By Melanie Lekocevic
Capital Region Independent Media
ALBANY — Gov. Kathy Hochul pledged Tuesday to deploy the National Guard if wildcat strikes at two dozen prisons around New York state don’t end by Wednesday.
The strikes by corrections officers began Monday at correctional facilities at Collins near Buffalo and Elmira in Chemung County, and spread rapidly Tuesday to 25 facilities, including Washington Correctional Facility in Comstock and Coxsackie Correctional Facility in Greene County.
NYSCOPBA, the union that represents corrections officers, said the strikes are unsanctioned and not condoned by the union.
Striking workers are demanding better and safer working conditions, better pay and increased staffing. The union has for years called on the state to improve job conditions to reduce violent incidents in correctional facilities, but the union said the strikes have not been sanctioned.
Hochul said Tuesday she was preparing to utilize the New York National Guard if the wildcat strikes — strikes that are not sanctioned by a union — don’t end Wednesday.
“The illegal and unlawful actions being taken by a number of correction officers must end immediately,” Hochul said Tuesday. “We will not allow these individuals to jeopardize the safety of their colleagues, incarcerated people, and the residents of communities surrounding our correctional facilities.”
Hochul said she directed her staff to meet with union leadership to resolve the situation and promised to send in the National Guard if the situation is not resolved by Wednesday.
DOCCS Commissioner Daniel Martuscello III said his agency had met with union officials to try to remedy the situation.
“Earlier today we met with NYSCOPBA President Summers and his executive board to discuss a path forward to returning all facilities to normal operations and ending this illegal strike,” Martuscello said. “The safety and security of the staff and incarcerated population is paramount to me.”
But Assemblyman Chris Tague, R-102, said the situation in state prisons has become untenable and laid the fault at Hochul’s door.
“Gov. Hochul’s policies have turned New York’s prisons into powder kegs,” Tague said. “Staffing shortages are at crisis levels, assaults on officers have skyrocketed and now, Hochul is pretending that 70% staffing is ‘full.’ This isn’t just mismanagement — it’s dangerous, reckless, and costing lives. For years, correctional officers have been warning about deteriorating conditions, yet Hochul refused to listen. The same policies that made New York’s streets more dangerous are now bleeding into our prison system, creating chaos and making them unmanageable.”
Hochul said the work stoppages have created “significant public safety concerns” across the state.