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History of the Board of Correction

In 1953, a special mayoral panel was convened to study the operations of the New York City Department of Correction. It recommended to Mayor Robert Wagner the creation of an unpaid citizen watchdog agency, the Board of Correction, to provide management and planning assistance to the Department and to monitor the City's jail system on behalf of the public.

In 1957, the Mayor appointed the Board’s first nine members. They were Carl M. Loeb (Chair), Lisle C. Carter, Jr., Robert E. Curry, D. John Heyman, Rev. Vincent de Paul Lee, Rev. Robert J. McCracken, Rev. Sidney G. Menk, Rose M. Singer, and Ethel H. Wise. In 1988, Mrs. Singer's long and dedicated service to the Board and the City's jail system was officially recognized when the new women's facility on Rikers Island was named the Rose M. Singer Center.

In November, 1975 the Board’s recommendations to the Charter Revision Commission were adopted when the electorate approved a revised City Charter by referendum. As a result, on January 1, 1977 (the effective date of the new Charter), the Board's mandate was expanded in three significant ways. First, the Board was directed to establish Minimum Standards for the care, custody, treatment, supervision and discipline of all persons confined within Department of Correction facilities. Second, the Charter directed the Board to establish grievance procedures for inmates and employees of the Department. Third, the Board received subpoena power and was authorized to conduct hearings, investigations and studies on any matter within the scope of its delegated authority, and to make recommendations based on its findings.

Two additional 1977 Charter revisions were designed to promote independent BOC oversight of the Department. First, the process for appointing Board members was changed. Instead of vesting sole appointing authority with the Mayor, new language provided that three members were to be appointed by the Mayor, three by the City Council, and three were to be appointed by the Mayor upon the joint nomination of the presiding justices of the first and second judicial departments. Second, the Board was authorized to hire its own small staff.


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