City Council approves plan to close prisons on  
 Rikers Island and build borough-based jails 
 BY BILL PARRY 
 A  new  path  forward  for  
 the  city’s  criminal  justice  
 system was forged last week  
 when  the  full  City  Council  
 voted  in  favor  of  the  de  Blasio  
 administration’s  plan  
 to  close  the  notorious  jail  
 complex  on  Rikers  Island  
 and build four new boroughbased  
 detention facilities. 
 The  36-to-13  vote  passing  
 the  $8.7  billion  land use  
 plan  came  after  Mayor  Bill  
 de Blasio and Speaker Corey  
 Johnson reached a deal on a  
 wide-range of community investments  
 totaling  $391 million, 
   including  $126  million  
 that was previously planned  
 and $265 million in new programming  
 that will address  
 the root causes of incarceration  
 that was announced for  
 the  first  time  just  prior  to  
 the vote.  
 “When  we  pledged  to  
 close Rikers Island, we made  
 a  promise  to  transform  a  
 broken criminal  justice system  
 and give back to communities  
 that have experienced  
 the effects of mass incarceration  
 firsthand,”  de  Blasio  
 said. “By investing in neighborhoods  
 and putting people  
 on  the  path  to  success,  we  
 are  making  good  and  getting  
 closer  to  a  day  when  
 we’re  the  fairest,  big city  in  
 America.” 
 To  get  to  this  point,  the  
 number  of  New  Yorkers  entering  
 jail  has  declined  by  
 nearly  half  in  the  past  six  
 years. 
 The  jail  population  has  
 declined  from  11,000  in  2014  
 to  about  7,000  today,  and  is  
 projected to be approximately  
 3,300 by 2026. 
 “For  too  long,  the  city’s  
 answer  to  every  societal  
 problem was to throw people  
 in  jail.  Because  of  that,  we  
 lost  generations  to  mass  incarceration, 
   mostly  young  
 men of color,” Johnson said.  
 “These  investments  are  at  
 the heart of our plan to close  
 Rikers.” 
 The  plan  adds  over  $71  
 million  for  alternatives  to  
 detention  and  incarceration  
 and  reforms  to  the  Department  
 of Correction, building  
 on $126 million in annual investments  
 to  reduce  justice  
 involvement,  support  communities, 
  and make our justice  
 system smaller. 
 The City Council approved the plan to close the prisons on Rikers Island and replace them with borough-based facilities last week.  
 City  Councilwoman  Karen  
 Koslowitz  said  she  will  
 sleep  well  at  night  with  her  
 vote  in  favor  of  the  plan  
 which  will  build  a  smaller  
 prison  than  was  originally  
 planned in her district at the  
 old  Queens  Detention  Complex  
 in Kew Gardens. 
 “I  am  very  proud  of  the  
 community  investments  
 that I have secured from the  
 administration,”  Koslowitz  
 said.  “As  a  result  of  these  
 investments our seniors will  
 receive the services they deserve, 
   are  children  will  be  
 better  equipped  to  succeed  
 and  the  community  overall  
 will benefit. Moving forward  
 it will be my imperative that  
 these  investments  will  be  
 implemented in a timely and  
 responsible manner.” 
 Such  investments  affecting  
 the  borough  includes  
 updates  to  the Queens  Community  
 House  on  Kew  Gardens  
 Road  and  expansion  of  
 the  Cure  Violence  programming  
 at the 113th Precinct in  
 southeast Queens. 
 Another  key  part  of  the  
 agreement  addressed  parking  
 in  Kew  Gardens  where  
 the  city will  create  676  public  
 parking  spaces,  and  
 increase  of  150  above  the  
 initial  design  and  605  additional  
 parking spaces so Department  
 of  Correction  personnel  
 will not utilize public  
 parking. 
 “Closing  Rikers  Island  is  
 one  of  the  most  important  
 votes  this  council  has  ever  
 taken,  but  these  critical  investment  
 in  restoring  and  
 healing  our  communities  
 are  the  most  effective  part  
 of  the  plan  that  will  drastically  
 reduce  our  incarcerated  
 population by providing  
 opportunities for at-risk New  
 Yorkers,”  City  Councilman  
 Donovan Richards said. “Locally, 
   increased  investment  
 in  the  Crisis  Management  
 System  in  southeast  Queens  
 and a community justice center  
 in Rockaway will help divert  
 New Yorkers away from  
 the  criminal  justice  system  
 before  they  get  caught  in  a  
 system  for  the  rest  of  their  
 life.  The  work  doesn’t  end  
 today,  since  we  will  have  to  
 hold this administration and  
 the  next  accountable  to  the  
 progress  that  must  be  made  
 over the next few years until  
 Rikers in shutdown forever.” 
 The  deal  for  investment  
 in  community-based  resources  
 was  applauded  by  
 The  Fortune  Society,  the  
 Long  Island City-based nonprofit  
 that  helps  formerly  
 incarcerated people re-enter  
 society. 
 “For too long, and at great  
 QNS/File 
 human  and  financial  cost,  
 our  jails  have  warehoused  
 people  on  minor  offenses  
 whose unmet needs of homelessness  
 and untreated mental  
 illness  could  have  been  
 addressed  while  they  were  
 at  liberty  in the  community  
 and before they ever became  
 involved  in  the  criminal  
 justice  system,”  Fortune  
 Society  President  and  CEO  
 JoAnne  Page  said.  “”With  
 these  key  investments  in  
 housing,  mental  health  services, 
   gun  violence  prevention  
 and  youth  services,  
 these  vulnerable  New  Yorkers  
 can  get  the  help  they  so  
 desperately  need,  while  we  
 continue to build a safer and  
 more just city.” 
 Reach  reporter  Bill  Parry  
 by  e-mail  at  bparry@schnepsmedia. 
 com  or  by  phone  
 at (718) 260–4538. 
 QNS.COM TIMESLEDGER, OCT. 25-31, 2019 3  
 
				
link
		link
		link
		/QNS.COM