House Bill 3006 would require the installation of climate control in state prison facilities by 2032.
HOUSTON, TEXAS - SEPTEMBER 30: The downtown Houston skyline is visible looking north from Interstate 45 Gulf Freeway south Thursday, Oct. 10, 2024 in Houston. Read full article: New Hope Housing Berry: A new chapter in affordable housing for Houston’s Northside A driver has been arrested for allegedly hitting a 13-year-old boy on a bicycle and leaving the scene near FM 2920 in Spring.
2 hours ago With FEMA in limbo, here’s how people in the Houston Metro Area can mitigate potential financial burdens after storms Read full article: With FEMA in limbo, here’s how people in the Houston Metro Area can mitigate potential financial burdens after storms‘No mirrors, no walls, no ballet bars—just a vision:’ How a HISD elementary teacher built an award winning dance program Read full article: ‘No mirrors, no walls, no ballet bars—just a vision:’ How a HISD elementary teacher built an award winning dance programRead full article: Upgrade your beauty routine and kitchen essentials with these Insider DealsGive the gift of two dozen freshly picked roses for just $20The Texas House gave preliminary approval Thursday to a bill requiring prisons to have air conditioning by the end of 2032., D-Edinburg. If the Legislature or the federal government allocates funding, it will require the installation of climate control in phases to be completed by the end of 2032. The bill must go through one more round of approval in the House before it can clear its last hurdle in the Senate. “The bill targets key housing units and medical spaces, kitchens, and administrative offices in state prison facilities to ensure the most critical spaces are temperature-controlled,” saidThe bill mandates that the Texas Department of Criminal Justice purchase and install climate control systems to ensure temperatures are maintained between 65 and 85 degrees in certain areas. The installation will occur in three phases, capped at $100 million per phase, and completion is set for 2028, 2030 and 2032.Officials from the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, which oversees the state’s 101 prison facilities, asked lawmakers for $118 million over the next biennium to install air conditioning in about 11,000 units. Even if lawmakers grant that request, millions more will be needed to get to the at least $1.1 billion the TDCJ says will be needed to fully air condition its prisons.that TDCJ’s heat mitigation efforts were not enough to ensure the well-being of inmates and the correctional officers who work in prisons, lawmakers have tried to pass bills that would require the agency to install air conditioning. None of those bills made it to the governor’s desk.11,788 “cool beds” and is in the process of procuring about 12,000 more. The addition is thanks to $85.5 million state lawmakers appropriated during the last legislative session. Although not earmarked for air conditioning, an agency spokesperson said all of that money is being used to cool more prisons. Still, about two-thirds of Texas’ prison inmates reside in facilities that are not fully air conditioned in housing areas. Indoor temperatures routinely top 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and inmates report oppressive, suffocating conditions in which they douse themselves with toilet water in an attempt to cool off. Hundreds of inmates have been diagnosed with heat-related illnesses, court records state, and at least two dozen others have died from heat-related causes. The pace at which the state is installing air conditioning is insufficient, U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman wrote in ain late March. The lack of system-wide air conditioning violates the U.S. Constitution, and the prison agency’s plan to slowly chip away at cooling its facilities — over an estimated timeline of at least 25 years — is too slow, he wrote., a Houston Republican who chairs the Senate Finance Committee, said in an emailed statement that the supplemental appropriations bill will include the $118 million TDCJ requested to fund approximately 11,000 new air-conditioned beds. It also will include $301 million to construct additional dorms — which the prison agency requested to accommodate its growing prison population — and those new facilities will all be air-conditioned.that TDCJ has falsified temperatures, and an investigator hired by the prison agency concluded that some of the agency’s temperature logs are false. Citing that report, Pitman wrote “The Court has no confidence in the data TDCJ generates and uses to implement its heat mitigation measures and record the conditions within the facilities.”Read full article: Upgrade your beauty routine and kitchen essentials with these Insider DealsGive the gift of two dozen freshly picked roses for just $20
Criminal Justice Politics State Government Texas Prisons Texas Department Of Criminal Justice Terry Canales Texas Legislature
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