Bill To Require More Data From Jails Heads To Oregon Governor

By Conrad Wilson (OPB)
Portland, Ore. May 15, 2019 3:10 p.m.

The Oregon Senate passed a bill 28-0 on Wednesday that would require county jails to provide the state information about their in-custody populations and details about the healthcare inmates receive.

The bill "directs the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission to conduct studies on local and regional correctional facility data collection and provision of health care."

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House Bill 3289 previously passed the House. The bill heads next to Gov. Kate Brown, who hasn't indicated whether she'll sign it.

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Oregon doesn't comprehensively track information about inmates in county jails.

In April, OPB, KUOW and the Northwest News Network released an investigation that found since 2008, at least 306 people died after being taken to a county jail in Oregon or Washington.

That information was previously unknown.

The news organizations also found that many of those who died had not been convicted of a crime and the leading cause of death was suicide.

The bill directs the state's Criminal Justice Commission to collect the data from local jails.

The Oregon State Sheriffs' Association has testified in support of the legislation, but also noted there is no statewide unified computer system for jails, making data collection a challenge.

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