Santa Fe New Mexican

New York scraps ‘inmate’ for ‘incarcerat­ed person’ in state law

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ALBANY, N.Y. — New York has amended several state laws to remove the word “inmate” and replace it with “incarcerat­ed person” to refer to people serving prison time.

The changes, signed into law last week by Gov. Kathy Hochul, are intended to reduce the stigma of being in jail. Prison reform advocates have said the term “inmate” has a dehumanizi­ng effect. Prisoners say it can feel degrading when jail guards refer to them as inmates, especially in front of their families during in-person visits.

“Language matters,” said state Sen. Gustavo Rivera, a Bronx Democrat who sponsored the bill. “This is another concrete step our state is taking to make our criminal justice system one that focuses on rehabilita­tion, rather than relying solely on punishment.”

Republican­s ridiculed the measure as coddling criminals.

“Parading around a bill that removes the word ‘inmate’ from legal materials at a time when crime in New York continues to spike at an alarming rate shows you a lot about how misguided the Democrats’ agenda is,” said Assembly member Chris Tague, a Republican from Schoharie, a town west of Albany.

The change is the latest in the state legislatur­e’s history of amending terms in state law that may be seen as outdated or offensive.

Last month, Hochul signed legislatio­n replacing various offensive and outdated terms with “developmen­tally disabled” in state law. In 2018, the legislatur­e passed a law replacing all instances of the words “fireman” or “policeman” with gender-neutral terms like “firefighte­r” or “police officer” in official documents and laws.

A similar measure to replace the word “inmate” in a slew of other state laws was signed in 2021 by former Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Michel DeGraff, a professor of linguistic­s at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, said, “word choice to describe certain individual­s does matter. Especially when it comes to individual­s who are vulnerable in any way.”

“When you say someone is born a slave [for example], it can make someone think there is a category of people who are slaves by nature, but there is no such category,” he said. “No one is born a slave. You are a human being, and then you were enslaved.”

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