Ronnie W. Carroll, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. George E. DeTella, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 00-1281
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Submitted May 3, 2001--Decided July 3, 2001
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 99 C 2443--Harry D. Leinenweber, Judge.
Posner, Circuit Judge. The plaintiff, a long-time Illinois prison inmate with extended sojourns at Stateville and Menard, brought this suit under
The radium at Stateville presents a more difficult question. Since 1988, when he first became an inmate of the Illinois prison system, the plaintiff has spent a total of almost four yeаrs at Stateville. In 1993, in response to complaints made by inmates to the Illinois EPA concerning the quality of the drinking water, the warden assured the inmates that it was safe--yet three days later the prison began providing its employees with bottled water free of charge to allay their concerns about the safety of the prison‘s water. Three years later, in response to the plaintiff‘s inquiry, the Illinois EPA told him that the water contained radium in excess of thе maximum level set by the federal EPA. That level, for the combination of radium isotopes involved (radium 226 and radium 228), is 5 pCi/l (picocuries per liter).
The following year, 1998, the Illinois EPA told the plaintiff that while Stateville‘s water supply continuеd to exceed the federal maximum and that 80 other Illinois water systems had a similar problem (though how similar--that is, what the level of radium in those communities’ water is--is not indicated), no remedial action would be taken because the federal EPA was considering raising the maximum level from 5 pCi/l to 20 pCi/l and at that level the concentration of radium in Stateville‘s water would be well below the maximum. So far as we know, the EPA has not yet raised the level and so Stаteville‘s water continues to contain a level of radium that exceeds the federal maximum. There is some medical evidence that a person who ingested 5 pCi/l of radium 226 plus radium 228 for 70 years would have a 1/10,000th higher risk of cancer; the record contains no evidence on the hazards if any of ingesting twice that level of radium fоr four years.
Poisoning the prison water supply or deliberately inducing cancer in a prisoner would be forms of cruel and unusual punishment, and might be even if the harm was probabilistic or future rather than certain and immediate, Helling v. McKinney, 509 U.S. 25 (1993). But fаiling to provide a maximally safe environment, one completely free from pollution or safety hazards, is not. McNeil v. Lane, 16 F.3d 123, 125 (7th Cir. 1994); Steading v. Thompson, 941 F.2d 498 (7th Cir. 1991); Harris v. Flemming, 839 F.2d 1232, 1235-36 (7th Cir. 1988); Clemmons v. Bohannon, 956 F.2d 1523, 1527 (10th Cir. 1992) (en banc). Many Americans live under conditions of exposure to various contaminants. The Eighth Amendment does not require prisons to provide prisoners with more salubrious air, healthier food, or cleaner water than are enjoyed by substantial numbers of free Americans. McNeil v. Lane, supra, 16 F.3d at 125; Givens v. Jones, 900 F.2d 1229, 1234 (8th Cir. 1990). It would be inconsistent with this principle to imрose upon prisons in the name of the Constitution a duty to take remedial measures against pollution or оther contamination that the agencies responsible for the control of these hazards do not think require remedial measures. If the environmental authorities think there‘s no reason to do anything about a contaminant because its concentration is less than half the maximum in a proposed revision of the existing standards, prisоn officials cannot be faulted for not thinking it necessary for them to do anything either. They can defer to the suрerior expertise of those authorities.
The fact that the prison gave bottled water free of chаrge to its own staff does not show an awareness of a substantial hazard. If an employee has an irrationаl fear, that is nevertheless a brute fact that the employer has to take into account lest the employee quit or demand a higher wage to compensate him for bearing the supposed hazard. It is no prоof that the employer shares the fear. Prison officials do not demonstrate that deliberate indifferenсe to the inmates’ welfare which is the sine qua non of cruel and unusual punishment when they refuse to take measures against hazards that they reasonably believe to be nonexistent or slight.
If the prison authorities are violating federal antipollution laws, the plaintiff may have a remedy under those laws. See, e.g.,
Affirmed.
