Crime & Safety

Cal/OSHA​ Fines ​San Quentin $421,880 For COVID-19 Outbreak

San Quentin State Prison was fined for its COVID-19 outbreak — the largest fine the state agency has levied for pandemic-related violations.

SAN QUENTIN, CA — Cal/OSHA fined San Quentin State Prison nearly $421,880 for its coronavirus outbreak, the largest fine the state's workplace safety agency has levied for pandemic-related violations.

San Quentin was slapped with the fine after Cal/OSHA inspectors found that the prison's staff did not have the proper training or protective equipment to interact with inmates and other staffers who had contracted COVID-19.

Cal/OSHA also found that staff who had been exposed to a coronavirus patient were not offered proper services like testing, contact tracing and medical referrals.

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"Cal/OSHA issued citations for four willful-serious, five serious, one regulatory and four general category violations, including the employer's failure to institute an effective aerosol transmissible diseases control exposure plan," the agency said in a statement.

The fine is consistent with a scathing report released Monday by the state's Office of the Inspector General, which identified the transfer of 122 inmates from the California Institution for Men as the locus for the outbreak that eventually led to 2,240 coronavirus cases and 28 deaths among inmates at San Quentin.

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The report also found the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and California Correctional Health Care Services, which oversees health care within the state prison system, improperly tested inmates before the transfer and cut corners to move medically vulnerable inmates out of the Chino facility by the end of May 2020.

"Our review found that the efforts by CCHCS and the department to prepare for and execute the transfers were deeply flawed and risked the health and lives of thousands of incarcerated persons and staff," Inspector General Roy Wesley said.

Cal/OSHA also issued five-figure citations for coronavirus-related safety violations to Kaiser Permanente medical centers in San Leandro, Antioch and Walnut Creek; the Mills-Peninsula Medical Center in Burlingame; the NorthBay Medical Center in Fairfield; the Fremont Healthcare Center; the San Miguel Villa nursing home in Concord; Cardenas Market in Oakland and Carter's Children's Wear in Gilroy.

Employees can file complaints about workplace safety and hazards at a Cal/OSHA district office or by calling 844-522-6734.


By Eli Walsh / Bay City News Foundation

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