gothamist.com Open in urlscan Pro
108.156.184.52  Public Scan

URL: https://gothamist.com/news/mayor-adams-cuts-classes-and-re-entry-services-at-rikers-to-save-17-million-in-nyc-budget
Submission: On May 17 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Gothamist
A non-profit newsroom, powered by WNYC.
Gothamist
Listen Live
Donate
 
 
Gothamist
A non-profit newsroom, powered by WNYC.
Gothamist
Listen Live
Donate
 
 
Gothamist
A non-profit newsroom, powered by WNYC.
Mayor Adams cuts classes and re-entry services at Rikers to save $17 million in
NYC budget
FacebookTwitterRedditEmail
Donate 
News


MAYOR ADAMS CUTS CLASSES AND RE-ENTRY SERVICES AT RIKERS TO SAVE $17 MILLION IN
NYC BUDGET



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By
Matt Katz

Published May 16, 2023 at 4:34 p.m.

33 comments

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Share

FacebookTwitterRedditEmail

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 
Never miss a story
 Email address

By submitting your information, you're agreeing to receive communications from
New York Public Radio in accordance with our Terms.
 
Lev Radin / Shutterstock

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By
Matt Katz

Published May 16, 2023 at 4:34 p.m.

33 comments

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Share

FacebookTwitterRedditEmail

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We rely on your support to make local news available to all

Make your contribution now and help Gothamist thrive in 2023. Donate today

Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations

The Adams administration is eliminating programs that help detainees get jobs,
find housing, stay off drugs, and reconnect with loved ones once they’re
released from Rikers Island in order to save $17 million in next year’s budget.

“We were blindsided and in shock,” said Ronald Day, vice president of programs
at the Fortune Society, one of five nonprofit agencies informed on Monday that
their contracts, due to expire next year, were suddenly nixed.

The canceled classes cover training in carpentry and plumbing skills, financial
literacy, cognitive behavioral therapy, drug relapse prevention and anger
management. The last day of class will be June 30. Dozens of full-time employees
who worked daily in the jails, including the formerly incarcerated, will lose
their positions.

> There is no way that DOC is going to be able to deliver the services at the
> rate and at the capacity and with the quality that the providers have been
> doing for years. That is a complete pipe dream to think that is possible.

Ronald Day, vice president of programs at the Fortune Society

Some of the programs operated in various forms at Rikers and the floating jail
in the East River for decades. The agencies’ contracts together make up just
1.4% of the Department of Correction’s $1.2 billion budget, but the cuts were
ordered by Mayor Eric Adams who has tasked city agencies with eliminating 4% in
spending.



“The department will assume the responsibilities previously carried out by
contracted providers and continues to offer dozens of additional programs to
people in custody, including educational programming, fine/performing arts, and
other enrichment activities,” said Frank Dwyer, the department’s deputy
commissioner of public information, in a statement.

But Day said the Department of Correction cannot replicate the programs, which
helped reduce violence and idleness in the jails..

“There is no way that DOC is going to be able to deliver the services at the
rate and at the capacity and with the quality that the providers have been doing
for years,” he said. “That is a complete pipe dream to think that is possible.”

It is unclear how the department will replace the reentry services that the
agencies provided. Day said they were intended to “increase the chances that
people can be successful once they make the transition from the jail to the
community.”

CHALLENGES OF RECIDIVISM

Recidivism remains a persistent political and policy challenge in the city, with
the Adams administration often blaming repeat offenders for crime increases.
Jordan Neely, who was killed on the subway earlier this month during an
encounter with another commuter, Daniel Penny, had recently been released from
Rikers. He was allegedly acting erratically on the train prior to Penny placing
him in a deadly chokehold.



“A lot of individuals who have mental health and substance abuse issues — where
do they end up? They end up in our city jails,” Day said.

Thousands of detainees who attended the classes will be “devastated” to learn
that the programs – and their facilitators – will be gone from Rikers, according
to Archana Jayaram, CEO of the Osborne Association, which had its $2.5 million
contract canceled.

“We find that participants engaged very deeply in the conversations – we’re
talking about their family relationships, talking about past harms, talking
about things they feel guilty about,” she said. “It’s a really vulnerable set of
conversations.”

The programs also give detainees a link to the outside, as those released later
connect with the Osborne Association for job placement, housing assistance,
substance abuse counseling and free MetroCards, Jayaram said.

Still, attendance at the 90-minute classes, which is voluntary, has just been
about 30%, according to the Department of Correction.

Jayaram said attendance numbers are affected by the fact they’re conducted in
loud communal areas with regular lockdowns and interruptions.



“And the engagement we see is quite powerful despite those dynamics,” she added.

Other budget reductions planned at the Department of Correction include $30
million in salaries and benefits, due to vacant positions. The City Council must
approve the next fiscal year's budget by June 30.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Related stories
“We Need Action”: Elected Officials Tour Rikers Island Demanding Decarceration

Rikers Island is supposed to close in 2027, so why is Mayor Adams talking about
'Plan B?'

City Council Approves Plan To Shut Down Rikers Island And Build 4 New Jails


Tagged

Race And Justice Unit
crime and punishment
recidivism
public safety
Rikers Island
new york city
department of correction

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Matt Katz
Twitter

Matt Katz reports on public safety, focusing on decarceration and the equitable
enforcement of laws. He has investigated abuse in ICE detention and covered
former N.J. Gov. Chris Christie, sharing a Peabody Award for coverage of
Bridgegate and writing a book, "American Governor: Chris Christie's Bridge to
Redemption." Once upon a time, he wrote a syndicated dating column. Got a tip?
Email mkatz@wnyc.org or Signal 609-217-8355.

Read more

Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MORE news

‘We’re very concerned’: NYPD looking for 2 youths missing from Bronx, Manhattan

Police are mobilizing to try and find a missing 11-year-old from the Bronx and
13-year-old from Manhattan.

By
Catalina Gonella

Published May 16, 2023 at 9:44 p.m.

2 comments

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Head of NYC Campaign Finance Board resigns six months after taking job

The announcement comes a day after Mayor Eric Adams was slapped with a record
fine from the agency.

By
Brigid Bergin
1 comment
News
Head of NYC Campaign Finance Board resigns six months after taking job

The announcement comes a day after Mayor Eric Adams was slapped with a record
fine from the agency.

By
Brigid Bergin
1 comment

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No 24/7 mental health service: Staffing challenges limit NYC’s crisis response
program
By
Caroline Lewis
3 comments
Councilmembers press for more support as NYC small businesses struggle to
recover
By
Giulia Heyward
2 comments
Extra Extra: The leaning fire hazard of Lower Manhattan
By
James Ramsay
92 comments

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Never miss a story

Catch up on the most important headlines with a roundup of essential NYC
stories, delivered to your inbox daily.

Sign upEmail address

By submitting your information, you're agreeing to receive communications from
New York Public Radio in accordance with our Terms.
AdvertisingContact UsOur TeamRSS FeedDiversity (DEI)Careers
Gothamist

Gothamist is a website about New York City news, arts, events and food, brought
to you by New York Public Radio.

AdvertisingContact UsOur TeamRSS FeedDiversity (DEI)Careers

Gothamist


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FacebookTwitterInstagramYoutube
Terms Of UsePrivacy PolicyAccessibility
©2023 New York Public Radio. All rights reserved.