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 Oct. 18-24, 2019 Your Neighborhood — Your News® 
 ALSO COVERING ELMHURST, JACKSON HEIGHTS, LONG ISLAND CITY, MASPETH, MIDDLE VILLAGE, REGO PARK, SUNNYSIDE 
 City Council strikes deal ahead of jails vote 
 Borough-based facilities will be reduced as a result of the expected drop in jail population 
 Queens families joined forces in Sunnyside on Saturday for the  
 third Sunnyside Family Fun Bike Ride. The event celebrates the  
 neighborhood’s protected bike lanes and emphasis on sustainable  
 transportation.   Photo by Dean Moses 
 BY BILL PARRY 
 With  the  City  Council  
 poised  to  vote  Thursday  on  
 the  controversial  land  use  
 plan  to  build  borough-based  
 jails in order to close Rikers  
 Island,  a  new  deal  has  been  
 struck. 
 Councilwoman  Karen  
 Koslowitz,  Speaker  Corey  
 Johnson  and  council  members  
 representing  Brooklyn,  
 the  Bronx  and  Manhattan  
 —  where  the  new  jails  have  
 been proposed — announced  
 Tuesday  that  the  new  borough 
 based  facilities  will  be  
 reduced  by  an  average  of  90  
 feet,  which  is  equivalent  to  
 nine floors. 
 The deal was reached as a  
 result of the expected drop in  
 the average daily jail population, 
  community engagement  
 and design-efficient improvements. 
  The maximum height  
 for  each  facility  will  be  significantly  
 reduced  from  
 its  original  plan;  the  first  
 proposal  called  for  jail  towers  
 ranging  from  a  450  feet  
 height to 245 feet, but the new  
 proposal ranges from a maximum  
 0f 295 feet to 195 feet. 
 In  Kew  Gardens,  where  
 the revised proposal reduces  
 the building  from 270  feet  to  
 195  feet,  and  from  27  floors  
 to 19. 
 “The  last  several  months  
 I have been adamant that the  
 proposed size of the boroughbased  
 jail  in  Kew  Gardens  
 needed  to  be  significantly  
 reduced,”  Koslowitz  said.  
 “As  a  result  of  difficult  negotiations  
 with  the  administration, 
  I am pleased to have  
 reduced  the  height  of  the  facility  
 by close to 100 feet, and  
 cut  the  number  of  beds  that  
 the facility will house nearly  
 in half.” 
 The  design  changes  are  
 in  response  to  the  blowback  
 raised by the four communities  
 that  will  host  the  jails  
 during  a  difficult  public  review  
 process,  which  for  the  
 first  time  featured  different  
 sites in four boroughs.. 
 “The  administration’s  
 commitment  to  reducing  the  
 height  of  the  four  planned  
 borough-based  jails  is  another  
 step in the right direction,” 
   said  Councilwoman  
 Adrienne  Adam,  chair  of  
 the  Subcommittee  on  Landmarks, 
   Public  Sitings  and  
 Dispositions.  “This  revised  
 plan will  only  reduce  capacity  
 Community  Board  9  voted  
 unanimously  against  the  
 but  will  allow  the  facilities  
 plan to build a new jail at the  
 to  better  integrate  with  
 old Queens Detention Center,  
 the  surrounding  neighborhoods.” 
 Vol. 7 No. 42  56 total pages 
 The  original  facilities  
 were designed with expected  
 average  daily  populations  of  
 5,000  by  2026,  but  that  estimate  
 is down  to 3,300, a new  
 figure  which  will  mark  the  
 lowest jail population in New  
 York City in a century. 
 “Just  a  few  years  ago,  
 the  Lippman  Commission’s  
 projection  of  a  5,000  average  
 daily population was considered  
 to be overly optimistic,”  
 Johnson said. “To now reach  
 3,300  is  an  extraordinary  
 achievement,  and  the  culmination  
 of years of hard work  
 to move away from the failed  
 policies  of  mass  incarceration, 
  But we will not rest. We  
 will  keep  fighting  to  bring  
 this  number  down  even  further. 
   New  York  City  should  
 be  a  model  of  progressive  
 criminal  justice  reform  nationwide.” 
 The reduction in the scale  
 of  the  jails  working  in  conjunction  
 with the steady drop  
 BIKING FOR A CAUSE 
 in prisons populations likely  
 means a 26-vote majoring on  
 the  plan  paving  the  way  for  
 the  closing  of  the  Rikers  Island  
 prison complex. 
 “Having a jail population of  
 less than 4,000 people was considered  
 unthinkable  in  New  
 York City  just  five  years  ago,  
 but the work of legislators,  
 advocates,  criminal  justice  
 experts and the NYPD in New  
 York has made the impossible  
 possible,” said Councilman  
 Donovan Richards, the chair  
 of the Committee on Public  
 Safety. “Focusing on keeping  
 nonviolent offenders out of  
 jail, investing in communities  
 and making a serious commitment  
 to  vocational  training  
 and programming will help  
 us  reach  that  reality.  This  is  
 only the start of the work that  
 needs to be put in to reform  
 a  horrible  system  that  led  to  
 the loss of too many lives and  
 turned minor offenders into  
 lifelong  victims  of  the  criminal  
 justice  system.  I  look  forward  
 to  continuing  the  work  
 needed  to  ensure  that  these  
 plans are executed responsibly  
 and compassionately by  
 2026.” 
 Reach  reporter  Bill  Parry  
 by  e-mail  at  bparry@schnepsmedia. 
 com or by phone at  
 (718) 260–4538. 
 THE LARGEST LANTERN FESTIVAL IN NORTH AMERICA 
 
				
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