Community Corner
State Prisons Report Employees Infected By Coronavirus
Twelve Florida prison employees test positive, no inmates reported infected.

From the Florida Phoenix: By Laura Cassels - March 31, 2020
Twelve prison employees in Florida have tested positive for COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus that has expanded across the globe.
The Florida Department of Corrections said there were no inmate infections so far among the 96,000 people incarcerated in Florida prisons.
Find out what's happening in Across Floridafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The DOC reported Tuesday that three employees at the privately operated Blackwater Correctional Facility in Santa Rosa County tested positive, and one employee tested positive at each of the following:
/ Apalachee Correctional Institution, in Jackson County
Find out what's happening in Across Floridafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
/ Century Correctional Institution, in Escambia County
/ Everglades Correctional Institution, in Dade County
/ Florida Women’s Reception Center, in Marion County
/ Marion Correctional Institution, in Marion County
/ Sumter Correctional Institution, in Sumter County
/ Zephyrhills Correctional Institution, in Pasco County
/ DOC’s Region 3 operations office, based in Tampa
/ Region 4 probations office, based in Jacksonville.
The DOC employs more than 24,000 people who run 144 state prisons and supervise 161,000 former inmates.
Trying to delay the arrival of COVID-19 in the prison population, DOC previously suspended visitation at the state’s prisons, adjusted probation reporting scheduled to minimize gatherings at probation offices, and suspended inmate furloughs.
Federal prisons too have faced challenges as the coronavirus pandemic has expanded across Florida and other states.
Ray Coleman, Jr., president of AFGE local 1570, a labor union representing over 200 federal correctional workers in Tallahassee, said the system has been overlooked by the pandemic.
He wrote in a Phoenix column recently: “Prison employees, who become more susceptible to the disease, leave work every day and go home to their kids and families. Some even visit their parents in elderly facilities. Even while on duty many are escorting and monitoring inmates at local courts, hospitals and emergency rooms.”
This story was originally published by the Florida Phoenix. For more stories from the Florida Phoenix, visit FloridaPhoenix.com.