Showing posts with label Homelessness - Trailer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homelessness - Trailer. Show all posts

March 31, 2010

County awaits Albany ruling on GPS requirement for homeless sex offenders

Are there any politicians left with half a brain? These folks are homeless because they cannot afford housing, so you turn around and pile another expense on them, only fools would do that! Are the politicians willing to pay for that too?
3-31-2010 New York:

Suffolk County legislators are still waiting to hear back from Albany to see if a law they adopted last week requiring homeless sex offenders to wear global positioning system devices is valid.

On March 23, the Suffolk County Legislature unanimously passed a law that requires homeless sex offenders staying at county-run trailers in Riverside and Westhampton, or those receiving $90 a day from the county to find housing on their own, to wear the tracking devices.

The law has been sent to Albany for review by state officials who will decide if it can be enacted, according to Legislator Jack Eddington, an Independence Party member from Brookhaven Town who sponsored the bill. It is not clear when that decision will be announced.

The New York State Office of Family and Children’s Services, which oversees Suffolk County’s Department of Social Services, does not issue rulings on policies unless there is a clear plan in place, said Rob Calarco, Mr. Eddington’s chief of staff. “That’s why we had to pass the resolution first,” he said.

Mr. Calarco expects that it will be at least a month before the Suffolk Legislature hears back from state officials.

Though he could not be reached this week, John Desmond, the director of Suffolk County’s Probation Department, previously stated that it is illegal for the county to force homeless sex offenders to wear the devices unless they are on probation.

About two-thirds of the county’s homeless sex offenders, who have recently numbered around 20, are on probation, according to Gregory Blass, the commissioner of the county’s Department of Social Services. Mr. Blass’s department, which oversees the two trailers, declined to comment on the new GPS requirement.

“We have to get clearance from the state,” he said.

Earlier this year, Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy announced that the trailers—one of which is located on Old Country Road in Westhampton and the other next door to the Suffolk County Jail in Riverside—would be closed within weeks and that the county would transition to a voucher program. But the County Legislature has repeatedly refused to approve a money transfer that would allow social services to expand the voucher program and shutter the trailers.

Mr. Eddington, the chairman of the County’s Public Safety Committee, said the GPS devices will cost $28 each, and that fee includes renting them and hiring an outside agency to do the monitoring.

Predicting that the trailers will eventually be shuttered, Mr. Eddington said he introduced the bill to quell the fears of colleagues over who will be monitoring the offenders once the trailers are closed. He said that there is nothing stopping an offender from checking into a hotel, using the voucher, and later leaving to go elsewhere for the night. “Which is wasting money and is illegal,” Mr. Eddington said.

Legislator Jay Schneiderman said he had sponsored a similar bill last year, but it never made it out of committee. The Independence Party legislator from Montauk said he hopes that the state will sign off on the county law soon.

“I’m thrilled that they passed it,” Mr. Schneiderman said. “I just don’t want to get everybody’s hopes up.”

Meanwhile, the stalemate over closing the two trailers continues. The trailers have been the source of controversy since their placement in 2007, and many East End officials and residents have called them an unfair burden.

Since the transition to the voucher system has been delayed, officials are looking at other alternatives to housing the homeless sex offenders. Mr. Blass said county officials are again considering resuming efforts to find alternative sites for the trailers in western Suffolk County, which they failed to do earlier this year. The county in 2009 spent $850,000 in taxi fares to transport its homeless sex offender population, which at times reached 30 people, from western Suffolk County, where most of them are from, to the trailers.

William Lindsay, the presiding officer of the Suffolk Legislature, said he is working on a solution, though he could not say what that was this week. Through an e-mailed statement, Mr. Lindsay said the voucher system isn’t working, and that the trailers unfairly burden the East End. He then pointed out that moving them will cause an “uproar” in other communities.

“I am not ready at this time to provide details about any new plan, which is still being formulated,” Mr. Lindsay’s statement reads. “The proposal will be laid on the table at the April 27 meeting of the County Legislature.”

Until a suitable solution can be found, the voucher system will go forward, Mr. Blass said. He added that he is optimistic that the issue will eventually be resolved.

"As long as there are homeless, and as long as there are registered sex offenders that are homeless, this will be a controversial issue, almost impossible to resolve,” he said. “But somehow we are going to do it, we are determined to.” ..Source.. Hallie D. Martin

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June 28, 2009

ND- Trailer to house ND homeless sex offenders on parole

6-26-2009 North Dakota:

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Prison officials say a mobile home just east of the state penitentiary in Bismarck will be ready next week for up to seven homeless sex offenders.

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Prison officials say a mobile home just east of the state penitentiary in Bismarck will be ready next week for up to seven homeless sex offenders.

Men who are under state supervision for sex offenses will pay $7 a day to live in the trailer until they find permanent homes.

Officials say the trailer has four bedrooms, a kitchen and a bathroom. The men living there will have to wear GPS locators and will have curfews.

Corrections officials say the price tag is about $35,000 for the trailer along with water and other services.

Parole and Probation Division Director Leslie "Barney" Tomanek says the corrections department had rented a house in Bismarck for homeless offenders but did not renew its lease after neighbors complained. Two men living in the house were arrested last year after police found a 17-year-old girl with them. ..Source.. by WDAY News6

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October 7, 2008

NY- Sex offender bill will be introduced to legislature

This seems to be the nth degree of a sick mind to say to homeless people, that we will give you a place to stay IF you give up your constitutional rights and become a prisoner following certain rules only applied to prisoners. Clearly cruel and unusual, but it is politics speaking which supposedly makes it acceptable. Hopefully the ACLU will jump on this.

10-7-2008 New York:

Suffolk Legislator Jay Schneiderman’s bill to limit the number of registered sex offenders the county may place in emergency housing without extensive monitoring has been finalized after a review by the counsel to the legislature.

With the names of the East End’s two legislators listed as co-sponsors—Mr. Schneiderman of Montauk and Legislator Edward Romaine of Center Moriches—the bill is to be formally introduced when the legislature meets Tuesday in Hauppauge. The bill will be considered in committee after its introduction next week.

The proposal calls for a limit on the placing “more than four registered sex offenders in emergency housing at a single facility and/or location.” It provides an exception if the county “successfully implements a program whereby an employee or agent of Suffolk County escorts any sex offender leaving the grounds of the facility” or, as an “alternative, any sex offender leaving the grounds of the emergency housing facility agrees to wear a GPS tracking device until they return to the facility.”

Mr. Schneiderman began working on the bill after the county’s Department of Social Services installed a large trailer last month, with room for 20 sex offenders on the grounds of the county jail in Riverside, in the northwest corner of Southampton Town. Last spring, it placed a smaller trailer there able to accommodate eight people.

In the text of the bill, the sponsors declare that “the devastating impact of sex crimes, particularly against children, and the alarmingly high rate of recidivism among sex offenders” have caused Suffolk “to enact a series of laws designed to protect residents from the dangers posed by sex offenders.”

They cites as a precedent for their measure a 2006 law limiting the placement of “more than one registered sex offender at the same residence in an area zoned for residential use.”

They cite the placement of the eight-person trailer on the grounds of the county jail last spring and the larger trailer more recently and add that “according to the State Sex Offender Registry, 15 sex offenders now list” the 20-person “trailer as their home address, 13 of whom are designated as Level 3” sex offenders, the category of offenders deemed to have the highest chance of repeating their crimes. “Nine were convicted of victimizing children,” they said.

Also, the sponsors write, “recent media reports indicate that the sex offender trailer is not as secure as the surrounding communities were led to believe by county officials.” It is a reference to stories about a large hole in the fence that encircles the parking lot where the trailer sits. Journalists and public officials, including Messrs. Schneiderman and Romaine, were given a tour last month of the site by a Riverhead town assessor, Mason Haas, who pointed out the gaping hole to them. ..News Source.. by Karl Grossman

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September 25, 2008

NY- Holes in their story (Public Spinology)

Lesson 1: How to SPIN the Public..Spinology 101

9-25-2008 New York:

County's trailer for sex offenders not as secure as declared

In defending their decision to house homeless convicted sex offenders in a trailer in the parking lot outside the Suffolk County jail in Riverside, county officials have been assuring the public that the offenders were in a secure, fenced-off perimeter behind barbed wire.

But the location might not be as secure as it was made out to be, The News-Review learned yesterday.

A Riverhead Town assessor with knowledge of the layout of the property -- and who said he was tired of reading misrepresentations about the trailer from the county -- led a reporter and several elected leaders on a five-minute walking tour to the jail's grounds yesterday.

The culmination of the tour, which was taken on a path through the woods that surround the jail, revealed a 20-foot wide, opened gate in the fence that encircles the lot where the trailer is parked.

The gate has not been closed in years, a correction officers union representative said. It is overgrown with weeds. But even closed, it still leaves a large enough gap in the fence to walk through. The gap opens to several trails in the woods that lead to county routes 24 and 51.

"This isn't the secure location they are making it out to be," said assessor Mason Haas. "So why isn't one of these trailers located on the ground of every police station in the county?"

County Legislator Ed Romaine, who has been publicly skeptical of the county's handling of the trailer program, expressed shock over the revelation.

"I'm surprised," he said after first peering at the gap. "Just, surprised."

A spokesman for the Department of Social Services, Roland Hampson, noted that the offenders are not prisoners and could walk through the parking lot's front gate if they wanted, though the county would arrange for a cab ride.

"They're not in jail, but we do have three security guards there, and in the event that someone attempted to leave, unauthorized, they would call the deputies," he said. "If someone were to leave the trailer area, they would be apprehended by sheriff's deputies."

-Given these are not prisoners, what could be done if someone decided to leave at say 4:00 AM. Nothing could be done, they are not prisoners!

Backed by County Executive Steve Levy, social services officials decided to locate a trailer by the jail in early 2007.

The decision caused an uproar among local residents, who showed up in two busloads for a session of the County Legislator to argue that such a concentration of high-risk -- and homeless -- sex offenders would put their children at risk.

This month, as reported by The News-Review, the county replaced the original eight-person trailer with one that is 20-feet longer and can fit more than 20 people.

According to the state's sex offender registry, 15 sex offenders list the trailer as a home address, 13 of which are Level 3 -- deemed the most likely to re-offend. Nine were convicted of victimizing children.

James Milowski of the Suffolk County correction officers union, which is tangling with county government over labor contracts, scoffed at the notion that the offenders were under lock-and-key at night.

"I work out here on occasion, when [offenders] come in at night and get dropped off. A lot of them are sitting in cars or wandering around before they walk in," he said. "The corrections officers are concerned as well, because the public believes that we're watching them. If something happens, it falls back on us.

"This is the outer perimeter," he continued, speaking of the lot where the trailer sits. "This is not the secure perimeter."

South Fork County Legislator Jay Schniederman, who also joined yesterday's tour, said he was "shocked."

"I thought they were behind barbed wire too," he said. "I thought that they couldn't get out of there without going through security checkpoints. I'm very disappointed."

Mr. Hampson was quoted in The News-Review last week as saying the offenders were behind barbed wire. "It was pointed out to me that's it's not barbed, it's a fence," he said yesterday, adding that it was an innocent misstatement.

County officials often tout the homeless sex offender program because of the security measures it provides, including a location manned by security guards as well as the proximity of a 24-hour police presence.

At the conclusion of the walking tour, and an impromptu meeting between elected officials that followed, Mr. Romaine called for the county to at least move the trailer to the side of the jail, in a cordoned off area, behind barbed wire.

"And assign a correction officer, 24 hours a day, as a checkpoint," he added.

"This trailer is on the wrong side of the fence," fumed Riverhead Councilwoman Barbara Blass, speaking of the larger, barbed wire fence that secures the jail's inmates.

"We agree that this is probably the best place to put them," noted Mr. Milowski. "But if it's going to be here, there should be proper control, whether it's under us [corrections officers] or the deputies."

Mr. Haas, who has spent many years as a volunteer emergency responder, said he had no political motivations for blowing the whistle on the county.

"It's a matter of safety," he said. ..News Source.. by Michael White

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