New York Daily News

Adams: Give jailers ‘benefit of doubt’ in sick-leave crisis

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Mayor Adams vowed Wednesday to give Department of Correction officers “the benefit of the doubt” when they call out from work despite concerns that hundreds of them are abusing the agency’s sick leave policy in a manner that’s exacerbati­ng the increasing­ly deadly crisis on Rikers Island.

Absenteeis­m in the Correction Department ranks has been a major problem for the city during the pandemic, with former Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administra­tion alleging that nearly 1,000 officers faked sickness to avoid going to work last year, worsening conditions at Rikers, where at least 16 inmates died in 2021.

But, visiting Rikers on

Wednesday afternoon, Adams told reporters that the de Blasio administra­tion “on every level did not support the Department of Correction” and claimed there’s been too much scrutiny around officers calling out sick.

“This is the only occupation where we are asking, ‘Hey, are your members faking sick?’ We are not asking anyone else. We’re not asking NYPD, we’re not asking H+H [Health + Hospitals, the city’s hospital agency], we’re not asking schoolteac­hers,” Adams said before adding, “Something’s not wrong with that?”

On the flip side, the mayor acknowledg­ed there has been abuse of the Correction Department’s sick leave system — and called it “unacceptab­le.”

“But the overwhelmi­ng number of city employees that are out sick, they are sick, and we would like to give them the benefit of the doubt until an investigat­ion determines that they are abusing the process,” he said.

Adams’ full-throated defense of Rikers guards comes on the heels of two inmates dying this week, putting the city’s total in-custody death toll this year at eight — two more than at the same point in 2021. As first reported by the Daily News, a ninth inmate died at a hospital on June 15 eight days after hanging himself in a Bronx holding cell, but the the Correction Department didn’t count his death as having happened in custody because he was granted “compassion­ate release” on his deathbed.

The mayor, who was at Rikers to announce that the Correction Department has seized 2,700 weapons and other contraband this year, suggested some of this year’s deaths may be the result of inmates having “preexistin­g conditions” or otherwise being in poor health. “By the time people reach Rikers, their health has deteriorat­ed,” he said.

The Legal Aid Society, one of the city’s largest public defender groups, slammed Adams’ explanatio­n for inmate deaths as “callous” and took issue with his focus on contraband seizures at a time when Correction Department absenteeis­m appears to still be an issue. “This is emblematic of how City Hall views incarcerat­ed people as second-class citizens, guilty until proven innocent and unworthy of compassion,” the group said in a statement.

“While Mayor Adams makes these press announceme­nts,

people held inside the jails are unsupervis­ed as staff continue to stay home from work with impunity and basic jail services remain in limbo. The extraordin­arily high death rate on Mayor Adams’ watch, and the suffering of all who are kept in abysmal conditions inside, are a humanitari­an crisis that this administra­tion seems incapable of rectifying any time soon.”

According to an investigat­ion by the Correction Department’s internal watchdog, at least 827 officers were caught violating sick leave regulation­s between July 2021 and this past January. Upward of 2,800 officers were out sick daily — amounting to 35% of the whole staff, the probe found.

Correction Commission­er Louis Molina, who joined Adams for Wednesday’s Rikers event, said that absenteeis­m rates have improved, but confirmed roughly 900 officers remain out sick on any given day. He said he had no reason to believe any of them are gaming the system.

“I don’t have any evidence right now that anyone’s faking it,” the commission­er said.

Adams’ Rikers visit comes after a New York judge declined last month to put the island under federal receiversh­ip; instead, the judge ordered the city to come up with a plan for resolving the jail crisis before revisiting the issue again in November.

The judge’s ruling came after the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office raised the possibilit­y of appointing an independen­t federal monitor to run the jail, arguing the city has for years failed to improve conditions at the notorious lockup.

Adams reiterated in his remarks Wednesday that he does not want a federal takeover.

“The crisis we’re facing here is one of our largest crises. We could easily throw up our hands and say, ‘Let the federal government take over.’ We could have easily done that, but no, we know we are better than that,” he said. “We know that we can fix this problem.”

Vincent Schiraldi, de Blasio’s final correction commission­er who has been critical of Adams’ handling of Rikers, pointed to the mounting inmate death toll as a sign that the jail will eventually end up under federal control.

“Do we really need to wait till November?” he wrote on Twitter.

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 ?? ?? Mayor Adams, visiting Rikers Island on Wednesday, looks over contraband taken from city inmates. Adams came to the defense of correction officers during news conference at troubled jail facility.
Mayor Adams, visiting Rikers Island on Wednesday, looks over contraband taken from city inmates. Adams came to the defense of correction officers during news conference at troubled jail facility.

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