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NYC commission calls for fixes to speed Close Rikers timeline, reduce jail population
NYC commission calls for fixes to speed Close Rikers timeline, reduce jail population

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

NYC commission calls for fixes to speed Close Rikers timeline, reduce jail population

New York City should create two new positions to oversee the closure of Rikers Island, which is mandated by law to take place by 2027, but is now already up to a half-decade behind schedule because the new borough jails won't be finished in time, a commission appointed to review the plans said Wednesday. The Independent Rikers Commission's report said the plan needs a point person at City Hall focused only on closing Rikers and a similar official at the Correction Department charged with readying the agency for the four new borough jails. The commission, made up of a range of jail experts and prominent New Yorkers in legal, business and political circles, also pressed in the report for expansion of the number of beds for the mentally ill, who make up half the jail population and might be the most pressing issue confronted in the system on a daily basis. The Brooklyn jail is slated for completion in 2029, the Bronx jail in 2031, and Queens and Manhattan in 2032. The city could reduce that timeline by a year by having the design and construction work as one team, rather than separately as is the current structure, the panel argued. The major hurdle is the size of the jail population — currently about 6,800 compared with the 3,300 ceiling originally envisioned in the Close Rikers plan and later expanded by the Adams administration to 4,500. The jail population has risen 32% since January 2022. The panel called the current population 'artificially inflated,' caused by court backlogs and the large number of mentally ill detainees. A combination of speedier case management by the state courts, electronic monitoring and expanded drug and mental health treatment could reduce the population to 4,500, the commission said. Another 500 beds would be in state psychiatric facilities and reserved for the severely mentally ill. 'None of this is guaranteed,' the panel wrote. 'We freely admit that our projections are both science and art; the best educated guesses we can make under current circumstances. It is clear from experience that properly funded, properly staffed interventions with reasonable caseloads can make real progress.' In a statement, Mayor Adams insisted he supports the closure of the jails on Rikers Island, but the original plan was 'not realistic.' 'We are glad that the Lippman Commission is finally recognizing what we have been sounding the alarm on for years — the plan for Rikers was flawed and did not offer a realistic timeline,' he said. Adams said the city has already been investing hundreds of millions in the Correction Department and he blamed the pandemic for the delayed construction timeline. He also said laws passed during the de Blasio era 'prohibit' the city from using emergency capital funds to bolster the jail system. 'To leave the plan as is and deny us these funds hurts our staff and is inhumane to those in our custody,' the mayor said. City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, a recently announced candidate for mayor, countered, 'While success requires partnership and close collaboration from many stakeholders, our city's mayoral administration must be willing to take concrete action steps and dedicate resources required to implement this blueprint, so another viable plan does not go unfulfilled. 'There is no shortcut to the work ahead, and there can be no discussions about the legal closure date without these types of commitments from the administration,' Adams said. With Chris Sommerfeldt

Eric Adams supports new finding that Rikers jail won't close by legal deadline
Eric Adams supports new finding that Rikers jail won't close by legal deadline

Politico

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Politico

Eric Adams supports new finding that Rikers jail won't close by legal deadline

NEW YORK — A commission that supports closing the jail on Rikers Island acknowledged Wednesday the decrepit facility will not be shuttered by the 2027 deadline — and Mayor Eric Adams expressed vindication with the news. The Independent Rikers Commission nevertheless outlined how the city could fully transition to four under-construction jails, despite the detainee population exceeding capacity at the planned facilities. The 114-page report, produced at the behest of City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, urged City Hall to speed up construction of the four jail projects across the city. The commission also called for transferring mentally ill inmates to psychiatric facilities and expanding alternative-to-incarceration programs. 'For decades, Rikers has been marked by dysfunction, violence and neglect — failing not only incarcerated people, but the staff and the entire city. Our blueprint lays out a clear path for Rikers to be closed safely, as is required by law,' said commission chair and former New York Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman. 'With strong leadership by New York's current and future officeholders, and the urgency that has been sorely missing, we can end the stain of Rikers forever.' Closing the notorious jail complex became a rallying cry among left-flank Democrats after documented incidents of mistreatment, most notably the case of Kalief Browder. The Bronx teenager was detained on Rikers for three years — much of it in solitary confinement — and killed himself after his charges were dropped and he was released. Under the leadership of then-Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, the body voted to shutter the facility in 2019 — a move she and former Mayor Bill de Blasio celebrated at the time, even though the mayor was initially a skeptic. Things have not gone according to plan ever since. Eric Adams — a former NYPD captain with a conservative bent — has long been cool to closing the detention complex and overruled a bill Adrienne Adams' championed to limit the practice of solitary confinement. His administration estimates the replacement jails in Queens and Manhattan could take until 2032 to complete — five years after Rikers' legally mandated closing date. Costs to build the four new jails have ballooned from $8.7 billion to $15.5 billion, and the jail population is 6,800, which is 2,300 more than the total capacity of the planned facilities. Those headwinds have further pitted Eric Adams, who has called the original plan unworkable, against Adrienne Adams. The speaker, who is running to unseat him in June, has the power to amend the 2019 law but has lambasted the administration for delays in increasing off-site mental health bed capacity and instituting alternatives to incarceration that could reduce the population. 'We are glad that the Lippman Commission is finally recognizing what we have been sounding the alarm on for years — the plan for Rikers was flawed and did not offer a realistic timeline,' the mayor said in a statement. He called on the council to amend the 2019 law and allow the city to unlock emergency capital funds. 'To leave the plan as is and deny us these funds hurts our staff and is inhumane to those in our custody,' he added. The speaker, however, said the council would not pursue any modifications until it had secured new commitments from City Hall. 'Our city's mayoral administration must be willing to take concrete action steps and dedicate resources required to implement this blueprint, so another viable plan does not go unfulfilled,' she said. 'There is no shortcut to the work ahead, and there can be no discussions about the legal closure date without these types of commitments from the Administration.' The main problem with the current plan, according to the report, is the mismatch between the detainee population and the capacity of the four planned jails, which are currently under construction in every borough except Staten Island. And a major contributor to that is the court system. About 84 percent of the people detained at Rikers are awaiting trial, according to the report. And the average wait for a day in court is almost nine months. The New York State Office of Court Administration is pursuing changes to how it handles certain types of cases, according to the commission, which predicted those reforms would reduce the Rikers population by up to 1,600 people or more within three to five years. By using more alternatives like pretrial electronic monitoring and supervised release, the report argued the daily Rikers population could be reduced by another 750 people. Together, those changes are expected to bring the headcount down to 4,500. The original Rikers plan called for creating nearly 400 secure hospital beds for detainees with severe mental illness. The commission is demanding the city to make good on its commitment — after a severely delayed rollout — and create another 500 beds to create more capacity in the system. The report also calls for the city to speed up construction on the replacement jails by a year by allowing vendors to do some construction tasks simultaneously rather than in series and by bringing in experts to eyeball the projects. It's a tall order in the world of New York infrastructure projects, which routinely come in late and over budget. While the commission said external factors like crime rates and Covid have contributed to the difficulty with the 2027 deadline, the report also blamed elected officials for a lack of urgency and action. To that end, it suggested placing one senior official each at City Hall and the Department of Correction to get the closure goal accomplished. The new jails would allow families of detainees to more easily visit since Rikers is geographically isolated. And purveyors of the plan argued it would ultimately save the city money by razing Rikers and investing in more easily managed modern correction facilities.

Eric Adams supports new finding that Rikers jail won't close by legal deadline
Eric Adams supports new finding that Rikers jail won't close by legal deadline

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Eric Adams supports new finding that Rikers jail won't close by legal deadline

NEW YORK — A commission that supports closing the jail on Rikers Island acknowledged Wednesday the decrepit facility will not be shuttered by the 2027 deadline — and Mayor Eric Adams expressed vindication with the news. The Independent Rikers Commission nevertheless outlined how the city could fully transition to four under-construction jails, despite the detainee population exceeding capacity at the planned facilities. The 114-page report, produced at the behest of City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, urged City Hall to speed up construction of the four jail projects across the city. The commission also called for transferring mentally ill inmates to psychiatric facilities and expanding alternative-to-incarceration programs. 'For decades, Rikers has been marked by dysfunction, violence and neglect — failing not only incarcerated people, but the staff and the entire city. Our blueprint lays out a clear path for Rikers to be closed safely, as is required by law,' said commission chair and former New York Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman. 'With strong leadership by New York's current and future officeholders, and the urgency that has been sorely missing, we can end the stain of Rikers forever.' Closing the notorious jail complex became a rallying cry among left-flank Democrats after documented incidents of mistreatment, most notably the case of Kalief Browder. The Bronx teenager was detained on Rikers for three years — much of it in solitary confinement — and killed himself after his charges were dropped and he was released. Under the leadership of then-Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, the body voted to shutter the facility in 2019 — a move she and former Mayor Bill de Blasio celebrated at the time, even though the mayor was initially a skeptic. Things have not gone according to plan ever since. Eric Adams — a former NYPD captain with a conservative bent — has long been cool to closing the detention complex and overruled a bill Adrienne Adams' championed to limit the practice of solitary confinement. His administration estimates the replacement jails in Queens and Manhattan could take until 2032 to complete — five years after Rikers' legally mandated closing date. Costs to build the four new jails have ballooned from $8.7 billion to $15.5 billion, and the jail population is 6,800, which is 2,300 more than the total capacity of the planned facilities. Those headwinds have further pitted Eric Adams, who has called the original plan unworkable, against Adrienne Adams. The speaker, who is running to unseat him in June, has the power to amend the 2019 law but has lambasted the administration for delays in increasing off-site mental health bed capacity and instituting alternatives to incarceration that could reduce the population. 'We are glad that the Lippman Commission is finally recognizing what we have been sounding the alarm on for years — the plan for Rikers was flawed and did not offer a realistic timeline,' the mayor said in a statement. He called on the council to amend the 2019 law and allow the city to unlock emergency capital funds. 'To leave the plan as is and deny us these funds hurts our staff and is inhumane to those in our custody,' he added. The speaker, however, said the council would not pursue any modifications until it had secured new commitments from City Hall. 'Our city's mayoral administration must be willing to take concrete action steps and dedicate resources required to implement this blueprint, so another viable plan does not go unfulfilled,' she said. 'There is no shortcut to the work ahead, and there can be no discussions about the legal closure date without these types of commitments from the Administration.' The main problem with the current plan, according to the report, is the mismatch between the detainee population and the capacity of the four planned jails, which are currently under construction in every borough except Staten Island. And a major contributor to that is the court system. About 84 percent of the people detained at Rikers are awaiting trial, according to the report. And the average wait for a day in court is almost nine months. The New York State Office of Court Administration is pursuing changes to how it handles certain types of cases, according to the commission, which predicted those reforms would reduce the Rikers population by up to 1,600 people or more within three to five years. By using more alternatives like pretrial electronic monitoring and supervised release, the report argued the daily Rikers population could be reduced by another 750 people. Together, those changes are expected to bring the headcount down to 4,500. The original Rikers plan called for creating nearly 400 secure hospital beds for detainees with severe mental illness. The commission is demanding the city to make good on its commitment — after a severely delayed rollout — and create another 500 beds to create more capacity in the system. The report also calls for the city to speed up construction on the replacement jails by a year by allowing vendors to do some construction tasks simultaneously rather than in series and by bringing in experts to eyeball the projects. It's a tall order in the world of New York infrastructure projects, which routinely come in late and over budget. While the commission said external factors like crime rates and Covid have contributed to the difficulty with the 2027 deadline, the report also blamed elected officials for a lack of urgency and action. To that end, it suggested placing one senior official each at City Hall and the Department of Correction to get the closure goal accomplished. The new jails would allow families of detainees to more easily visit since Rikers is geographically isolated. And purveyors of the plan argued it would ultimately save the city money by razing Rikers and investing in more easily managed modern correction facilities.

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