With nearly all of New York’s state prisons on lockdown, those on the inside struggle to get by.
With nearly all of New York’s state prisons on lockdown, those on the inside struggle to get by. ·  View in browser
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Incarcerated people report varied conditions within the prisons, with some facilities making due while others leave those in their custody hungry, unshowered, and lacking medical attention. Maia Hibbett / New York Focus
With nearly all of New York’s state prisons on lockdown, those on the inside struggle to get by.
By Chris Gelardi and Sara G. Kielly

Sara Kielly, an investigative journalist and poet, reported this article from inside Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, where she is currently incarcerated.

On Friday morning, a woman incarcerated at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Westchester County tried to get help. The prison was on lockdown, and she’d been confined to her cell with little information as to why. She said she was having suicidal thoughts, but officers weren’t sending anyone to provide medical attention.

That afternoon, with no guards making their normal security rounds, others on the woman’s block called out to her — to no answer. She was trying to hang herself, officers eventually found. She survived.

The New York state prison system is flirting with chaos as a corrections officer strike enters its sixth day. Since guards at two western New York facilities walked off the job on Monday, the wildcat action has spread across the state. Nearly all of the system’s 42 prisons are now on lockdown as National Guard troops deployed by Governor Kathy Hochul and the few officers who haven’t walked out struggle to provide incarcerated people with basic necessities.

Incarcerated people report varied conditions within the prisons, with some facilities making do while others leave those in their custody hungry, unshowered, and lacking medical attention. The following accounts include reporting directly from Bedford Hills, a maximum security women’s prison where one of this article’s reporters is incarcerated, as well as anecdotes from incarcerated people, their family members, and their advocates across six other facilities.

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The New York state prison system is teetering on disaster as guards have staged an unsanctioned wildcat strike at almost all of its 42 facilities. Governor Kathy Hochul has deployed the National Guard and, on Wednesday, obtained a court order mandating that corrections officers return to work.

While striking officers have been mostly mum to the press, Assemblymember Scott Gray, who visited picket lines outside three northern New York prisons and went inside two this week, told New York Focus that they’re determined to wrest concessions from the state and from their employer, the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision.

“The members seem to be resolved in their determination to hang tight until some sort of corrective action is taken,” he said. To facilitate negotiations, the picketers are working on paring down their original list of 13 demands, Gray said.

The guards will likely stick to their guns on pay and staffing issues. They also appear resolute on one of their most ambitious demands: repealing a four-year-old solitary confinement reform law. That would likely require action by the slow-moving and relatively progressive state legislature, though both Gray and the union’s executive vice president have told New York Focus that officers are asking the governor to explore what authority she has to chip away at the law.

 
A striking guard holds up a sign outside Bare Hill Correctional Facility in Franklin County on Tuesday. JB Nicholas
Wildcat strikes have spread to over half of the state’s prisons.
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Roughly 150 prison officers huddled around burn barrels across the street from Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York as they staged a work stoppage Tuesday afternoon. An hour’s drive south, about three dozen guards used a grove of pine trees to shield themselves from the single-digit cold as they picketed in front of the medium-security Adirondack Correctional Facility.

Clinton, Adirondack, and at least 23 other New York state prisons saw guards walk off the job Tuesday — part of an unsanctioned wildcat strike that began at two western New York facilities this week and quickly spread to over half the prison system. Guards are demanding that the prison agency address chronic understaffing and that the state overturn a solitary confinement reform law.

While guards haven’t mentioned it, the strike also acts as a counter to recent pressure to rein in officers: Since the state released video of guards beating an incarcerated man to death in December, state legislators, advocates, and Governor Kathy Hochul have pushed to increase scrutiny on prison officers and hold abusive guards to account.

 

Copyright © New York Focus 2024, All rights reserved.
Staying Focused is compiled and written by Alex Arriaga
Contact Alex at alex@nysfocus.com

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