State of New York OPINION
Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 32
Richard Alcantara, et al.,
Appellants,
v.
Anthony J. Annucci, &c., et al.,
Respondents.
Matthew Freimuth, for appellants.
Blair J. Greenwald, for respondents.
TROUTMAN, J.:
The issue on this appeal is whether the Department of Corrections and Community
Supervision (DOCCS) has a statutory obligation to attempt to secure community-based
“employment, educational, and training opportunities” for the persons confined in its
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residential treatment facility (RTF) at Fishkill Correctional Facility (Correction Law § 2
[6]; see id. § 73 [2]). We hold that DOCCS’s wholesale refusal to secure such opportunities
for Fishkill RTF residents constitutes a violation of the statute.
I
Plaintiffs are convicted sex offenders who were confined in the Fishkill RTF while
on postrelease supervision (PRS). Since 2014, DOCCS has used the Fishkill RTF to
confine convicted sex offenders past the maximum expiration dates of their carceral
sentences in circumstances where the offenders are unable to find housing in compliance
with the requirements of the Sexual Assault Reform Act (SARA), which bars them from
living within 1,000 feet of a school (see Executive Law § 259-c [14]). DOCCS derives the
authority for this confinement from Penal Law § 70.45 (3), which permits transfer of a
person to an RTF for the first six months of PRS, and from Correction Law § 73 (10),
which permits use of the RTF as a residence for a person on PRS (see People ex rel.
McCurdy v Warden, Westchester County Corr. Facility, 36 NY3d 251, 260-262 [2020]).
We have concluded that DOCCS has the constitutional authority to confine offenders in
this manner (see People ex rel. Johnson v Superintendent, Adirondack Corr. Facility, 36
NY3d 187, 192 [2020]).
In 2016, plaintiffs commenced a proceeding seeking one or more injunctions,
declaratory relief pursuant to CPLR 3001, and class certification. 1 On defendants’ motion
1
Plaintiffs invoked CPLR 7803 (1), alleging that defendants “failed to perform duties
enjoined on them by law.” Plaintiffs did not seek relief under CPLR 7803 (3), as Judge
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to dismiss, Supreme Court dismissed the proceeding in part and converted what remained
into an action seeking a declaration that DOCCS’s operation of the Fishkill RTF “fails to
comply with the statutes governing [RTFs] because it does not offer adequate programming
or employment opportunities.” In denying class certification, the court reasoned that this
converted declaratory judgment action would “adequately protect the interests of similarly
situated offenders.” Following discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment and a
declaration in their favor. Plaintiffs opposed the motion.
The evidence before the motion court established that there were only two kinds of
employment opportunity available to Fishkill RTF residents, neither of them in the
community. One of the jobs involved labor at the prison storehouse, located on prison
grounds less than a tenth of a mile from the gates that surround the prison. The storehouse
crew was limited to eight RTF residents, less than a tenth of the RTF’s population. The
only other employment opportunity made available to RTF residents was in the “porter
pool,” performing janitorial work alongside members of the general population.
Furthermore, a deputy superintendent of Fishkill Correctional Facility testified that there
was a work release program under which members of the general population were allowed
to go outside prison grounds to work in the community, but that RTF residents were
ineligible for the work release program. With respect to internal programming, defendants
submitted the affidavit of an offender rehabilitation coordinator (ORC) who facilitated a
Cannataro acknowledges. Even if they had, CPLR 7803 (3) is inapplicable in this converted
declaratory judgment action.
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program for RTF residents consisting of nine modules including Sex Offender Registration
Act requirements, securing employment, and relapse prevention. She averred that the
program was “specified” to sex offenders and that most of the modules were “adapted to”
or “specifically target” the particular challenges faced by sex offenders.
Supreme Court granted defendants’ motion in part, concluding that defendants
established that the internal programming was “at least minimally adequate” to satisfy
DOCCS’s statutory obligations, and that plaintiffs failed to raise an issue of fact. The court
entered a declaration to that effect. Otherwise, the court searched the record and granted
partial summary judgment to plaintiffs. The court agreed with plaintiffs that DOCCS failed
to provide adequate community-based opportunities, concluding that DOCCS does not
have the authority to deny “all” community-based employment opportunities to the
residents of the Fishkill RTF, and that the possibility of work in the prison storehouse does
not satisfy DOCCS’s responsibility to secure such opportunities. Accordingly, the court
declared that “DOCCS is failing to comply with its obligations under Correction Law § 73
to provide community-based programming and educational, vocational and employment
opportunities in the communities outside the Fishkill Correctional Facility.”
The Appellate Division, inter alia, modified the judgment by reversing so much
thereof as granted partial summary judgment to plaintiffs, and it granted defendants’
motion in its entirety. The Court concluded that, although the statute requires DOCCS to
locate RTFs near a community with employment, training, and educational opportunities,
there was no mandate that DOCCS offer such opportunities outside the facility (see 203
AD3d 1483, 1484-1485 [2020]). The Court acknowledged that offering community-based
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employment, educational, and training opportunities would seem to serve the purpose
behind a rehabilitation program but reasoned that DOCCS was in the better position to
make that determination (see id. at 1485). The Court further concluded that defendants met
their burden of establishing that Fishkill RTF’s internal programming was adequate, and
plaintiffs failed to raise an issue of fact (see id. at 1485-1486).
We granted leave to appeal (39 NY3d 906 [2023]).
II
Before proceeding to the merits, we address two threshold matters. First, the appeal
is moot because plaintiffs were long ago released from confinement in the RTF (see
Johnson, 36 NY3d at 195-196). Although the Appellate Division did not address mootness,
we conclude that the issues presented in this appeal may be decided under the exception to
the mootness doctrine because the issues are substantial and novel, are likely to recur, and
will typically evade our review (see id. at 196).
Second, we conclude that plaintiffs did not preserve their contention that DOCCS
failed to accord them the distinct rights of a person on community supervision for whom
DOCCS is using the RTF as a residence under Correction Law § 73 (10), as opposed to the
rights of an incarcerated person transferred into the RTF under Correction Law § 73 (1).
We have previously acknowledged the difference between those two types of RTF
residents (see McCurdy, 36 NY3d at 261 & n 5). The nature of the rights of a Correction
Law § 73 (10) resident remains an open question (see id.), but not one that we have
occasion to address in this appeal. The parties do not dispute that plaintiffs were assigned
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RTF programming pursuant to Correction Law § 73 (2) and (3). The only challenge
properly before us is to the adequacy of that programming.
III
Our fundamental role in interpreting a statute is to effect the intent of the legislature
(see Patrolmen’s Benevolent Assn. of City of N.Y. v City of New York, 41 NY2d 205, 208
[1976]). We start with the statutory language, the clearest indicator of the legislative intent,
and we construe the statute as a whole and consider its various provisions together and with
reference to each other (see McCurdy, 36 NY3d at 257). “The literal language of a statute
is generally controlling unless the plain intent and purpose . . . would otherwise be defeated,
or where a literal construction would lead to absurd or unreasonable consequences that are
contrary to the purpose of the statute’s enactment” (People ex rel. E.S. v Superintendent,
Livingston Corr. Facility, 40 NY3d 230, 235 [2023] [internal quotation marks and brackets
omitted]; see Matter of Anonymous v Molik, 32 NY3d 30, 37 [2018]).
Correction Law § 2 (6) defines an RTF in terms of its external features and the
connection between those external features and the population to be confined therein:
“A correctional facility consisting of a community based
residence in or near a community where employment,
educational and training opportunities are readily available for
persons who are on parole or conditional release and for
persons who are or who will soon be eligible for release on
parole who intend to reside in or near that community when
released” (emphasis added).
“[R]eadily available” community-based opportunities are thus essential to a
facility’s designation as an RTF. By contrast, definitions of other types of correctional
facilities lack any focus on outside resources and instead define those facilities in terms of
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their internal features (see e.g. Correction Law § 2 [8] [defining a “(c)orrectional (c)amp”
as a “correctional facility consisting of a camp maintained for the purpose of including
conservation work in the program of incarcerated individuals”]; id. § 2 [10] [defining a
“(g)eneral confinement facility” as a “correctional facility for confinement and treatment
of persons under institutional programs oriented to education, vocational training and
industry”]).
The statute also provides that DOCCS is “responsible for securing” for RTF
residents “education, on-the-job training and employment” opportunities and for
supervising residents who are participating in these activities outside the facility (id. § 73
[2]). And the statute expressly permits outside access for the purpose of engaging in RTF
programming, as RTF residents “may be allowed to go outside the facility during
reasonable and necessary hours to engage in any activity reasonably related to [their]
rehabilitation and in accordance with” their assigned programs (id. § 73 [1]).
The statute, read as a whole, affords DOCCS “leeway to design its RTF programs”
(Johnson, 36 NY3d at 207). While the plain language of the statute confirms that
community-based opportunities are an essential characteristic of an RTF, the statute does
not create an individual right to community-based opportunities. This is evident by the
legislature’s use of the permissive phrase, “may be allowed to go outside,” which must be
read to afford DOCCS discretion in determining whether an individual RTF resident should
be allowed outside the facility to engage in community-based activities (Correction Law §
73 [1]). Moreover, DOCCS’s responsibility to RTF residents extends only to securing those
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opportunities that it deems “appropriate” (id. § 73 [2]); it does not require DOCCS to secure
community-based opportunities that would be inappropriate.
Plaintiffs nonetheless argue that at least some RTF residents must be allowed to go
outside the facility to engage in employment, educational, or on-the-job training activities.
Otherwise, plaintiffs argue, the facility loses its character as an RTF. Defendants counter
that the statutory language imposes no obligation whatsoever to secure community-based
opportunities, nor does it create a percentage or threshold number of RTF residents who
must be able to participate in these activities, leaving the decision entirely to the discretion
of DOCCS.
We agree with plaintiffs that DOCCS cannot categorically refuse to attempt to
secure community-based opportunities for RTF residents. Crucially, while DOCCS surely
has discretion in operating its RTF programs, the record here demonstrates that DOCCS is
exercising no discretion with respect to community-based opportunities. DOCCS instead
offers only speculation that the opportunities would be difficult to secure for the types of
offenders housed in that RTF. To be sure, the statute establishes no percentage or threshold
number of RTF residents who must be allowed outside the facility to engage in community-
based activities. But defendants incorrectly construe the permissive phrase, “may be
allowed to go outside,” to empower DOCCS to bar all RTF residents categorically from
accessing community-based opportunities without considering whether such opportunities
are available or appropriate. A comprehensive reading of the statutory provisions cannot
support such a construction. By reading the permissive phrase in isolation, defendants read
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the definitional provision out of the statute, eviscerate the character and purpose of the
RTF, and undermine the legislative intent.
Our construction is buttressed by the legislative history. When the governor signed
the bill that first created RTFs (L 1966, ch 655), he observed that residents “would
participate in rehabilitation programs within the [RTF] and would be permitted to go
outside the [RTF], under the careful supervision of the Board of Parole, to attend school,
to work or to participate in other rehabilitative activities” (Governor’s Approval Mem, Bill
Jacket, L 1966, ch 655, at 2). Not long thereafter, this enactment was replaced by
Correction Law § 73 as part of comprehensive reorganization of the corrections system
that provided DOCCS’s predecessor department “the flexibility needed for tailored
rehabilitative programs” (Budget Report, Bill Jacket, L 1970, ch 476, at 16), and that
empowered the department to “utilize treatment programs according to the needs of
individual inmates” (Senate Mem in Support, Bill Jacket, L 1970, ch 476, at 3). The
Correctional Association of New York praised the bill for creating “flexibility in the
handling of inmates, permitting the department to more readily transfer an inmate to an
institution based on his particular need rather than statutory requirements” (Letter in
Support, Bill Jacket, L 1970, ch 476, at 21). While the references to “flexibility” support
that DOCCS has discretion in fashioning its RTF programming, this flexibility is tied to
the needs of individual offenders about to reenter the community. This legislative history
is directly contrary to DOCCS’s construction of the statute, which has given rise to an
inflexible policy that does not take individual RTF residents into account.
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We do not doubt that the task of securing community-based opportunities for the
population at Fishkill RTF, all or nearly all of whom are sex offenders who pose a public
safety risk, would be a challenging one. Securing community-based opportunities such as
these depend not only on the ready availability of those opportunities in spaces that the
offenders may lawfully enter, but also on the willingness of the employers and the
educators in the community to employ, train, or educate convicted offenders. But although
DOCCS does not have the authority to impress private enterprise into service, there is a
big difference between undertaking efforts to secure community-based opportunities for
RTF residents where appropriate and deciding categorically that no one in the RTF is
permitted to go outside into the community to engage in readily available opportunities.
All of these offenders have completed their prison sentences. Due to the enactment and
enforcement of SARA, DOCCS is faced with the reality that, while these offenders cannot
stay in prison and cannot go home, they must go somewhere, and DOCCS made the
decision to house them in an RTF. The solution is not for this Court to redefine RTFs by
stripping them of the community-based character and purpose that the legislature
established in the statute. As we have noted, DOCCS has significant leeway in operating
RTFs, and we have confidence in DOCCS’s ability to discharge its public safety function
while complying with its statutory obligations.
We thus conclude that DOCCS’s wholesale refusal to undertake efforts to secure
community-based opportunities for RTF residents constitutes a violation of the statute.
Correction Law §§ 2 (6) and 73 (2) and (3) require DOCCS, at a minimum, to undertake
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reasonable efforts to secure community-based opportunities for those persons subject to its
RTF programming.2
IV
Otherwise, for the reasons stated at the Appellate Division, we agree with
defendants that they are entitled to summary judgment because they demonstrated as a
matter of law that the internal programming at the Fishkill RTF is at least minimally
adequate, and plaintiffs failed to raise an issue of fact (see 203 AD3d at 1485-1486).
Statutory requirements for RTF programming within a facility are few and broad. The
statute provides for the assignment of a “specific program” to each resident and that the
program be “directed toward the rehabilitation and total reintegration into the community”
of residents (Correction Law § 73 [3]). The details fall entirely within the discretion of
DOCCS (see Johnson, 36 NY3d at 207). We therefore conclude that the Appellate
Division properly affirmed that part of the judgment which entered a declaration in
defendants’ favor.
Accordingly, the order insofar as appealed from should be modified, without costs,
in accordance with this opinion and, as so modified, affirmed.
2
The assistant solicitor general stated during oral argument that DOCCS has declined to
undertake efforts to secure community-based opportunities for RTF residents, choosing
instead to direct its resources to assisting them in finding SARA-compliant housing.
Although offering such assistance does not relieve DOCCS of its obligations under
Correction Law § 73, successful efforts to find approved housing for RTF residents in an
expeditious manner may be relevant to whether efforts taken to comply with Correction
Law § 73 are reasonable.
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GARCIA, J. (dissenting in part):
Plaintiffs, convicted sex offenders subject to the condition that they reside no less
than 1,000 feet from school property or a childcare facility (see Executive Law § 259-c
[14] [Sexual Assault Reform Act “SARA”]), brought this action alleging, among other
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things, that they were being illegally confined to the Fishkill Residential Treatment Facility
(RTF) and that Fishkill is not a statutorily compliant RTF. The sole issue here is whether
the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS) was obliged to
secure educational, training, and employment opportunities for plaintiffs “that were
community based and outside the facility” (Alcantara v Annucci, 203 AD3d 1483, 1484
[3d Dept 2022]). I agree with the majority that the relevant statutes impose no such duty
or obligation on DOCCS (see majority op at 7-8). We should therefore affirm the Appellate
Division’s holding to that effect. But the majority recasts the issue as whether DOCCS has
a “statutory obligation to attempt to secure community-based” opportunities (majority op
at 1 [emphasis added]), as a way to provide a remedy that plaintiffs do not seek, affords no
substantive relief to RTF residents, and offers no guidance for DOCCS going forward in
determining what “attempts” must be made. I dissent.
All or nearly all of the Fishkill RTF residents are sex offenders subject to SARA’s
special housing condition.1 That condition applies only to sex offenders who either
committed certain enumerated offenses against a minor or who have been designated a
“level three sex offender” under the Sex Offender Registration Act (see Executive Law
259-c [14]), meaning “the risk of repeat offense is high and there exists a threat to the
1
In certain circumstances, DOCCS may place sex offenders subject to SARA in RTFs
when compliant housing cannot be located (see People ex rel McCurdy v Warren,
Westchester County Corr Facility, 36 NY3d 251 [2020]; People ex rel Johnson v
Superintendent, Adirondack Corr Facility, 36 NY3d 187 [2020]; see also Matter of
Gonzalez v Annucci, 32 NY3d 461, 473 [referencing “the enormous difficulty in finding
appropriate housing for sex offenders”]). As the majority describes the situation, DOCCS
faces the “reality” that these sex offenders “cannot stay in prison and cannot go home” (see
majority op at 10) – if “home” is within 1000 feet of a school or childcare facility.
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public safety” (Correction Law § 168-l [6] [c]). As DOCCS maintains, and the majority
accepts, this is a particularly challenging population to place in “community-based”
opportunities (see majority op at 10).2
Plaintiffs, who sought class certification for various classes and subclasses, all made
up of RTF residents subject to the SARA residency restriction, brought a CPLR article 78
proceeding alleging, as relevant here, that they were not being afforded such opportunities. 3
Supreme Court rejected all of plaintiffs’ claims with the exception of declaring “that
plaintiffs have demonstrated that DOCCS is failing to comply with its obligations under
Correction Law § 73 to provide community-based programming and educational,
vocational and employment opportunities in the communities outside the Fishkill
Correctional Facility environs” (66 Misc 3d 850, 866 [Sup Ct, Albany County 2019]
[emphasis added]).
The Appellate Division, addressing this same issue—whether the statute mandated
that DOCCS provide opportunities outside the facility—reversed, holding that Supreme
Court “erred in granting partial summary judgment … on the claim that DOCCS did not
create an appropriate RTF program outside the confines of Fishkill” (203 AD3d at 1484-
2
These residents must be closely monitored. In securing community-based opportunities,
DOCCS has the statutory obligation to “supervise such incarcerated individuals during
their participation in activities outside” the facility “at all times” (Correction Law § 73 [2];
Correction Law § 73 [1] [while residents “may be allowed to go outside the facility[,]” they
“shall be at all times in the custody of [DOCCS] and under its supervision”]).
3
Although plaintiffs originally commenced this action as an article 78 petition seeking
declaratory and injunctive relief, Supreme Court converted the proceeding to a declaratory
judgment action.
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1485). The majority agrees that there is no statutory duty or obligation to provide such
programming and that the statute affords discretion and flexibility to DOCCS (see majority
op at 7-9). But instead of confirming the Appellate Division’s grant of summary judgment
to defendants dismissing the claim, the majority fashions new relief in the form of
mandating that DOCCS “undertake reasonable efforts to secure community-based
opportunities for those persons subject to RTF programming” (majority op at 10-11).
This case concerns the difficulty in placing sex offenders subject to the SARA
housing condition in community-based jobs and whether the relevant statutes require
DOCCS to do so. The key question—can DOCCS categorically refuse to attempt obtaining
community-based opportunities for the subset of residents composed of high-risk sex
offenders subject to SARA?—goes unanswered. Under the majority’s new rule, it is
unclear whether DOCCS must (1) attempt to locate community based-opportunities
generally and then determine if the provider will accept sex offenders subject to SARA; or
(2) attempt to find specific opportunities for that group of sex offenders. And if it applies
generally, can DOCCS make the discretionary determination that community-based
opportunities are not appropriate given the high risk to the community posed by these sex
offenders as a subgroup of RTF residents (see majority op at 7 [“DOCCS’s responsibility
to [] RTF residents extends only to securing those opportunities that it deems
‘appropriate’…; it does not require DOCCS to secure community-based opportunities that
would be inappropriate”])?
It might appear that the majority’s amorphous holding is harmless error. DOCCS,
after all, must only make reasonable efforts to secure community-based opportunities that
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it “deems ‘appropriate’ ” (see majority op at 8, citing Correction Law § 73 [2]), and that
obligation to attempt to do so is not enforceable by any individual resident (id. at 7). But
what is an “appropriate” community placement for a sex offender, particularly one subject
to the condition that prevents the offender from residing within 1000 feet of a school? Is
this purely a subjective standard that courts must defer to in providing DOCCS with
“flexibility” to run the RTF (see majority op at 9)? Can a class of residents subject to
SARA bring a suit to enforce such a vague directive? Two things are certain to follow
today’s ruling: uncertainty and litigation.
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CANNATARO, J. (dissenting in part):
Every Judge of this Court appears to agree that the inclusion of community-based
opportunities within RTF programming is ultimately a matter within DOCCS’s discretion
(majority op at 7-8; Garcia, J., dissenting op at 2; see also Matter of Doe v Coughlin, 71
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NY2d 48, 59 [1987] [recognizing courts’ traditional deference “to the discretion of
correction officials on matters relating to the administration of prison facilities and
rehabilitation programs”]). Judge Garcia admonishes the majority for creating a new and
ill-defined duty on the part of DOCCS “ ‘to attempt to secure community-based’
opportunities” (Garcia, J., dissenting op at 2, quoting majority op at 1), a criticism with
which I fully agree. I write separately to express my view that the creation of a “reasonable
efforts” standard is unnecessary because the appropriate standard for reviewing DOCCS’s
exercise of discretion is well settled and not unique to this area of administrative law.
When DOCCS’s policies and determinations with respect to community-based
programming are challenged, the proper question is whether they are “affected by an error
of law or [are] arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion” (CPLR 7803 [3]). The
fact that plaintiffs litigated this dispute on a different theory—pleading that defendants
“failed to perform a duty enjoined upon it by law” (CPLR 7803 [1]), and then pursuing a
declaratory judgment to that effect—does not authorize this Court to create a different
mechanism to avoid abuses of discretion.
There was no error of law here. As everyone agrees, DOCCS had no absolute duty
to provide community-based opportunities. Had the legislature intended to require
DOCCS to undertake “reasonable efforts” to secure community-based opportunities for
RTF residents, it would have said so in plain language (see e.g., Correction Law § 137 [6]
[j] [vi]). Instead, the Correction Law provides that DOCCS is “responsible for securing
appropriate education, on-the-job training and employment” for RTF residents, with no
specific mention of community-based activities (id. § 73 [2] [emphasis added]). This
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careful wording can only be construed as a deliberate choice by the legislature to leave the
provision or denial of community-based opportunities to the discretion of DOCCS (subject
to judicial review), not as an invitation for the judiciary to append additional duties that do
not appear on the face of the statute (see e.g., People v Jackson, 87 NY2d 782, 788 [1996];
McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 74).
Nor does the record establish that DOCCS’s refusal to seek or approve community-
based opportunities over the relevant period was irrational or an abuse of discretion.
Preliminarily, it must be appreciated that the entire population (or close thereto) of the RTF
during this time consisted of high-risk sex offenders (see majority op at 2, 10; Garcia, J.,
dissenting op at 2-3). If, as DOCCS has suggested, the Department rationally believed that
efforts to secure community-based opportunities “appropriate” for high-risk sex offenders
would be futile or would frustrate more efficient community reintegration strategies—such
as helping sex offenders secure SARA-compliant housing and leave confinement
entirely—it would be difficult to characterize that determination as either irrational or an
abuse of discretion, especially considering that DOCCS “secur[ed] appropriate education,
on-the-job training and employment” inside the facility (see Correction Law § 73 [2]).
Since CPLR 7803 (3) prevents DOCCS from adopting policies that are arbitrary and
capricious or abuses of discretion, there is no need for the majority’s creation of a duty of
“reasonable efforts.” By mandating such efforts, the majority is prescribing and limiting
DOCCS’s discretion rather than reviewing it. I would accordingly affirm the order of
dismissal. The majority’s well-intentioned but ambiguous decision casts unnecessary
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doubt on whether DOCCS can make rational decisions with respect to RTF programming
in the future, and for that reason, I respectfully dissent.
Order insofar as appealed from modified, without costs, in accordance with the opinion
herein and, as so modified, affirmed. Opinion by Judge Troutman. Chief Judge Wilson
and Judges Rivera and Halligan concur. Judge Garcia dissents in part and votes to affirm
in an opinion, in which Judge Singas concurs. Judge Cannataro dissents in part and votes
to affirm in a separate dissenting opinion.
Decided April 25, 2024
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