Current staffing levels leave the door open for the possibility of another murder of an incarcerated person or possibly a correctional officer, said Rhynhart.
Between August 2020 and May 2021, five incarcerated people were killed. A sixth, Rodney Hargrove, was fatally shot on prison grounds shortly after being released from the Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility, one of four city jails on State Road in Northeast Philadelphia.
That’s more prisoner murders than the previous eight years combined.
“When do we say enough is enough? When does the city wake up and say we have to do something?” said David Robinson, president of Local 159 of AFSCME District Council 33, which represents more than 1,000 city correctional officers. He said those employees are routinely being asked to work well beyond their eight-hour shifts as a result of the staffing shortage, making it challenging to do the job properly because it requires mental focus and physical fitness.
Jackson said several veteran correctional officers have recently walked away from the job because of the current conditions — because they fear they may not make it home one day if they keep going.
In a statement, mayoral spokeswoman Deana Gamble said the administration has not received the controller’s findings, but added that it takes “very seriously” the conditions inside the city’s jails, and that “extensive recruitment efforts” are already underway.
A class of 23 cadets graduated from the city’s training academy on May 5 and has since been deployed to city jails, said Gamble. The department started bringing on another class of 20 cadets on Monday, she said.
A spokesperson for the city Department of Prisons did not immediately return a request for comment.