Your guide to NYC's public proceedings.
    QUESTION
            What would it take for NYC Aging to extend services to formerly incarcerated adults aged 50-59?
2:02:05
·
66 sec
The NYC Department for the Aging is open to discussions with the Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice on providing services to formerly incarcerated older adults aged 50-59.
- The department acknowledges the unique aging process of incarcerated individuals and the need for gap services.
- Dialogues with the Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice are necessary to explore potential solutions.
- The issue is increasingly recognized, especially the accelerated aging experienced by those incarcerated.
- There is an emphasis on the need for advocacy at the federal level to address this issue.
                                
                                    Crystal Hudson
                                
                            
                            
                                            
                                            2:02:05
                                        
                                        And I'm I'm just gonna touch on incarcerated and formally incarcerated older adults for a second due to the impact of incarceration Adults in prison are considered older adults when they are aged fifty and up.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:16
                                        
                                        Yet, most of NYC aging services starts at age sixty, and I know that's also federally mandated.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:22
                                        
                                        But what would it take programmatically or fiscally for NYC Aging to extend services to formally incarcerated older adults who are between fifty fifty nine years old.
                                    
                                
                                    Lorraine Cortes-Vasquez
                                
                            
                            
                                            
                                            2:02:33
                                        
                                        The conversation we would have to have with Mach J, with the mayor's office of criminal justice, to see what kind of gap services can be provided.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:43
                                        
                                        It's an issue that has raised more and more particularly with the conversation that if you've been incarcerated even though you're fifty.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:53
                                        
                                        Right?
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:54
                                        
                                        Chronologically, you're not fifty.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:56
                                        
                                        Every other sense of the words Right.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:02:58
                                        
                                        Which are really aged in.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:03:00
                                        
                                        And it's a conversation that we really need to look at.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:03:03
                                        
                                        And it's also a conversation for advocacy at the federal level.
                                    
                                
                                    Crystal Hudson
                                
                            
                            
                                            
                                            2:03:06
                                        
                                        Absolutely.
                                    
                                            
                                            2:03:10
                                        
                                        Okay.
                                    