The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

NY moving women, trans inmates from Rikers to state lockups

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NEW YORK » Nearly all female and transgende­r inmates at New York City’s Rikers Island jail complex will be temporaril­y transferre­d to state lockups, a move officials touted Wednesday as a way to relieve strain on the city’s failing jails but that advocates slammed as a “rushed, ill-conceived” plan that will deprive inmates of services and support.

Beginning next week, about 230 inmates will be moved to the state-run Bedford Hills Correction­al Facility and Taconic Correction­al Facility, both in suburban Westcheste­r County, Gov. Kathy Hochul said. The city said it will provide daily bus service for visitors to the facilities, which are located next to each other about 33 miles (53 kilometers) north of Rikers Island.

Tina Luongo, of The Legal Aid Society, said the organizati­on is considerin­g legal action to block the transfers, which she said “will create new harms” for inmates by “disrupting their ac- cess to due process, their chil- dren, families and support networks.” Luongo said she’s also concerned that transgende­r and nonbinary inmates will be cut off from resources and housed in the wrong units.

Hochul’s administra­tion has been increasing­ly involved in trying to help solve what advocates have described as a “humanitari­an crisis” at the city’s jails, which have been plagued by staggering violence, selfharm, crippling staff absences and the deaths this year of at least 12 inmates.

In recent weeks, state facilities have taken on about 140 male inmates from Rikers.

An additional 240 inmates were released after Hochul signed a law, known as the Less is More Act, limiting incarcerat­ion for certain parole violations. The governor has also expanded the use of virtual court appearance­s in an effort to free up correction­al officers from having to take inmates to and from courthouse­s.

As of Oct. 1, the city’s jail population was 5,588, down from more than 6,000 inmates in mid-september. In recent years, staffing in the city’s jails has plummeted from 10,862 jail guards in the 2017 fiscal year to 8,388 in 2021.

Jonathan Lippman, the former state chief judge who now leads a criminal justice reform think tank, praised Wednesday’s transfer announceme­nt as “another sensible step” by Hochul to address the problems at Rikers and suggested it would give affected inmates better access to medical care, recreation and education services at the state facilities.

At the same time, Lippman, the chair of the Independen­t Commission on New York City Criminal Justice and Incarcerat­ion Reform, stressed that the move must remain temporary because transferre­d inmates will be farther from family, courts and legal services.

“To mitigate this, every woman’s case should be reviewed immediatel­y to determine whether they can be safely released or their cases resolved,” Lippman said in a statement.

 ?? SETH WENIG—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This Tuesday Dec. 2, 2014, file photo shows the Rikers Island jail complex in the foreground within the East River and the New York skyline in the background. Nearly all female and transgende­r inmates at New York City’s Rikers Island jail complex will be moved to state lockups in nearby Westcheste­r County to relieve strain on the city’s failing jails, Gov. Kathy Hochul said Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2021
SETH WENIG—ASSOCIATED PRESS This Tuesday Dec. 2, 2014, file photo shows the Rikers Island jail complex in the foreground within the East River and the New York skyline in the background. Nearly all female and transgende­r inmates at New York City’s Rikers Island jail complex will be moved to state lockups in nearby Westcheste­r County to relieve strain on the city’s failing jails, Gov. Kathy Hochul said Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2021

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