At the end of January, in response to the results of a universal testing effort, Judge Schiller ordered the city to gradually expand out-of-cell time from 45 minutes a day to a minimum of three hours a day.
After determining the city was violating the order, the case’s plaintiffs filed a motion for contempt of court, which ultimately led to Wednesday’s settlement agreement.
Previously, the city had conceded that staffing issues had made it challenging for the Prisons Department to provide at least three hours of out-of-cell time, and argued it had made “substantial efforts to mitigate these issues,” according to court documents.
“There are, unquestionably, numbers of deeply dedicated employees within the Philadelphia Department of Prisons, a majority of whom have continued to report to work during, as has been described, an incredibly challenging year,” city lawyers wrote in May. “At the same time, after the imposition of the Court-ordered three hours of out of cell time, staff absenteeism increased, likely a function of the increased operational challenges associated with that Order.”
That same month, Schiller ruled there were grounds for holding the city in civil contempt of court, but postponed a final decision pending the results of roughly three weeks of mandatory reporting on correctional officer attendance and absenteeism.
Schiller ordered the city to track officer attendance for each shift at each of the city’s four jails, as well as report the number of officers scheduled to work for each of those shifts, the number of officers who reported to work, and the number of officers who called out for any reason.
The city was also ordered to report on the out-of-cell time for each facility by housing unit, and the specific reasons for any unit or incarcerated person not receiving three hours of out-of-cell time on a daily basis.
Schiller warned that if the city did not show “clear and convincing evidence” that the Department of Prisons was in compliance with the consent decree, he would impose a one-time fine of $50,000, as well as order daily fines starting at $10,000 until the city could show it was in compliance.
Any fines collected would be distributed to the Philadelphia Community Bail Fund and the Philadelphia Bail Fund “in equal amounts,” he said.