Categories: New York News

DOCCS proposes revisions to HALT Act solitary confinement rules

ALBANY, N.Y. (NEXSTAR) — In the wake of an unauthorized strike by correction officers earlier this year, the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision and several unions published recommendations to amend the state’s Humane Alternatives to Long-Term Solitary Confinement Act. DOCCS said that their proposals would improve safety for both staff and people who are incarcerated.
Sponsored

James Miller from the New York State Correctional Officers and Police Benevolent Association, the correction officers’ union, said, “We were pleased to participate and look forward towards achieving the recommendations the committee has submitted to the Governor and State Legislature.”

The HALT Committee—formed in March 2025 through an agreement with NYSCOPBA—drafted the unanimous recommendations after five months of meetings. Their amendments would adjust limitations in the HALT Act, changing the criteria and consequences for serious offenses.

They proposed clarifying that sexual harassment, lewd conduct, and unhygienic acts like throwing bodily fluids are eligible for segregated confinement, and changing limits for offenses like rioting or escaping. They also recommended allowing temporary placement in a Special Housing Unit for protective custody for up to three days if there is an immediate safety risk.

The committee further suggested giving DOCCS more flexibility to provide out-of-cell time for people who commit new offenses in disciplinary housing, and they also recommended more flexibility for using segregated confinement. They want to allow up to 15 days in a SHU or Residential Rehabilitation Unit for repeat misconduct, and to redefine “violent felony act” to align with state penal law. Finally, they would change incentive programs to let more of the incarcerated benefit.

The HALT Act took effect in March 2022, restricting solitary or segregated confinement—keeping a person in a cell for more than 17 hours a day—to no more than 15 consecutive days or 20 days within a 60-day period. It also requires at least four hours of out-of-cell programming per day, including an hour for recreation, even for those in segregated confinement.

HALT has faced pushback from law enforcement since inception.

The original law allowed exceptions for facility-wide emergencies, which DOCCS cited to suspend the act during the correction officers’ strike. But a federal judge ruled that the suspension violated the separation of powers and ordered DOCCS to comply.

The committee included representatives from DOCCS, the Office of Employee Relations, the Division of Criminal Justice Services, and the employee unions the Civil Service Employees Association, Council 82, and the Public Employees Federation. Union leaders expressed support.

CSEA President Mary E. Sullivan said the modifications were thoughtfully developed and represent “an important step forward in protecting the health and safety of incarcerated individuals and staff.”

Council 82 President Russell Fox called the recommendations a “clear example of how meaningful and effective reform can happen when all stakeholders have a seat at the table.”

PEF President Wayne Spence said the recommendations “reflect common sense solutions to address persistent and dangerous situations being caused by just a relatively few bad actors.”

But the recommendations faced opposition from advocates like the HALT Solitary Campaign. These critics said the recommendations would gut HALT, expand solitary, and make detention facilities more dangerous instead of reckoning with the deaths of Robert Brooks and Messiah Nantwi.

Sponsored

They called the committee illegitimate for excluding those most affected by solitary confinement, like people who have been through it or their loved ones. Naila Awan, co-director of policy at the New York Civil Liberties Union, described the committee as “an affront to incarcerated New Yorkers” and “an antidemocratic effort to subvert voters’ will.”

Antony Gemmell of the Legal Aid Society, an advocacy group for the incarcerated, argued that DOCCS “never faithfully implemented” HALT to begin with, and now they’re trying to “dismantle the law altogether.” These groups want the state to follow the law as written, not adopt new recommendations.

Anthony Dixon, Deputy Director of the Parole Preparation Project, argued that the strike was “intentionally orchestrated to distract from increased scrutiny of prison abuses.”

In a recent court case, a federal judge in Syracuse ordered DOCCS to provide specific out-of-cell time and programming at the Residential Mental Health Unit at Marcy Correctional Facility as part of a lawsuit filed by eight named plaintiffs. That lawsuit connected conditions to the correction officers’ strike, pointing out how DOCCS suspended most out-of-cell options and mental health treatments when the strike started. NYSCOPBA leaders never officially endorsed the 22-day strike.

Strikers cited forced overtime, low staffing, and problems with HALT Act enforcement as reasons for the walkout. Governor Kathy Hochul and other officials declared it an illegal violation of the Taylor Law prohibiting public employees from striking.

In response to the walkout, Hochul and DOCCS Commissioner Daniel Martuscello suspended HALT for 90 days, supposed to end on June 6. came under fire from the Legal Aid Society, which claimed in a lawsuit that the department ignored a court order to provide details and justification for the suspension. In a letter to a judge, the Legal Aid Society also raised concerns about an emergency exception to the HALT Act that sidesteps its requirements.

But according to a report from the Legal Aid Society, the strike created inhumane conditions inside prisons. The report, which featured firsthand accounts from incarcerated people, alleged food shortages, a lack of medical care, and restrictions on showers.

In that report, one individual at Marcy echoed Dixon, saying that some prisoners believe the strikers “don’t want to be held accountable” for what happened to Brooks, a 43-year-old Black man who died at Marcy in December 2024, one day after being beaten by facility staff. Several correction officers were charged with murder in that case.

After the strike ended, some incarcerated people reported that officers returned with hostility. As one person at Greene Correctional Facility alleged in the report, “A lot of the COs are still engaging in misconduct even with the cameras rolling.”

The Legal Aid Society’s report also stated that people in solitary were seven times likelier to die by suicide and 15 times more likely to self-harm than the rest of the prison population. That report also tallied 25 suicides in 2024, the highest rate since at least 2000, and that at least nine of those, or 36%, were in isolation units like SHUs, RRUs, and RMHUs. It also alleged that at least 12 died during the strike.

rssfeeds-admin

Share
Published by
rssfeeds-admin

Recent Posts

GlassWorm Campaign Uses 72 Malicious Open VSX Extensions to Broaden Reach

In a major escalation of supply chain attacks, the GlassWorm malware campaign has evolved to…

24 minutes ago

These Genetically Engineered Brain Cells Devour Toxic Alzheimer’s Plaques

A single shot protected mice from the protein gunk implicated in Alzheimer’s disease. Alzheimer’s disease…

38 minutes ago

Video Editor & Maker AndroVid

If you have an interest in video and movie making then you are going to…

41 minutes ago

edjing Mix – Music DJ app

If you want to become a DJ or love mixing sounds then this music mixer…

41 minutes ago

Guess The Brand – Logo Mania

If you are into brands and love solving quizzes then this logo quiz is an…

41 minutes ago

What Product Leadership Teaches Us About AI Adoption in Renewable Energy Systems

Artificial intelligence is increasingly positioned as a key enabler of renewable energy adoption. From wind…

42 minutes ago

This website uses cookies.