Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Running Rikers is expensive


From Huffington Post:

New York is indeed an expensive place, but experts say that alone doesn't explain a recent report that found the city's annual cost per inmate was $167,731 last year – nearly as much as it costs to pay for four years of tuition at an Ivy League university.

They say a big part of it is due to New York's most notorious lockup, Rikers Island, and the costs that go along with staffing, maintaining and securing a facility that is literally an island unto itself.

"Other cities don't have Rikers Island," said Martin F. Horn, who in 2009 resigned as the city's correction commissioner, noting that hundreds of millions of dollars are spent a year to run the 400-acre island in the East River next to the runways of LaGuardia Airport that has 10 jail facilities, thousands of staff and its own power plant and bakery.

The city's Independent Budget Office annual figure of $167,731 – which equates to about $460 per day for the 12,287 average daily New York City inmates last year – was based on about $2 billion in total operating expenses for the Department of Correction, which included salaries and benefits for staff, judgments and claims as well as debt service for jail construction and repairs.

But there are particularly expensive costs associated with Rikers.

The department says it spends $30.3 million annually alone on transportation costs, running three bus services that usher inmates to and from court throughout the five boroughs, staff from a central parking lot to Rikers jails and visitors to and around the island. There were 261,158 inmates delivered to court last year.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sometimes you are awaiting trial and go to court while on rikers island and not even see the judge on your court date.

Anonymous said...

Corrections is one of the biggest secrets of municipal employment:

* Salary increasing to $76,488 after 5 1/2 years of service
* $1,677 per year holiday pay increasing to $3,411 after
5 1/2 years
* Uniform allowance of $1100 per year
* 13 paid vacation days, increasing to 27 days after 5 years
* 11 paid holidays
* Paid health insurance
* Longevity pay ranges from $4,365 to $7,365 after 5, 10, 15, and 20 years of service

Anonymous said...

Yes you do get a good salary and benefits but look at what you have to deal with. Would you be willing to take this position for less?

Anonymous said...

Reason? Unions. The end.

Anonymous said...

Answer! Half way houses for convicted felons.

Anonymous said...

Chip, fingerprint and deport.
A good 1/3 the population of that Island is a gangland "cancer" that doesn't belong in this country.
Give the rest pink slippers, tents and cheap sandwiches like sheriff Joe in Arizona who cut costs 85%.

Anonymous said...

""Unions. The end""
Correct, a BIG part of it !
The pay and legacy packages are not only hemorrhaging the city but bleeding building, theater and many TV movie operations dry.
A seat for this years Rockefeller Center Christmas Show will cost a family of four and average $480-$2200 depending on the day and time.
$125 and up to watch Hockey at the garden, $40,000 administrative costs a year per each public school student. (future democrats for life and Rikers inmates that dont belong in this country also)

Anonymous said...

"$40,000...

Cut it in half. It's $20 thou which is still waaaaayyyyy tooooooo much!

Anonymous said...

Yes let's all cut salaries while the cost of everything else rises. If you thought that New York has become a third world country, just wait and see what happens when you destroy what is left of the middle class.

Anonymous said...

I guess someone could not get a union job.

Anonymous said...

"Corrections is one of the biggest secrets of municipal employment:"

It's not secret that no one wants that job.