Coleman, et al v. Schwarzenegger, et al
Filing
7216
ORDER signed by Chief District Judge Kimberly J. Mueller on 6/30/2021 ORDERING that with the exception of Indicator 8 on the list of key indicators for Access to Care, on page 21 of the Report, the Special Master's 5/6/2021 7151 Report on t he Continuous Quality Improvement Tool Key Indicators is ADOPTED. Indicator 8 on the list of key indicators for Access to Care, on page 21 of the Report, is STRICKEN as duplicative. As modified by this order, the list of key indicators at pages 21 through 26 of the Report is provisionally approved. The Special Master shall test and monitor the functionality and efficacy of the indicators on the provisionally approved list during his Twenty-Ninth Monitoring Round and shall report his findings to the court in his Twenty-Ninth Monitoring Round Report. (Zignago, K.)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
9
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
10
11
RALPH COLEMAN, et al.,
12
Plaintiffs,
13
14
15
v.
No. 2:90-cv-0520 KJM DB P
ORDER
GAVIN NEWSOM, et al.,
Defendants.
16
17
18
As directed by the court, ECF Nos. 7112, 7143, the Special Master has filed a
19
Report on the Continuous Quality Improvement Tool Key Indicators (“Report”). ECF No. 7151.
20
Plaintiffs have timely responded to the Report, ECF No. 7195, and defendants have timely filed
21
objections, ECF No. 7197. See ECF No. 7162 (setting timeframe for filing responses to Report).
22
For the reasons explained below, the court adopts the Special Master’s recommendations to
23
provisionally approve a preliminary list of CQIT indicators, to direct him to “test and monitor the
24
functionality and efficacy of these preliminary CQIT indicators” during his Twenty-Ninth
25
Monitoring Round, and to order him to report his findings in the Twenty-Ninth Round
26
Monitoring Report. ECF No. 7151 at 21. The court modifies the provisionally approved list in
27
light of one of defendants’ specific objections. The Special Master is, as always, authorized to
28
1
1
continue discussions with the parties as necessary to ensure the final list of proposed indicators
2
will serve its intended purpose.
3
I.
INTRODUCTION
4
The Report before the court is the result of work that defendants began in
5
20121, under the supervision of the Special Master, to develop the continuous quality
6
improvement tool (CQIT). CQIT is “a comprehensive tool that, once finalized, defendants will
7
ultimately use as part of a process to ‘self-monitor’ the key components of the remedy in this
8
action.” September 3, 2020 Order, ECF No. 6846, at 10 (citing ECF No. 5439 at 108).2 Seven
9
years after defendants began developing CQIT, the court held that remedial planning in this
10
action was complete, opening the door to updating and finalizing CQIT. July 9, 2019 Order, ECF
11
No. 6214, at 17-18.
12
The “primary court-approved remedial documents in this action are the California
13
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) Mental Health Services Delivery System
14
(MHSDS) Program Guide (Program Guide) and the Compendium of Custody Related Remedial
15
Measures (Compendium).” ECF No. 6846 at 4 (citing August 3, 2020 Order, ECF No. 6806, at,
16
e.g., 9). The court has approved several additional remedial plans in aid of the primary remedies,
17
including “a court-ordered mental health staffing plan, see ECF Nos. 3613 at 2 (court order),
18
3693 (staffing plan), regular mental health bed projections, see ECF No. 3629, and concomitant
19
planning for and building of necessary mental health beds and clinical treatment space, see, e.g.,
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
1
Defendants’ assertion that the continuous quality improvement process (CQI) “has been
twenty-six years in the making,” ECF No. 7197 at 14, is incorrect. As the Special Master
explains, while the need for a quality management system was identified in 1994, “[d]efendants
first had to ensure that clinical functions were routinely occurring as required and that they had a
quality assurance structure in place across institutions to track this.” ECF No. 7151 at 2-3. After
almost seventeen years, the quality assurance committee structure at individual prisons was
“predominately in place” and, “[i]n 2012, defendants, working under the guidance of the Special
Master with input from the plaintiffs” began identifying CQIT indicators “and developing a more
robust, central-office-driven CQI system capable of improving the quality of care delivered to the
Coleman class.” Id. at 3-4.
2
Citations to page numbers in documents filed in this action are to the page number
assigned by the Court’s Electronic Case Filing (ECF) system located in the upper right hand
corner of the page.
2
1
ECF No. 3556.” July 9, 2019 Order, ECF No. 6214, at 2. It is “established that the Program
2
Guide sets out the objective standards that the Constitution requires” for the delivery of adequate
3
mental health care to members of the plaintiff class. Coleman v. Brown, 756 Fed. Appx. 677, 679
4
(9th Cir. 2018). Since 2006, defendants have been under court order to “immediately implement”
5
the Program Guide’s provisions. ECF No. 6214 at 10 (quoting March 3, 2006 Order, ECF No.
6
1773, at 2).3 Durable implementation of each component of the remedy, including but not limited
7
to the Program Guide, is essential to full remediation of the Eighth Amendment violation. See,
8
e.g., ECF No. 6214 at 6-7.
9
10
An adequate quality improvement process is also an essential component of the
remedy. The court has repeatedly stated
11
that defendants’ development and implementation of an improved
quality improvement process is fundamental to ending federal court
oversight in this action. It is grounded in this court's obligation to end
its supervision of defendants' delivery of mental health care to
members of the plaintiff class when defendants have implemented a
durable remedy for the Eighth Amendment violations in the delivery
of that care. A key component of a durable remedy is the
development and implementation of an adequate quality
improvement process by which defendants will self-monitor, and as
necessary, self-correct inadequacies in the delivery of mental health
care to the thousands of seriously mentally ill inmates incarcerated
in California's prisons.
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
ECF No. 6846 at 10 (quoting February 27, 2014 Order, ECF No. 5092, at 4-5); see also ECF No.
19
6846 at 15 (quoting August 9, 2016 Order, ECF No. 5477, at 3). As the court has emphasized,
20
and defendants have recognized, completion and successful implementation of CQIT is integral to
21
full implementation of an adequate quality improvement process and the end of federal court
22
supervision. See ECF No. 6846 at 15 (citing ECF No. 5477 at 8); see also December 17, 2020
23
Order, ECF No. 6996, at 5.
24
25
26
27
28
3
While the March 3, 2006 order focused on all undisputed provisions of the Revised
Program Guide presented to the court in January 2006, save for a discrete list of disputed issues
that remained at that time, see ECF No. 6214 at 10 & n.10, the overarching direction to
implement the provisions of the Program Guide took effect with that order and remains in effect.
3
1
The “key indicators” in CQIT “signify the material provisions of the Program
2
Guide and the Compendium that must be durably implemented” in order to satisfy the Eighth
3
Amendment. ECF No. 6846 at 28; see also ECF No. 6996 at 8. The degree of compliance for
4
each indicator remains for the court to determine by subsequent order, id. at 9, which it will now
5
do following review of the Special Master’s upcoming Twenty-Ninth Round Monitoring Report.
6
In that upcoming Report, as required by this order, the Special Master will report on the
7
“functionality and utility” of the key indicators.
8
On December 17, 2020, the court ordered defendants, under the supervision of the
9
Special Master, to file within three months an updated list of key indicators to be used in CQIT.
10
The Special Master was authorized to “seek input from plaintiffs as appropriate” and consistent
11
with the direction the court provided in that order. ECF No. 6996, passim. On March 17, 2021,
12
defendants filed their proposed updated list. ECF No. 7089. With leave of court, ECF No. 7102,
13
on March 23, 2021, plaintiffs filed objections to defendants’ proposed list. ECF No. 7101. At a
14
status conference on March 25, 2021, the court issued a bench order granting defendants’ request
15
to respond to plaintiffs’ objections. See ECF No. 7112. At the March 25, 2021 status conference
16
the Special Master confirmed the parties’ inability to reach agreement on an updated list of key
17
indicators. Reporter’s Transcript of Proceedings (3/25/21 RT) at 10-13. The court referred the
18
matter to the Special Master “as soon as the defense reply” was filed, for the filing of a report and
19
recommendations before April 29, 2021. ECF No. 7112. After receiving an extension of time, the
20
Special Master filed his Report on May 6, 2021. ECF No. 7151. The parties timely filed their
21
responses on June 14, 2021. ECF Nos. 7195 (Plaintiffs’ Response), 7197 (Defendants’
22
Objections).
23
II.
24
25
26
27
28
DEFENDANTS’ OBJECTIONS
A.
Duplicative Indicators
Defendants identify seven indicators on the Special Master’s proposed list, which
they contend are duplicative, as follows:
• “Treatment Plans with Reason for Refusal and Intervention
Documented for High Refusers.” This indicator appears twice as
items 4 and 8 in the “Quality of Care” section. ECF No. 7151 at 23.
4
1
2
• “Percentage of IDTTs Observed in which a Health Record and CFile were Available.” This indicator appears twice as item 12 in the
“Access to Care” section and as item 30 in the “Restricted Housing”
section. Id. at 22, 25.
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
• “Percentage of Health Care Staff with Suicide Prevention
Training.” This indicator appears twice as item 19 in the “Suicide
Prevention” section and as item 13 in the “Staffing” section. Id. at
22, 26.
• “Observed RC Screens Conducted in a Confidential Setting.” This
indicator appears as item 15 in the “Access to Care” section. Id. at
22. There is also an indicator titled “Percentage of Observed R&R
and Reception Center Screens in Confidential Setting and Correct
Documentation Used” that appears in the “Suicide Prevention”
section. Id. at 22 (Suicide Prevention No. 10). Both indicators
measure whether Reception Center screens were conducted in a
confidential setting. [Footnote: That said, Reception Center screens
and R&R screens should remain separate.]
• “Percentage of MH-7s required completed prior to ASU
placement” appears as item 38 in the “Restricted Housing” section.
Id. at 25. This item seems to be duplicative of the “ASU Pre-Screens”
indicator, which also appears in the “Restricted Housing” section. Id.
at 24 (Restricted Housing No. 4).
• “MH Screens.” This indicator appears as item 16 in the “Access to
Care” section. Id. at 22. The current MH Screens indicator on the
Mental Health Performance Report measures several types of Mental
Health screens, including Reception Center screens and ASU prescreens. As mentioned above, there is already an ASU Pre-Screens
indicator that appears in the “Restricted Housing” section of the
Special Master’s list. Id. at 24 (Restricted Housing No. 4). If the MH
Screens indicator on the list is meant to capture Reception Center
screens, then it should be renamed. Otherwise, the indicator is
duplicative of another indicator already on the list.
19
20
21
• “Timely Admissions to Inpatient Care” and “Inpatient Transfer
Deadlines for PIPs and DSH.” These new indicators appear as items
8 and 9 in the “Access to Care” section. Id. at 21-22. Both indicators
seem to measure transfer timelines to the Acute and ICF levels of
care. If so, one should be eliminated.
22
23
ECF No. 7197 at 9-10. This objection is sustained as to the first indicator identified by
24
defendants, Treatment Plans with Reason for Refusal and Intervention Documented for High
25
Refusers. Id. at 9. The language of items 4 and 8 is identical, and they appear under the same
26
topic heading on the indicator list. For this reason, this indicator as it appears as item 8 in the
27
Quality of Care section will be stricken.
28
5
1
The next two indicators on the list appear under two separate topics on the
2
proposed indicator list. Given their inclusion under two separate topics, the court cannot
3
determine from this record whether they are duplicative or, instead, intended to capture different
4
information related to the specific topic under which they are listed.
5
Regarding the remaining pairs of four indicators, defendants use conditional
6
language, i.e., “seem to measure” or “if . . . then,” in describing the alleged duplication. None of
7
the four is characterized by identical language. Given this, the court cannot find these items are
8
in fact duplicative.
9
For these reasons, defendants have not met their burden of establishing that six of
10
the seven indicators they identify are duplicative or that the Special Master’s inclusion of these
11
remaining items was clearly erroneous; these aspects of the objection are overruled. That said,
12
the defendants have identified potential issues for the Special Master to carefully consider. Over
13
the course of the upcoming monitoring round, the Special Master shall review the six remaining
14
indicators to which defendants object as duplicative, and shall recommend adoption of a final list
15
of key indicators that eliminates all duplications.
16
17
B.
Recommendation for Provisional Approval
Defendants object that the Special Master’s recommendation for provisional
18
approval of the list of key indicators appended to the Report “leads to indefinite uncertainty.”
19
ECF No. 7197 at 11. Although they “understand and agree that CQI[T] indicators will
20
necessarily evolve as CDCR’ policies change,” defendants contend “this case lacks clear
21
benchmarks with no finality on the horizon.” Id. The suggestion there are no clear benchmarks
22
in this action or no “finality on the horizon” borders on frivolous and, in any event, is entirely
23
meritless. See, e.g., ECF No. 6846, passim.
24
Finality is on the horizon if defendants keep their eye on the remedial ball: it will
25
arrive when defendants fully and durably implement the remedial plans that have been developed
26
and finalized through careful, considered work of the parties, with court oversight. The court’s
27
most recent status conferences, attended by principals in leadership roles, make clear the
28
defendants themselves are fully aware of the requirements of the remedial plans and what is
6
1
required to implement them. The Special Master’s recommendation to test the proposed list of
2
key indicators for one monitoring round, after which he will report to the court on a
3
recommended final list of key indicators, keeps the case moving forward. Once the list is
4
finalized, the process the court will use to confirm compliance rates for key indicators is already
5
defined. ECF No. 6996 at 9. Completion of this core task, essential to finality, is well underway.
6
Defendants’ objection to provisional approval of the proposed list, as modified, is
7
overruled.
8
C.
9
Placeholders
Defendants’ final objection is to inclusion of a list of eight indicators, which they
10
represent the Special Master “expects . . . to be more fully developed during the course of his
11
Twenty-Ninth Monitoring Round.” ECF No. 7197 at 12-15. Defendants contend “full and final
12
development” of these indicators “will unnecessarily delay the CQIT process . . . because they
13
have not been the subject of the parties’ prior extensive conversations on the subject of key CQI
14
indicators.” Id. at 15. This objection is addressed in section III immediately below, together with
15
plaintiffs’ response to the Report.
16
III.
PLACEHOLDERS/PLAINTIFFS’ RESPONSE
17
As noted above, defendants object to several proposed indicators included in the
18
Special Master’s list that they contend are not fully developed.4 They contend these indicators
19
should not be fully developed because doing so will slow the process and because the indicators
20
have not been the subject of prior discussions. Plaintiffs’ response to the Report, on the other
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
4
It appears defendants actually challenge nine proposed indicators on this ground; they
provide a bullet point list of eight proposed indicators but include two separate proposed
indicators in one of those bullet points. See ECF No. 7197 at 12:23-26. The list is as follows:
“Emergent/urgent MH referrals that result in SRASHEs,” ECF No. 7151 at 22 (Suicide
Prevention No. 2); “Suicide-resistant MHCBs,” id. at 22 (Suicide Prevention No. 4); “Additional
Use of Force (Specificity to be determined),” id. at 23 (Specialized Custody No. 11); “Additional
MAPIP (Specific medication monitoring, other MAPIP measures related to psychiatric
medication monitoring not included here),” id. at 24 (Medication Management No. 15);
“Allocated and filled positions,” id. at 26 (Staffing/Personnel Training, and Staff Resources
No. 14); “Sustainability Process,” id. at 26 (Additional Key Indicators No. 1); “ASU EOP Hub
Certification,” id. (Additional Key Indicators No. 2); “PIP (To be developed),” id. (Additional
Key Indicators No. 3); “Custody and Mental Health Partnership Collaboration,” id. at 26
(Additional Key Indicators No. 4). See ECF No. 7197 at 12-15.
7
1
hand, consists entirely of a list of ten indicators they contend are not on the proposed list but
2
should appear on the final approved list; plaintiffs “provide this list to ensure that these additional
3
indicators are considered during the period in which the Special Master employs the provisional
4
list.” ECF No. 7195 at 1-2.
5
As the court previously has observed, the current proposed list of key indicators
6
must “‘reflect any changes required by the 2018 update to the Program Guide . . . [and] identify
7
key indicators for CQIT to reflect the material provisions of the Compendium.’” ECF No. 6996
8
at 4 (quoting ECF No. 6846 at 25, 26). At the same time, the court made clear this direction was
9
“neither an opportunity to reinvent the wheel, including through revisiting the set of key
10
indicators agreed to in 2012 and 2013, except as minimally necessary to bring them current with
11
the 2018 Update to the Program Guide; nor is it an invitation to depart from the law of the case.”
12
ECF No. 6846 at 25. The task now is straightforwardly to “complete a necessary task” on the
13
road to finalizing the remedy. Id. at 26.
14
Defendants have not demonstrated how the eight proposed items they identify on
15
the Special Master’s list exceed the scope of indicators that must be included on the final list.
16
Their objection is overruled for this reason. The court directs the Special Master to finalize these
17
indicators, without delaying the monitoring process, by the end of the Twenty-Ninth Monitoring
18
Round.
19
Plaintiffs’ list is accepted as presented, but also as proposed and subject to
20
consideration and efficient refinement during the upcoming Monitoring Round. The Special
21
Master shall report on these proposed indicators and whether they should be incorporated into the
22
final proposed list of CQIT key indicators in the Twenty-Ninth Round Monitoring Report.
23
IV.
DEFENDANTS’ ADDITIONAL ASSERTIONS
24
25
26
Defendants make several general assertions that are not properly before the court.
The court addresses them only briefly here.
A.
“Redundancies and Discrepancies”
27
Defendants assert the Special Master’s proposed list is “inchoate” because the
28
Special Master used an early draft of key indicators created by defendants to develop his list,
8
1
failed to omit “numerous redundancies and discrepancies” that were ultimately omitted by
2
defendants from their final proposed list filed March 17, 2021, and “filed his Report without first
3
giving the Defendants an opportunity to review it and provide informal comments or objections,
4
as required by the Court’s scheduling order.” ECF No. 7197 at 5, 9.
5
As the Special Master explains in his Report, the list of CQIT indicators
6
defendants developed beginning in September 2012 “became known as ‘key indicators’ because
7
they were culled from the ‘material’ requirements of the Program Guide, relevant Court orders,
8
and the collaborative identification of additional indicators central to the provision of adequate
9
mental health treatment and its monitoring.” ECF No. 7151 at 7.5 It is plain this initial list
10
5
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
On August 2, 2013, the Special Master filed a report on defendants’ quality
improvement process that included a “List of Areas Covered within the Continuous Quality
Improvement Tool (CQIT). See ECF No. 4730. The Special Master did not recommend any
court orders in that report. See id. at 29-31. However, on August 16, 2013, plaintiffs moved for
court-ordered relief based on that report, principally directed at the timeline for testing CQIT and
the attendant monitoring process; defendants objected to the request. In its order denying
plaintiffs’ request, the court observed that
while defendants’ objections to the orders requested by plaintiffs
miss the mark, issuance of the requested orders will not adequately
serve the underlying goal of the court’s August 30, 2012 order and
the Special Master’s recommendation on which that order is based.
21
By its terms, the order is directed at ending federal court oversight of
the delivery of mental health care in California’s prisons. Defendants
did not object to the Special Master’s recommendation that they be
ordered to review and assess their existing quality assurance process
and develop an improved quality improvement process as part of the
transition to self-monitoring and the end of federal court oversight;
indeed, as the court noted in the August 30, 2012 order, they
acquiesced in the recommendation. See id. at 3.
22
...
23
Rather than set a new deadline, the court will reiterate that
defendants’ development and implementation of an improved
quality improvement process is fundamental to ending federal court
oversight in this action. It is grounded in this court’s obligation to
end its supervision of defendants’ delivery of mental health care to
members of the plaintiff class when defendants have implemented a
durable remedy for the Eighth Amendment violations in the delivery
of that care. See Horne v. Flores, 557 U.S. 433, 450 (2009). A key
component of a durable remedy is the development and
implementation of an adequate quality improvement process by
which defendants will self-monitor and, as necessary, self-correct
9
18
19
20
24
25
26
27
28
1
informed the Special Master’s creation of the current proposed list, reasonably so. Id. at 17, 21
2
(footnote omitted). The Special Master also considered all of the material presented during
3
discussions after the court’s December 17, 2020 order requiring an updated list. See id. at 15-19.
4
While not a final list, the Special Master’s list is comprehensive, which he appropriately
5
characterizes as “preliminary” in the sense that he recommends he be ordered to test its
6
“functionality and efficacy” during the Twenty-Ninth Monitoring Round. ECF No. 7151 at 21-
7
26.
8
Defendants’ contention that the Special Master’s proposed list was “developed
9
from a draft list of all CQIT indicators initially created by Defendants that contained numerous
10
redundancies and discrepancies,” ECF No. 7197 at 5 (emphasis in original), is speculative. See
11
Ex. B to Decl. of Mello, ECF No. 7197-3 at 3 (June 1, 2021 Letter from Melissa C. Bentz, Esq. to
12
Special Master Lopes). Defendants do not object to the relevant facts and thorough description of
13
the process followed as presented by the Special Master. See ECF No. 7151 at 15-20. Their
14
speculative contention is not a proper objection.
15
Finally, the court did not require the Special Master to provide defendants with an
16
opportunity to review his Report before it was filed with the court. It was only after the parties
17
were unable to come to agreement after an extensive process supervised by the Special Master
18
that the court ordered the current Report. Defendants do not identify the “scheduling order”
19
referred to in their objections, and neither the bench order requiring the Report nor the Order of
20
Reference required the Special Master to do more. See 3/25/2021 RT, ECF No. 7111, at 14, 17;
21
ECF No. 7112; see also ECF No. 640 (requiring “draft compliance reports” to be circulated to the
22
23
24
25
26
27
inadequacies in the delivery of mental health care to the thousands
of seriously mentally ill inmates incarcerated in California’s prisons.
Defendants are required to work under the guidance of the Special
Master, with input from plaintiffs’ counsel, on this task until it is
completed. The court expects that the Special Master will report to
the court in due course when this necessary step has been
accomplished.
ECF No. 5092, at 4-5 (footnote omitted).
28
10
1
parties before filing)6; ECF No. 6230 (setting a thirty day objection period for Special Master
2
reports not circulated to the parties prior to filing). The court directed the Special Master to file
3
“a written report by April 29th with intensive sessions with the parties in the interim.” 3/25/2021
4
RT, ECF No. 7111, at 17. Both the Report and the Special Master’s request for a one week
5
extension of the April 29, 2021 deadline reflect his compliance with the court’s direction. See
6
ECF No. 7151 at 18; ECF No. 7142.7 The parties were granted thirty days to file objections to
7
the Report, consistent with the time frame set by the court for objection to any report from the
8
Special Master not circulated to the parties before filing. See ECF No. 6230.
9
B.
10
“Key” versus “Informational” Indicators
Defendants object to the Special Master’s purported failure to distinguish in his
11
proposed list between “key” indicators and what defendants characterize as “informational”
12
indicators. ECF No. 7197 at 7-8 & Ex. A. As noted above, the court has previously provided a
13
description of what a key indicator is. See Section I, supra (quoting ECF No. 6846 at 28).
14
Defendants now seek to define “informational” indicators as those that “do not measure Program
15
Guide, Compendium, or court-ordered requirements, or they do not measure material provisions
16
of the Program Guide, Compendium, or court orders, but are included within CQI to aid quality
17
improvement.” ECF No. 7197-2 at 2. Though defendants introduce the word “informational” in
18
an attempt to distinguish a subset of indicators, in its December 17, 2020 order the court resolved
19
the issues associated with this contention.
20
Specifically, the court rejected defendants’ proposed distinction between CQIT
21
indicators that measure constitutional requirements and those defendants contended were
22
“designed to inspire best practices and for administrative coordination . . . [and] are used to
23
enhance or improve performance.” ECF No. 6996 at 5 (quoting ECF No. 6936 at 8, 9). The
24
25
26
27
28
6
The Report currently before the court is not a “compliance report” within the meaning of
the Order of Reference. See ECF No. 640 at 4-5.
7
Specifically, the Special Master reports plaintiffs declined his offer for further
negotiations and that a further meeting with defendants did not result in agreement between
defendants and the Special Master and his experts. ECF No. 7151 at 18.
11
1
court held defendants’ “contentions misperceive the remedial function of the quality improvement
2
process and CQIT,” that the continuous quality improvement (CQI) process “is essential to a
3
durable remedy in this action,” and that full implementation of “all components of CQIT is
4
essential” to the proper functioning of the CQI. ECF No. 6996 at 5. The court also clarified it
5
had not invited “parsing” of CQIT “in any way that would impede” its core function in the quality
6
improvement process or achievement of a durable remedy. Id. For the same reasons, the court
7
rejected defendants’ suggestion that the proposed distinction between indicators that reflect
8
constitutional requirements and others that are, in defendants’ view, “aspirational” was necessary
9
to avoid “‘running afoul of the needs-narrowness-intrusiveness requirement of the Prison
10
Litigation Reform Act.’” Id. at 7 (quoting ECF No. 6936 at 11). The court reiterated
11
the quality improvement process serves an integral remedial function
in this action: defendants’ assumption of responsibility for selfmonitoring the adequacy of mental health care delivered to the
plaintiff class. This function is as essential to the constitutional
remedy as are individual components measured by CQIT. Viewed
through this lens, defendants’ contention that CQIT includes
components that exceed constitutional minima is misplaced. While
key CQIT indicators must be identified as an aid to measurement of
compliance with remedial plans in this action, namely the Program
Guide and the Compendium, that identification is but a component
of full implementation of CQIT and the quality improvement
process. . . . full implementation of CQIT and the quality
improvement process is required as part of the constitutional remedy
in this action to the same extent as all other court-ordered remedies.
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
ECF No. 6996 at 7-8.
20
Renaming as “informational” the indicators defendants previously contended were
21
only “used to enhance or aid performance” cannot evade the fact that the court has already ruled
22
against defendants’ attempt to use this conceptual distinction to limit the list of key indicators.
23
Defendants provide no support for their suggestion that the Special Master should have
24
differentiated between “key” and “informational” indicators, given the court’s December 17,
25
2020 order.
26
27
28
C.
Measurement of Constitutionally Adequate Mental Health Care
Defendants also contend “not all of the specific Program Guide, Compendium, or
court-ordered requirements that may be tracked by an indicator reflect a constitutional
12
1
requirement” and that “CDCR could provide constitutionally adequate mental healthcare
2
irrespective of its performance on several indicators.” ECF No. 7197 at 6. This argument is at
3
odds with defendants’ long-standing recognition that “‘[t]he program guide is the remedial plan
4
designed to get the State up to a constitutional level of care. . . .’” ECF No. 4539 at 30 n.30
5
(quoting RT, ECF No. 4538, at 27:5-7). If this is yet another attempt by defendants to relitigate a
6
long-standing, foundational finding of this court, it is deeply disappointing. The court’s finding
7
has guided remediation in this action for years and been expressly confirmed by the United States
8
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit: “the Program Guide sets out the objective standards that
9
the Constitution requires” for the delivery of adequate mental health care to members of the
10
plaintiff class. Coleman v. Brown, 756 Fed. Appx. at 679; see also ECF No. 4539 at 30 n.30
11
(denying defendants’ termination motion, noting “the degree to which defendants are complying
12
with the Revised Program Guide is an appropriate way to assess whether defendants are meeting
13
their constitutional obligations.”). More narrowly, defendants’ argument here either ignores or
14
betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the court’s extended discussion in its December 17,
15
2020 order, referenced above.8 Relitigation of these issues in the guise of an objection is
16
improper; any such objection is disregarded.
17
D.
18
“Decommissioned” Indicators
Finally, defendants also suggest the Special Master’s proposed list “includes
19
several indicators that have been decommissioned.” ECF No. 7197 at 10. Defendants’
20
“evidence” for this position is a March 14, 2021 letter to the Special Master from Melissa Bentz,
21
Esq., informing the Special Master that “defendants plan to decommission” several indicators.
22
See id. & ECF No. 7151 at 93. The letter is not evidence that the indicators either have been or
23
could or should be “decommissioned.”9 The Special Master may assess and report as appropriate
24
25
26
27
28
8
To date the court has not enforced the certification requirement with respect to
objections to reports from the Special Master. It may in the future if purported objections appear
to ignore or disregard prior court orders.
9
Although the issue has not been tendered to the court, it is not at all clear that defendants
may unilaterally “decommission” CQIT indicators, given the long-standing and well-established
remedial process of supervision by the Special Master.
13
1
on the information contained in Ms. Bentz’s letter during the Twenty-Ninth Monitoring Round,
2
which will be the first time the Special Master and his team will return to on-site monitoring since
3
the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
4
In accordance with the above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
5
1.
6
Care, on page 21 of the Report, the Special Master’s May 6, 2021 Report on the
7
Continuous Quality Improvement Tool Key Indicators, ECF NO. 7151, is
8
ADOPTED;
9
2.
With the exception of Indicator 8 on the list of key indicators for Access to
Indicator 8 on the list of key indicators for Access to Care, on page 21 of
10
the Report, is stricken as duplicative;
11
3.
12
of the Report is provisionally approved; and
13
4.
14
the indicators on the provisionally approved list during his Twenty-Ninth
15
Monitoring Round and shall report his findings to the court in his Twenty-Ninth
16
Monitoring Round Report.
17
As modified by this order, the list of key indicators at pages 21 through 26
The Special Master shall test and monitor the functionality and efficacy of
DATED: June 30, 2021.
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
14
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?