While running to be New York City’s next mayor, Zohran Mamdani pledged to shutter
Rikers Island and shrink the city’s jail population.
Now, as he prepares to take office in just over a month and a half, a coalition of formerly
incarcerated New Yorkers, family members and advocates are demanding that Mamdani
make good on those promises — and go even further.
Members of the Jails Action Coalition and the #HALTsolitary Campaign on Thursday
released a comprehensive “Blueprint” outlining a series of sweeping reforms they say
are necessary to end what they describe as a “humanitarian catastrophe” inside city jails.
The 23-page document calls on the incoming mayor to immediately reduce the number
of people incarcerated, fully end solitary confinement and improve medical and mental
health care. It also demands that Mamdani do everything possible to close Rikers Island
for good, a shuttering required by legislation passed by the City Council in 2019 with the
approval of then-Mayor Bill de Blasio.
“We must end the abuses, neglect, torture, and lack of mental health and medical care
treatment that continue on Rikers Island,” said Victor Pate, a former Rikers detainee
who is now co-director of the #HALTsolitary Campaign. “We are far beyond a
humanitarian crisis on Rikers and it must be ended.”
Some of the decisions may not be directly up to the mayor and his hand-selected
commissioner.
Laura Swain, chief district judge for Manhattan federal court, is in the process of
selecting a so-called “remediation manager” to take over large parts of the city’s troubled
Department of Correction.
Mamdani told THE CITY last week that he supports a court-appointed receiver but
hasn’t detailed how that person will work alongside his yet-to-be named jails
commissioner.
His press team did not respond to an email seeking comment.
The Blueprint paints a grim picture of life inside New York City’s jails: rampant staff
brutality, sexual abuse and medical neglect; widespread use of solitary confinement
despite a city law banning it, and the continued incarceration of thousands of legally
innocent people awaiting trial.
Over the past five years, more than 70 people have died in city custody, including at
least 12 so far this year, according to the report. Many have died from drug overdoses,
and some have taken their own lives, records show.
The number of people detained has also nearly doubled since Eric Adams became mayor
in January 2022, Department of Correction records show. The population has spiked
from a pandemic-era low of roughly 3,800 to 7,022 as of Tuesday.
The suffering and harm inflicted on thousands of people in the city jails cannot be
ignored,” said Jennifer Parish, director of Criminal Justice Advocacy at the Urban
Justice Center Mental Health Project. “Addressing these atrocities must be the first
priority of the next administration.”
The “Blueprint” also highlights the racial disparities underpinning the city’s jail system:
as of this fall, Black New Yorkers were incarcerated at 10 times the rate of their white
counterparts, and 86% of people in city custody were being held pretrial — often
because they cannot afford bail.
Closing Rikers, the document contends, is not just a moral imperative but a fiscal one.
“The city spends over $1 billion a year maintaining Rikers, largely due to staffing,
overtime and inefficiency,” the report said. “At the same time, prolonged detention, often for people who cannot afford bail, contributes to overcrowding and worsening
conditions within the jail complex.”
The advocates also want the incoming Mamdani administration to implement Local Law
42, which strictly limits the use of solitary confinement beyond four hours and replaces
it with structured, out-of-cell programming.
After years of lobbying from activists and criminal justice reformers, the law had been
set to go into effect in July 2024 before Mayor Eric Adams signed an emergency
executive order that blocked major parts of its implementation.
The emergency hold has not been lifted since that time.
It required jail officials to put detainees who acted out into so-called “de-escalation
cells” where they could cool off and get additional counseling and services.
The list of recommendations also calls on the city to invest in jail-diversion programs by
expanding community-based treatment options for people with mental health and
substance-abuse disorders.
For people in jail, the activists are pushing Mamdani and his team to expand
programming and education with peer-led and therapeutic classes.
Mamdani is set to take office as city jails struggle to transfer defendants who are
deemed mentally unfit to stand trial after failing so called 730 exams to secure state-run
mental health facilities, THE CITY has reported.
A report soon to be released by researchers at John Jay College’s Data Collaborative for
Justice and the Katal Center for Equity, Health & Justice found that mental illness
among the jail population has reached record levels — with 60% of people in custody
now receiving mental health services, up from 44% in 2020.
Nearly one in four detainees is diagnosed with a serious mental illness, the study found,
and more than one quarter are homeless or “likely to be homeless” upon release.
“Mayor Adams not only abandoned the plan to close Rikers, he abandoned the people
whose lives are impacted by the horror of Rikers,” said Gabriel Sayegh, executive
director of the Katal Center. “This new report, and our report coming out next week, are
good places to start.”