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Group calls for solitary confinement to end
Mar 25, 2016 12:03 am
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Andrea Sears reports from New York News Connection for Public News Service that from Grand Central Station in New York City to the public library in Ithaca, advocates for people in prison on Wednesday gathered to call for action to end solitary confinement in the state.
Jared Chausow, a member of the New York Campaign for Alternatives to Isolated Confinement, says last year, Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration settled a lawsuit by agreeing to virtually eliminate solitary confinement for minors and pregnant women in New York.
"But it does leave the vast majority of the 5,000 New Yorkers in prisons and jails right now, who are in solitary confinement, in the exact same conditions, or similar conditions as before," he points out.
Chausow notes some people remain in solitary for months, years and even decades.
A bill called the Humane Alternatives to Long Term Solitary Confinement Act is pending in both houses of the New York State Assembly.
Chausow says the bill could finally pass this year. But he points out it isn't necessary to wait for legislators to act.
"Governor Cuomo has the power right now to end the torture of solitary confinement and replace it with humane and effective alternatives," he stresses.
Extended isolation has been shown to have serious and lasting effects on the mental and physical health of people in prison.
Spending 23 hours a day in a tiny, windowless cell can exacerbate preexisting mental illness, which Chausow says is already common in the prison populations. But he points out that extreme isolation can also cause mental illness.
"Putting a human being in a cage alone for days, weeks, months and even years and decades, can literally make people lose their minds," he states.
The United Nations classifies solitary confinement lasting longer than 15 days as torture.
Andrea Sears reports from New York News Connection for Public News Service that from Grand Central Station in New York City to the public library in Ithaca, advocates for people in prison on Wednesday gathered to call for action to end solitary confinement in the state.
Jared Chausow, a member of the New York Campaign for Alternatives to Isolated Confinement, says last year, Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration settled a lawsuit by agreeing to virtually eliminate solitary confinement for minors and pregnant women in New York.
"But it does leave the vast majority of the 5,000 New Yorkers in prisons and jails right now, who are in solitary confinement, in the exact same conditions, or similar conditions as before," he points out.
Chausow notes some people remain in solitary for months, years and even decades.
A bill called the Humane Alternatives to Long Term Solitary Confinement Act is pending in both houses of the New York State Assembly.
Chausow says the bill could finally pass this year. But he points out it isn't necessary to wait for legislators to act.
"Governor Cuomo has the power right now to end the torture of solitary confinement and replace it with humane and effective alternatives," he stresses.
Extended isolation has been shown to have serious and lasting effects on the mental and physical health of people in prison.
Spending 23 hours a day in a tiny, windowless cell can exacerbate preexisting mental illness, which Chausow says is already common in the prison populations. But he points out that extreme isolation can also cause mental illness.
"Putting a human being in a cage alone for days, weeks, months and even years and decades, can literally make people lose their minds," he states.
The United Nations classifies solitary confinement lasting longer than 15 days as torture.