In October, 1975, eight juvenile residents of the Mayaguez Industrial School (Mayaguez), in Mayaguez, Puerto Rico, filed a complaint, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, urging the court to declare conditions at Mayaguez unconstitutional. Since that time, two similar suits have been consolidated with the first, and the actions have been certified as a class action on behalf of all present and future juveniles committed to Mayaguez or the Maricao Juvenile Camp (Maricao), in Maricao, Puerto Rico. In addition, on December 6, 1976, the court accepted a Complaint in Intervention of the United States, reinforcing the claims of the main plaintiffs.
After extensive discovery, the district court, on March 27, 1978, ordered the parties to attempt to settle the case. Between August 11, 1978 and June, 1979, the parties submitted three proposed consent decrees, all of which the district court rejected as “unduly and unnecessarily disruptive of the Commonwealth’s juvenile justice system.” Desiring to see and hear for itself whether conditions at the camps warranted the remedy agreed upon by the parties, the court held extensive hearings, in December and January of 1979-1980 and April to July of 1981. The court also personally inspected conditions at the two camps.
On February 15,1982, the court rendered its decision, reported at
On appeal, plaintiffs challenge the court’s refusal to enter the proposed consent decrees. They also renew their claim for a “right to treatment”, and, on that basis, challenge a number of conditions and deprivations which the court found constitutionally acceptable. Finally, they urge that certain conditions, particularly those relating to the use of the isolation unit as a disciplinary sanction, which use the district court did not enjoin or limit, violate their right not to be cruelly and unusually punished. Plaintiff-intervenor, on appeal, challenges only the district court’s failure to find certain fire hazards at Mayaguez unconstitutional and to order that they be remedied.
I. Consent Decrees
We sympathize with plaintiffs’ frustration in having been ordered to negotiate a settlement and then having had three proposed consent decrees rejected by the court. We also acknowledge our role in rendering the district court’s refusals essentially unreviewable. Plaintiffs appealed to us from those decisions and we dismissed for lack of an appealable order. Since then, the Supreme Court has made clear the error of our ways. In
Carson v. American Brands, Inc.,
In Carson, the Supreme Court reasoned that:
“unless the District Court order denying the motion to enter the consent decree is immediately appealable, petitioners will lose their opportunity to ‘effectually challenge’ an interlocutory order that denies them injunctive relief and that plainly has ‘serious, perhaps irreparable, consequence.’ First, petitioners might lose their opportunity to settle their case on the negotiated terms .... Settlement agreements may ... be predicated on an express or implied condition that the parties would, by their agreement, be able to avoid the costs and uncertainties of litigation..... Because a party to a pending settlement might be legally justified in withdrawing its consent to the agreement once trial is held and final judgment entered, the District Court’s order might thus have the ‘serious, perhaps irreparable, consequence’ of denying the parties their right to compromise their dispute on mutually agreeable terms.”450 U.S. at 86-88 ,101 S.Ct. at 997-98 (citations omitted).
In this case, defendants have withdrawn their consent to the proposed settlement. Moreover, having the evidence presented at the trial before us, and the benefit of the district court’s assessment of that evidence, it would be difficult for us now to “judge the fairness of [the] proposed compromise by weighing the plaintiffs’] likelihood of success on the merits against the amount and form of the relief offered in the settlement.”
See Carson,
II. Conditions of Confinement at Mayaguez and Maricao
On appeal, plaintiffs renew both their “right to treatment” claims and their *1176 Eighth Amendment challenge to the length of time a, juvenile may be confined in isolation at Mayaguez and to the conditions under which the juveniles live while so isolated. We agree with the district court that the state has no constitutional obligation to provide rehabilitative treatment to the juveniles within its custody, simply because its professed purpose in taking custody of the juveniles is to help them. We are concerned, however, that the district court, in rejecting the right to treatment, may have passed too lightly over other substantive limitations on the conditions of involuntary confinement, particularly the extensive use of isolation at Mayaguez. Before addressing those concerns, we pause to explain why we agree with the district court’s rejection of a broad right to rehabilitative treatment and training.
A. Right to Rehabilitative Treatment and Training
Plaintiffs challenge, as violative of their right to rehabilitative treatment, the inadequate intake assessment of each juvenile’s psychiatric, medical, academic, vocational and social strengths, weaknesses and needs, coupled with the inadequate classification system (based on age and physical characteristics); the absence of adequate individualized treatment plans covering all aspects of each juvenile’s care, education, growth and development; the absence of adequate educational, vocational and recreational programs; the deficient qualifications and training of the staff; and overreliance on the custodial staff. Basically, they claim that the juveniles are just being incarcerated, not rehabilitated, and that in light of the state’s professed purpose in institutionalizing the juveniles — to treat them — the state has an obligation to provide the promised treatment.
A number of courts have found that juveniles involuntarily incarcerated have a right to rehabilitative treatment.
See, e.g., Morgan
v.
Sproat,
As the district court in this case recognized, both of the theoretical bases for the claimed right to rehabilitative treatment are questionable. Although states have asserted their parens patriae authority in exercising control over problem juveniles, they may legitimately confine individuals solely to protect society from them.
See O’Connor v. Donaldson,
The second aspect of the quid pro quo theory has even less merit. The procedural protections accorded juvenile offenders may differ from those accorded criminal defendants, because the demands of due process differ according to the interests of the individual and of society in the given situation.
See Morrisey v. Brewer,
In short, there is no legally cognizable quo to trigger a compensatory quid. We therefore agree with the district court that although rehabilitative training is no doubt desirable and sound as a matter of policy and, perhaps, of state law, 3 plaintiffs have no constitutional right to that rehabilitative training. With that in mind, we turn to plaintiffs’ challenge to the practice of confining juveniles to the isolation unit at Mayaguez as punishment for disciplinary infractions.
B. Due Process and Eighth Amendment Limitations on the Confinement of Juveniles to Isolation
The district court made a number of factual findings regarding the use of isolation
*1178
at Mayaguez.
4
See
“34. The intensive care unit complex at Mayaguez, which is also referred to as the ‘isolation’ or ‘disciplinary’ unit, is a separate concrete building located approximately fifty yards from the quadrangle where the regular dormitories are located. It is also quadrangular in shape, and is surrounded by a ten foot high chain link fence, topped with barbed wire. The building is made of reinforced concrete, with an interior courtyard. The cells face inward and are approximately nine feet by nine feet square in size. They contain one bed, a toilet facility and a window facing the outside of the building. The window and the door are barred. The ceiling is ten to twelve feet high. The cells themselves are clean but bare, except for a wood slab with a foam mattress covered by a sheet, and a wash basin and toilet. Cross ventilation offers adequate ventilation. Neither the door nor windows are screened.
“74. It is a regular practice in Mayaguez to separate juveniles individually from the rest of the inmate population for disciplinary reasons. Juveniles so sanctioned are placed in the individual cells previously indicated as being located in the so called intensive treatment or isolation unit.
“76. The average length of stay in the isolation cells from September 18,1979 to December 18, 1979 which is a representative period, was 13.3 days. There are, however, several known cases of juveniles having spent several months at one stretch in isolation.
“77. The sole activity of juveniles while in isolation is eating and sleeping. They do not attend the Mayaguez academic or vocational school program and are not allowed any writing or reading material in their cells except the Bible. Furthermore, they are not allowed any physical exercise or recreation; the only time they are allowed out of the isolation cell is for a daily shower.”
The court then enjoined certain uses of the isolation unit as unconstitutional. It forbade commitment of a juvenile to isolation because of “any illness, sickness, or physical or mental defect or disease”; commitment to isolation of any pre-trial juvenile detainee; and commitment to isolation of any juvenile without notice of the charges against him and an opportunity to contest them. It also instructed defendants to write and post disciplinary rules specifying proscribed conduct and resulting sanctions. Id. at 992. The court did not, however, address additional claims by plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenor that the conditions of confinement in isolation at Mayaguez, even for juveniles determined after an appropriate hearing to be guilty of disciplinary infractions, are unconstitutional.
A number of courts have found conditions of isolation similar to those at Mayaguez unconstitutional when imposed on juvenile offenders.
See, e.g., Feliciano v. Barcelo,
In the context of adult prisons, the Supreme Court has made clear that not every aspect of prison discipline must serve a rehabilitative purpose.
See Hutto
v.
Finney,
The Supreme Court has not addressed the use of isolation in a juvenile detention center. While we are unwilling to say that isolation of juveniles is necessarily unconstitutional, we are satisfied that the considerations relevant to an assessment of isolation in a juvenile camp are somewhat different from those relevant to an assessment of the same treatment in a prison. In the first place, as the Supreme Court has noted, there is no simple test for determining whether conditions of confinement are cruel and unusual. The Eighth Amendment draws its meaning from “evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society”.
Trop v. Dulles,
Even more important than Eighth Amendment concerns for our purposes, juveniles like plaintiffs, who have not been convicted of crimes, have a due process interest in freedom from unnecessary bodily restraint which entitles them to closer scrutiny of their conditions of confinement than that accorded convicted criminals. In
Youngberg v. Romeo,
The district court had before it only the Third Circuit’s opinion in
Young-berg.
It noted that the Supreme Court had granted certiorari in
Youngberg,
but found
Youngberg
“clearly distinguishable” from the case before it.
The Supreme Court has recognized that the deprivation of liberty and conditions of confinement of both juvenile detention and involuntary confinement of the mentally ill may be sufficiently analogous to criminal punishment to warrant the protection of the Eighth Amendment.
See Ingraham v. Wright,
The distinction between conditions imposed for the legitimate purpose of maintaining institutional order and safety and those that amount to retribution is a fine one.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
The district court did not have the benefit of the Supreme Court’s guidance in
Youngberg
and made no findings regarding the legitimacy and weight of the state’s interest in confining the juveniles in isolation. Were there nothing of concern in the record, we might be inclined to assume that the state’s interest, presumably in protecting the juveniles from harm, in discouraging offending behavior and in preventing escapes, was sufficient to justify the deprivations imposed. A number of experts testified, however, that isolation for longer than a few hours serves no legitimate therapeutic or disciplinary purpose and is unnecessary to prevent harm unless a juvenile is severely emotionally disturbed. In addition, the experts testified, extended isolation can be psychologically damaging and, under the conditions of Mayaguez, may be physically harmful.
6
The district court recognized that “[ijsolation as a disciplinary measure, under the circumstances present in this case, entails a substantial curtailment of a juvenile’s freedom.”
The Supreme Court has cautioned us against substituting our judgment for that of correction officials charged with maintaining institutional order and security.
Bell
v.
Wolfish,
The district court made no findings regarding the therapeutic or damaging effects of extended isolation. It ordered defendants to post disciplinary rules specifying proscribed conduct and sanctions to be /imposed for violations thereof, but set no limits on the length of time a juvenile may be put in isolation, the offenses that would warrant it, or the conditions a juvenile may be subjected to while in isolation. Rather than substitute our judgment for that of the district court, we think a remand is necessary for the court to consider, based on the testimony already presented to it and its own examination of conditions at Mayaguez, whether and to what extent isolation as employed there is reasonably related to any legitimate government objectives. In doing so, the court should consider whether isolation should be limited to certain time periods and should require additional safeguards, such as close supervision by a qualified expert and periodic review of the continuing need for isolation. Finally, the court should consider whether minimal ad *1182 ditional individual attention might reduce the need for isolation. For instance, the district court found that there are four basic groups of juveniles at Mayaguez:
“mentally retarded juveniles, psychiatrically ill juveniles, those with minor psychological problems and serious social difficulties, and serious offenders. The first three groups comprise the majority of the population .... The group with mental retardation clearly represents a major proportion of the Mayaguez population and this group covers the range from severe to mild retardation.”533 F.Supp. at 980 .
Several witnesses testified that a major source of the camp’s inability to address its disciplinary and escape problems without extensive use of isolation 7 is the fact that it makes little effort to separate juveniles according to their particular problems, but only according to size and age. Thus, while one juvenile may be incorrigible, a number of others are simply retarded and could benefit from training in how to conform their behavior to acceptable patterns. Instead, they learn from their incorrigible peers, with whom they are cast. Similarly, dealing with emotionally disturbed juveniles as a group with common problems might significantly reduce the emotional outbursts currently leading to their confinement in isolation.
In
Youngberg,
relying on the liberty interest of even a convicted criminal in freedom from unnecessary bodily restraint, the Supreme Court required the state to provide minimally adequate or reasonable training to a mental incompetent to protect that interest. Reasonableness, of course, depends on the circumstances of the case and should be assessed in light of the judgment of qualified professionals.
See
III. Fire Hazards
The United States challenges the district court’s failure to address what it considers to be significant fire hazards at Mayaguez. It points to evidence that polyurethane *1183 mattresses are used throughout the institution and that polyurethane is highly inflammable, burns quickly at high temperatures and emits extremely toxic gasses. In fact, two juveniles at Mayaguez died several years before the trial in a fire they set to their mattresses. According to one witness, the two juveniles were in the cell with the fire only about a minute and a half. The United States also points to evidence that the fire extinguishers not only needed charging, but were inadequate, and that there was a need for an evacuation plan in the event of fire. It therefore urges that the court erred in not ordering that polyurethane mattresses be replaced by mattresses made of a fire-resistant material, that fire extinguishers be properly charged and maintained, and that an adequate evacuation plan be formulated.
There is no question that fire safety is a legitimate concern under the Eighth Amendment.
See, e.g., Ruiz v. Estelle,
Although the district court said nothing in its order about fire safety, it did recognize some of the fire hazards of concern to the United States. The court found that:
“A number of fire extinguishers in use throughout Mayaguez were not properly maintained in operational order, it appearing that they were not adequately charged. Once this situation is corrected the Court is not aware of other fire safety hazards at the Mayaguez, other than the polyurethane mattresses.”533 F.Supp. at 984 .
It appears that the court assumes that the fire extinguishers will in the future be adequately charged. It did not, however, so order. It is also not clear- whether the court assumes that the polyurethane mattresses will be replaced or that, while the mattresses are a fire hazard, the hazard does not rise to constitutional dimensions. Finally, the court made no findings regarding the adequacy of the fire extinguishers, once properly charged, or the need for an evacuation plan.
We agree with the United States that the court has not adequately addressed the evidence presented to it that conditions at Mayaguez are not as safe from the danger of fire as the constitution requires that they be. Having no first hand knowledge of the evidence, we are reluctant to say that the polyurethane mattresses must all be replaced, or that new fire extinguishers must be purchased and an evacuation plan be formulated. We think, however, that the district court should address those concerns and, if it finds current conditions constitutionally inadequate, should order that they be remedied.
The portion of the district court’s judgment, enjoining defendants from continuing certain unconstitutional actions and practices is affirmed. On the remaining issues of the constitutionality of defendants’ use of isolation as a disciplinary sanction at Mayaguez and the adequacy of defendants’ fire safety measures at Mayaguez, the judgment is vacated and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. No costs at this time.
Notes
. The district court found conditions reviewable under the Eighth Amendment and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We note that the Supreme Court has not yet determined whether the requirements of due process apply to Puerto Rico through the Fifth or the Fourteenth Amendment,
see Torres v. Puerto Rico,
. 34 L.P.R.A. § 2002 provides for two or more judges to take cognizance of matters concerning, inter alia:
“1. Any child:
(a) Whose parents or other persons legally responsible for his care and support, being able to do so, have wilfully or negligently failed to provide the care, education or protection prescribed by law for his welfare.
(b) Who is deemed undisciplined, and whose parents, tutors or teachers are unable to control him, thus jeopardizing his own or the community’s welfare, provided that the Secretary of Social Services certifies that the case has been referred to him and, after providing services in the community to him, his conduct is still deemed as undisciplined.
(c) Who violates or has attempted to violate any Commonwealth law or municipal ordinance.
2. The custody of any child.
3. A petition to place a child in a suitable institution for his treatment.”
34 L.P.R.A. § 2010 authorizes a judge, upon a finding that the condition or behavior of a child brings him under the provisions of section 2002, to, inter alia, enter an order:
“4. Placing the child under the custody of the Secretary of Health for commitment to an institution suitable for the treatment of children, or for his placement in a foster home ....”
Plaintiffs have not challenged the legitimacy of the state’s interest in incarcerating them. Nor have they alleged that there are juveniles at either Mayaguez or Maricao who have committed no offense and whose release would present no danger either to themselves or to the community. Thus, as we interpret the record before us, we are not presented with the issue of what treatment obligations the due process clause imposes on the state when it incarcerates juveniles solely for the purpose of treatment, or of the constitutional legitimacy of such incarceration. Cf. O’Connor v. Donaldson,422 U.S. at 573 ,95 S.Ct. at 2492 ; id. at 585,95 S.Ct. at 2498 (Burger, C.J., concurring).
. In their Proposed Conclusions of Law, presented to the district court after the hearing, plaintiffs urged the court to find that they had a state law right to treatment. The district court found that “the right to treatment is unquestionably a cognizable right pursuant to the Constitution and laws of the Commonwealth”,
. There is no isolation unit at Maricao.
. A “child” is “a person under 18 years of age or a person who having reached 18 years of age is held to answer for an actual or attempted violation of a commonwealth law or a municipal ordinance committed by said person before his having attained the age of 18 years”. 34 L.P.R.A. § 2001(c).
. Juveniles held in the isolation unit at Mayaguez apparently have suffered dehydration, numerous insect bites, severe depression and signs of sensory deprivation.
. Evidence produced by the Plaintiff-Intervenor highlights the extent of the use of isolation at Mayaguez. Between 1977 and 1981, the juvenile population at Mayaguez ranged from a low of 67 to a high of 158.
