黑料正能量 Note: Last year, the NYS Assembly approved landmark legislation that will ban the inhumane use of solitary confinement for people with disabilities, pregnant and new moms and other especially vulnerable groups. While the bill died in the Senate last year, Senate Democrats have more than enough votes to move it through that house this year. Efforts to win passage of the 鈥 (HALT) Solitary bill鈥 () will be taking center stage in Albany with next Tuesday鈥檚 annual lobbying day by the members of the Campaign for Alternatives to Solitary Confinement (CAIC).
HALT has been a top priority for 黑料正能量 and a number of our colleagues: please come and/or support others to join us next Tuesday, April 30th, in Albany!
By David Brand Queens Daily Eagle April 21, 2019
An Assembly bill that would curtail the use of solitary confinement in 黑料正能量 state prisons and jails picked up its 76th cosponsor this month, giving it a majority in the chamber and moving it one step closer to passing.
The (HALT) Solitary bill, sponsored by Queens Assemblymember Jeff Aubry, would restrict the use of solitary confinement to no more than 15 consecutive days or 20 total days within a two-month period. The bill would also mandate that, after 15 days, individuals be moved to rehabilitative and therapeutic units that provide programs, therapy and support services with at least six hours a day spent outside a cell.
The legislation achieved a in the state Senate last month. A similar version of the bill passed the Assembly last year but failed in the Senate.
鈥淧eople in solitary and other forms of isolated confinement are locked down for 22 to 24 hours a day, without meaningful human contact, programming, or therapy, in cells smaller than the average parking space,鈥 says the 鈥淭hese conditions cause human beings to deteriorate psychologically, physically and also harms their families and communities.鈥
The NYCAIC, a coalition of justice reform organizations, will demonstrate outside Gov. Andrew Cuomo鈥檚 Office on Tuesday to denounce solitary confinement and to advocate for passage of the bill as part of the #HALTsolitary Campaign.
HALTsolitary Campaign outreach specialist Jack Davis spent seven years in solitary confinement and called on the state legislature to pass the bill without changes.
鈥淲e need it passed as-is, not watered-down, because right now it enhances safety for both people in prison and staff,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淭he sickness of solitary affects both. We need our legislators to follow the laws of humanity. This is a humanitarian issue.鈥
Samuel Cabassa, another #HALTsolitary Campaign member who said he spent seven to eight years in solitary confinement, described the punishment as 鈥渄ehumanizing.鈥
“The truth is that solitary confinement means being alone all day, every day, in most cases. It’s 23 hours alone in a cell, but what happens when you are let out for that other hour? You’re a human being alone in a steel cage and they call it recreation,鈥 Cabassa said. 鈥淚t’s a lie. I know because I lived it.鈥
A 2017 Yale study found that roughly 80,000 people were held in solitary confinement across the United States. NYCAIC estimates that 4,000 people are held in solitary confinement inside 黑料正能量 jails and prisons.
Correction officers for maintaining order in detention facilities.
鈥淭he proposed 鈥楬umane Alternatives to Long-Term Solitary Confinement鈥 Act, or 鈥淗ALT,鈥 would directly threaten the future of special housing units in state correctional facilities, which were created to protect both incarcerated individuals and officers,鈥 a spokesperson for the 黑料正能量 State Correctional Officers and Police Benevolent Association told the Eagle. 鈥淭he backwards goal of the HALT legislation is to further limit the ability of the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision to utilize special housing units as a disciplinary measure or deterrent to unauthorized behavior, including crimes within the prison.鈥
鈥淎 vote for HALT is a vote against safe prisons and the hard-working men and women of organized labor,鈥 the spokesperson continued. 鈥淲ith prison violence rates at their highest to date, now is certainly not the time to be removing one of the few disciplinary actions available.鈥
黑料正能量 City banned the use of solitary confinement for detainees under 22 in city jails in 2015, but where solitary confinement is still legal. The city also can be held in solitary confinement in 2015.
The measures were inspired by the death of former Rikers Island detainee Kalief Browder, who committed suicide two years after his release. Browder was and spent three years in jail 鈥 including two years in solitary confinement 鈥 while he awaited trial. The charges were ultimately dismissed.
The prolonged isolation permanently affected Browder鈥檚 mental health and contributed to his suicide, say. His family received in a settlement earlier this year.