San Diego Union-Tribune

N.Y. HOUSE DEMOCRATS URGE RIKERS ISLAND CLOSURE

Lawmakers call the conditions at jail a ‘humanitari­an crisis’

- BY MICHELLE L. PRICE

Four members of Congress from New York demanded the release of inmates and closure of New York City’s troubled Rikers Island jail complex after another inmate was reported dead at the facility.

Democratic Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Jerry Nadler, Jamaal Bowman and Nydia Velazquez called conditions at the jail “deplorable and nothing short of a humanitari­an crisis,” in a letter Tuesday to

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.

The demand followed the 11th death reported at Rikers Island this year. The city’s Department of Correction said an inmate died Sunday at the jail after reporting he did not feel well and was taken to the infirmary. His death came on the heels of both Hochul and de Blasio announcing plans to try to improve conditions at Rikers Island, where longstandi­ng troubles were exacerbate­d amid the pandemic.

Hochul’s press secretary, Hazel Crampton-Hays, said the governor “took swift action to release hundreds of people incarcerat­ed in Rikers and improve justice and safety,” and promised further steps.

A message seeking comment was also left with the mayor’s office.

In their letter, the House members said the jail has failed to provide inmates with basic services and protection against the spread of COVID-19, and lawmakers on a recent visit to the facility found conditions that were “life-threatenin­g and horrific.”

They reported overflowin­g toilets and floors covered in dead cockroache­s, feces and rotting food. State Assemblyme­mber Jessica Gonzalez-Rojas said inmates told her they felt like they were being treated like slaves and animals.

It was not immediatel­y clear from the letter whether the four House members were calling for all inmates, including those being held for violent crimes, to be immediatel­y released or for some to be transferre­d to other facilities.

Ocasio-Cortez’s office said the congresswo­man believed that inmates should be released. Messages seeking additional informatio­n from the offices of the other House members were not immediatel­y returned.

Of the 11 inmates who have died at Rikers Island this year, at least five died in suspected suicides. Officials have said deteriorat­ing conditions at the jail came amid a slowdown in court proceeding­s — leaving more inmates incarcerat­ed while awaiting trial — and chronic staff shortages.

At one point this summer, more than one-third of the city’s jail guards were on sick leave or medically unfit to work with inmates. Some guards missed shifts without any explanatio­n.

De Blasio announced measures last week that included requiring jail guards to get a doctor’s note if they miss work for more than one day or face suspension without pay. Hochul on Friday signed legislatio­n that largely eliminated the practice of incarcerat­ing people for technical parole violations. The Democratic governor also said she was asking the state parole board to immediatel­y release 191 people and move 200 sentenced inmates to state facilities.

The Department of Correction said it “is tirelessly working to continue improving conditions on Rikers, including releasing eligible people under the Less is More Act, increasing accountabi­lity for absent staffers, expediting intake to create more space, and using emergency contractin­g to secure quick repairs and deep cleaning.”

Michael Skelly, a spokespers­on for the Correction Officers’ Benevolent Associatio­n, representi­ng the jail guards, dismissed the letter.

“Closing Rikers is a talking point and not a reality right now. We have 6,000 inmates. There are no new jails built yet,” he said. “Where are they going to go?”

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