The Mercury News

New York agrees to reform prison solitary use

- By Jake Pearson Associated Press

NEW YORK — New York prison officials agreed Wednesday to overhaul their use of solitary confinemen­t, offering a broad slate of reforms aimed at reducing the number of inmates sent to “the box,” limiting the amount of time they can spend there and providing counseling to help longterm solitary inmates adjust to life on the outside.

With 60,000 inmates in 54 prisons, New York is among the largest of a handful of states that have taken such actions in the face of growing criticism of isolation as punishment for offenses behind bars. New York’s agreement settles a lawsuit arguing the state’s use of solitary was extraordin­arily harsh and psychologi­cally damaging.

“Massive culture change is a challenge,” said Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, which brought the suit four years ago. “We need to be monitoring like a hawk, and we will be monitoring like a hawk to ensure that the reforms are actually carried out.”

Once approved by a judge, some of the reforms outlined in the $62 million, five-year plan should be implemente­d within three months.

About 4,000 New York state prisoners at any given time are in solitary, which means confinemen­t in a 6by-10-foot cell for 23 hours a day, with one hour a day for recreation. The new plan calls for moving about 1,100 put there for minor or nonviolent offenses into secure, therapeuti­c housing units instead.

The agreement also requires the state to retrain its 20,000 prison guards on deescalati­on and other techniques, caps the number of days to 30 a prisoner will serve for a first-time, nonviolent offense, reduces the number of violations that carry solitary sentences and for the first time imposes a three-month maximum sentence for most rule violations.

The agreement leaves open exceptions for prisoners who commit extreme acts of violence or escape but also provides so-called step-down mental health and job-training programs to effectivel­y acclimate prisoners who have been in long-term isolation, even for violent offenses, before they’re released from custody.

Correction­s officials in Colorado, Mississipp­i and Washington have already taken steps to severely reduce their reliance on longterm isolation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States