New York Daily News

Jailed are free to vote

Advocates say Rikers should have polling sites

- BY GRAHAM RAYMAN

The detainees at Rikers Island have lost their liberty, but most still have the right to vote — so the city should open polling sites behind bars, advocates wrote Monday.

People in custody currently use absentee ballots to vote. Though roughly 90% are eligible because they have not been convicted of a felony, a much smaller percentage of inmates actually cast ballots.

With the jail population more than 5,000 since September, just 301 detainees voted in the November general election using absentee ballots they got in a voter registrati­on drive between August and October 2021, Correction Department figures show.

In a letter sent to the city Board of Elections, the Legal Aid Society said the law requires “adequate and equitable access” to polling sites — a standard the society argues applies to incarcerat­ed people.

“Despite this legal mandate, those detained on Rikers effectivel­y do not have access to any early voting site,” the letter said. “The lack of early voting options prevents detainees from being treated the same as every other New Yorker, leaving thousands of eligible voters without the option to vote early.”

Several dozen groups plan to rally on the issue outside Board of Elections headquarte­rs in lower Manhattan at noon Tuesday.

Greg Williams, 57, who was detained at Rikers in 2020 on a parole violation, said the absentee system was confusing. “It just didn’t work the way they had it set up,” said Williams, an activist with the advocacy group Freedom Agenda.

“People didn’t know how to get absentee ballots in a timely fashion, who they were supposed to turn to and there was no one to really advise them. Sometimes, the info they are supposed to give you gets dumped in a box and sits there for weeks.”

Correction officials say the agency favors the idea, but creating polling sites in the jails is up to the Board of Elections. The Correction Department would handle security and logistics.

“We are proud of the ongoing work we’re doing to encourage voter engagement in our facilities,” Correction Department spokeswoma­n Shayla Mulzac said. “From distributi­ng and hand-delivering voter registrati­on forms and ballots to educating individual­s in our custody about their right to vote, we are dedicated to ensuring that individual­s have an active voice in matters that affect their communitie­s.”

Mulzac said the Correction Department provides voter informatio­n packets with ballot request forms and deadlines and makes voter guides available on tablets used by detainees. The June 2022 primary voter guide is being uploaded.

She said the agency conducts monthly registrati­on efforts and uses the weekly COVID-19 flyer to inform the jail population about voting news. Law library staffers help with informatio­n. And she said people released from Rikers are given voter informatio­n and a registrati­on form.

However, voting rights activist Takeasha Newton says the Correction Department’s suffrage record is mixed.

Newton, who was last at Rikers doing voter outreach on May 25, said the agency allows just one day a month to register detainees and there’s often no staff available to escort volunteers. Access to voter informatio­n is limited, she said.

“I want to acknowledg­e they’ve come a very long way, but they have a way to go,” said Newton, a fellow with the Alliance of Families for Justice. “It’s important because our communitie­s are greatly disenfranc­hised.”

 ?? ?? Rikers Island currently lets prisoners vote via absentee ballots, but inmates say it’s not easy to get ahold of them.
Rikers Island currently lets prisoners vote via absentee ballots, but inmates say it’s not easy to get ahold of them.

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