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LAS: Decarcerate City Jails Now or Risk Innocent Lives to COVID-19

The Legal Aid Society, in a recently issued letter, called on Mayor Bill de Blasio and his administration and New York City’s five District Attorneys to immediately facilitate the release of New Yorkers, especially those vulnerable to COVID-19, from local jails, as new troubling data show the pandemic surging again at rates similar to those seen in DOC facilities earlier this year, reports POLITICO.

A recent analysis by Legal Aid of City COVID-19 reports found that:

  • For months, there have been one or two seemingly isolated reported infections among DOC and CHS staff each week. Recently, however, a New York Board of Correction report reveals 31 new staff infections in a single week.
  • On November 7, there were only seven housing areas with COVID-19 designations in which 96 people were housed in DOC facilities.
  • By November 27, that number had skyrocketed to 33 COVID-designated units housing 759 people.
  • In just one week, the number of people in exposed housing units more than tripled. The problem has reached nearly all facilities: where previously the only facilities with COVID-19 designated housing units were MDC, AMKC, and WF, there are now exposures or active infections in MDC, AMKC, VCBC, GRVC, OBCC, RNDC, and WF.
  • CHS information shows that reported active infections among people in custody increased exponentially in the last two weeks, from 2 active infections on November 17, to 18 on November 29.

Adding more fuel to the fire, the population in the jails has risen rapidly in recent months and is now comparable to pre-pandemic levels. As of November 27, the total population in DOC was 4,805 people — the same population as in late March, a population that the City acknowledged was too dangerous and necessitated decarceration. And the New York City Department of Correction has created perilously high-density levels in the housing areas, in flagrant violation of public health standards: 66% of dorm units and 60% of cell units remain above 50% of capacity, and 34.5% of units exceed 75% of capacity.

Of the ten facilities in operation as of November 27, seven of them have units at or above 90% capacity, with units at six facilities at 100% capacity. Operating facilities in this manner as an outbreak surges within the jails and the broader community is unacceptably dangerous.