Climate Movement Mondays: deadly heat & the incarcerated

Welcome back to Movement Mondays in which I typically highlight a frontline community enduring the worst effects of climate change and then offer an action you can take on their behalf. However, today’s post is mainly intended to raise awareness about a deadly issue. Before going further, I need to say that I am a PIC abolitionist. Per criticalresistance.org: prison industrial complex (PIC) abolition is “a political vision with the goal of eliminating imprisonment, policing, and surveillance and creating lasting alternatives to punishment and imprisonment.”

Image by Fifaliana Joy from Pixabay

Okay, one of the aspects of climate change is how it affects people and planet in ways we might not have considered. I include myself in that statement. Because even though I’m active in the climate community and have done tons of reading on abolition and social justice, I hadn’t truly made the connection between climate and incarceration. But then an incarcerated friend wrote to me, mentioning how he was worried not only about the unhealthy air due to the Canada wildfires but also about the coming oppressive heat in the prison that doesn’t have air conditioning. My friend is not being whiny. Climate change poses a unique threat to the incarcerated and the insanely high temperatures around the country are literally killing people in prisons. (By the way, climate-induced flooding is another deadly threat to the incarcerated.)

The New Republic reported that in the last several weeks, at least nine people died heat-related deaths in Texas prisons (although the Texas Department of Criminal Justice has not acknowledged the deaths as such). “But only last month, Texas senators killed a bill that would have established a prison temperature standard of 65 to 85 degrees, as well as funding of $545 million for the first two parts of a four-phase air-conditioning installation plan. Despite a $32.7 billion budget surplus this year, the legislature allocated no funds specifically for prison air conditioning.” 

Then there’s Louisiana. Taproot Earth created a May 2023 policy report on climate and incarceration, and in that introduction states: “The rate of incarceration in Louisiana is higher than anywhere else in the world. Black people are 33% of the state’s population, but make up 52% of people in jail and 67% of people in prison.” (Note: The state relies on pretrial incarceration which means that people who can’t afford bail are incarcerated until trial.) The introduction also says this: “Louisiana is also particularly vulnerable to the climate crisis, due to its geographic location on the Gulf South and its production of the fossil fuels that drive the climate crisis and poison nearby communities. Louisiana is at high risk for sea level rise, coastal loss and flooding, increased heat waves, and storms that are increasing in frequency and intensity.”

So what can be done? The report makes many recommendations (including that Biden must Declare a Climate Emergency) and from page 19 of the report: “As the climate crisis worsens disasters and increases their frequency, these carceral facilities and the beds within them will become only more cruel and dangerous, leading to premature death of incarcerated people. To release people from the disaster within the disaster, all environmentally vulnerable carceral facilities must be closed–and when a disaster strikes them, they must not be rebuilt or reopened. This requires a state-wide study of carceral infrastructure and its vulnerability, especially in the context of climate-exacerbated disasters.” No more new prisons!

The good news is that people are organizing around this issue and there’s an increased urgency to that work as climate-induced extreme weather continues to hit every part of the globe. Texas Prisons Community Advocates (TPCA) is rallying at the state capitol on July 18th and they will gratefully accept a donation.

If you’ve read this far, thank you thank you thank you. Please keep your eyes and ears open to what’s happening in your own states. Maybe there’s a group organizing around climate and incarceration or maybe proposed legislation that would help keep the incarcerated alive. Or maybe you’ve seen a story or two in the news about prisons. No matter what it is, I’d love to converse with you about it because climate and abolition are two issues close to my heart.

Solidarity! ✊🏽

16 thoughts on “Climate Movement Mondays: deadly heat & the incarcerated

    • That’s a heartbreaking and rage-inducing story that is, unfortunately, not uncommon in terms of severe harm coming to those who have the misfortune of getting caught up in the system. Thank you for sharing and for recognizing that we’re failing in this system. There are MANY around the globe who recognize these systems must end and I’m grateful to connect with you on this issue, Tracy. Solidarity!

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  1. In studying North America Indigenous people I learned that Indigenous societies did not have prisons. They had non-incarceration means to deal with misdemeanors.
    They didn’t have racial issues to colour things. They didn’t let homelessness develop so that didn’t complicate their society. People with mental health concerns didn’t get incarcerated.
    If we release all lrisoners who are incarcerated because of the aforementioned underlying issues, our prisons would be almost empty. Imagine such a society. And then we had the audacity to pronounce Indigenous Peoples as uncivilized. Wow!

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    • We’ve been conditioned/propagandized to believe that our carceral state is the only option and that it’s always been in place. But as your example shows, that’s absolutely false. And you’re correct in your assessment of what would happen if we liberated all those who fall into those “categories.” I’d add classism to the list, because many are incarcerated only because they can’t afford bail or legal assistance. Thank you so much for engaging with me on this, Jasper. I appreciate your insights and compassionate heart.

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    • Oh, Becky. That’s heartbreaking and rage-inducing. The thought of all those people begging for water and breaking windows in hopes of cooling off a tiny bit. It’s all so wrong and I thank you for reading and engaging on this issue. I know that oppressive heat is awful for all of you right now and I hope you’re doing okay.

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