not.โ
Brown told the Mercury Monday that many of the inmatesโ inquiries are complicated, and require collaboration between different areas of the Oregon Department of Corrections (ODOC).
โWe are in the infancy stages of gathering responses,โ she said. โSome questions are more complex than others.โ
Yet itโs the complex requests, like how to treat inmates who show symptoms of COVID-19, that inmates believe are most critical to address.
Joshua Hedrick was one of the first inmates at CRCI to be placed in solitary confinement when he showed signs of contracting COVID-19 in March. With a fever, cough, and constant headache, Hedrick had tested negative for the flu. He wasnโt offered a COVID-19 test. Instead, he was ordered to change into a jumpsuit reserved for people facing discipline and placed in solitary confinementโreferred to as โdisciplinary segregationโ by ODOC and โthe holeโ by inmates. He wasnโt allowed to bring in any personal items or clothing. During his three-day stay, Hedrick had access to a bar of soap and a sink with only cold water. He was allowed one shower and was checked on twice a day by a nurse who, according to Hedrick, wasnโt changing her gloves between inspecting different patients in the solitary unit. He wasnโt able to call his family or girlfriend to tell them what was going on.
โIt felt no different than being in hole for some disciplinary reason,โ said Hedrick. โIt was awful.โ
Now recovered, Hedrick said heโs aware of several men with severe COVID-19 symptoms who refuse to tell doctors theyโre sick to avoid being placed in a solitary cell. Hedrick is not a member of the representative group.
In their meetings with CRCI leadership, inmates have asked that sick prisoners be placed in โnon-punitiveโ medical isolationโor, anywhere but solitary confinementโwhere they can access a phone and be allowed small comforts like soup, hot water, and personal items.
Thatโs not going to happen, according to CRCI administrators. Amanda van Arken, CRCIโs acting security manager, said that the solitary unit is the only area in the facility where staff have bed space to โsafelyโ house people.
โCorrectional facilities were not designed with a global pandemic in mind,โ she told the Mercury, echoing a line repeated by other ODOC officials over the past few weeks.
Inmate representatives have also asked for ODOC to stop transferring new prisoners into their facility, especially from Salem-area prisons where COVID-19 has been detected. Jennifer Black, a spokesperson for ODOC, said that, as long as new inmates continue to be booked in Oregon prisons, the transfers will continue.
โWeโre legally obligated to move people around to make space for intakes,โ Black said.
Another request: Allowing inmates to be seen for medical issues not related to COVID-19. According to van Arken, medical staff are only seeing inmates who show signs of coronavirus or have an emergency health needโโsomething that theyโd go to urgent care for.โ
โIn the community [outside of CRCI], health care providers have rolled back the opportunity for people to be seen for routine check-ups to preserve [Personal Protective Equipment],โ said van Arken. โWeโre doing the same in here.โ
But, van Arken adds, CRCI is not running low on PPE. Doctors are just โpreparing for the long game.โ
“Weโre a number, weโre cattle. Itโs always been like this here.โ
Inmate Gabriel Whitford is disappointed, but not surprised, by the prisonโs response to the outbreak. Whitford, whoโs been incarcerated in Oregon prisons since 2015, said heโs witnessed situations where one inmateโs illness spreads down an entire housing unitโand back through again.
โThey donโt do anything to stop illnesses spreading in here.โ said Whitford. โThatโs not their concern. Weโre a number, weโre cattle. Itโs always been like this here.โ
Whitford also represents CRCI Unit 4 inmates in the meetings with leadership. He said heโs worried that administration is simply using the meetings to target outspoken people in each unit.
โIโm afraid the purpose of these meetings is for them to collect intel to later shut us down and silence us,โ said Whitford.
Schneider shares Whitfordโs concerns. He told the Mercury that he considered dropping out of the group over the weekend because of this.
โBut I think itโs better to be as close as I can to the problem than waiting for answers on the outside,โ he said.
On Tuesday, some of the men reported that certain correctional officers have already begun to retaliate against them for their membership in the leadership meetings.
โThere is a core of [correctional officers] trying to bust up the group through tacit threats or implied threats of us being locked up or shipped elsewhere,โ said Steven Stroud, an inmate representing CRCIโs Unit 6. โWe were worried this would happen.โ
โI donโt have anyone to talk to. I just want to be with my family right now.โ
As the men wait for answers, tensions continue to rise.
To limit the spread of COVID-19, CRCI administrators have cancelled all outside programming, limited inmate recreation time and meal times, paused all in-person visitation hours, and rolled back access to mental health counselors.
The changes have left most inmates crowded into small day rooms, playing cards, watching TV, and reading the news on tablet computers provided by ODOC. Wait times to use the phone have skyrocketed: Two inmates mentioned skipping meals to get a chance to call their family.
These restrictions have been detrimental to prisoners who rely on going to church, attending substance abuse meetings or anger management classes, and participating in other community-building programs. Inmatesโ participation in these courses increases the likelihood of them being released early on parole.
โI do rely on those programs,โ said Whitford, who is enrolled in classes focused on โliberation literacyโ and communication skills. โI made a commitment to rehabilitate myself, and itโs important to me to keep that up.โ
Whitford, who has PTSD, is also struggling without his behavioral health counselor on site.
โI am scared,โ he said. โI donโt have anyone to talk to. I just want to be with my family right now.โ
Asked what heโs doing to temporarily cope with his growing anxieties behind bars, he said: โI put my headphones on and turn the volume up and write and drawโฆ. I do everything I can to block this all out.โ

I’ve been to prison 3 times. Got severely Ill several times.. You better know the risk when you break bad. Everyone’s all gangster til they get locked up. ..I have rights!!: let me go !! Suck it up. .Scaredy asses YOU DONT THINK ABOUT THE DANGERS WHEN YOU WERE DOING WHAT YOU DID ??? I did and knew. ..Not too scary in minimum I suppose..Go to New Jersey federal prison..Corona virus would be good news .
The previous commenter shows why he’s been to prison 3 times through his lack of ability to have empathy, even for people whose current circumstances have been his own.
It’s no secret that we have the largest incarcerated population in the world here in the U.S., by amy metric you choose to cite. It’s no secret that hundreds of thousands of non-violent offenders languish in our jails and prisons who pose no real threat to the community.
Kate Brown shows the same lack of empathy as the previous commenter and should be probably thrown in jail, as well; if for no other reason than to see how preposterous her statements and actions are and to gain a little empathy.
Our elected officials have failed us on every level throughout this crisis; from failing to prioritize the development and distribution of testing, to infringing upon our civil rights while draining the national treasury and handing out pitiful sums of cash as a substitute for meaningful action- which, by the way, we’ll later pay back through massive inflation and taxation.
My husband is in snake River corrections institute. He has told me that there was one guy that got sick and all they did was put him in isolation. The cleaning supplies are low no hand sanitizer. People in dorm area is not spaced right but they have moved those in regular cells to one per cell. No masks at all. And the laundry room in Salem is also doing hospital wash where the virus is getting on the bedding and going to the prison to be washed but it’s not a concern for the governor she doesn’t have loved ones in prison. My husband is part of the group that has issues. I don’t understand why brown asked for all that info about the inmates from the doc if she was not going to go through the release of inmates. To me this is not a time to worry about measure 11. worry about those that have stated that they will do it again (there is one in my husband’s prison that has stated he will re-offend) and those on life sentence.