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By Kalhan Rosenblatt
Outrage among advocates and New York officials was growing on Saturday after reports that a Brooklyn federal jail had limited heat and power during a week when temperatures in the city dropped as low as 3 degrees Fahrenheit.
On Friday, The New York Times reported that Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborhood had limited power and heat for the more than 1,600 inmates housed there.
The power issues began around Jan. 5, but the heating issues started last week, the Times reported.
In a statement sent to NBC News on Saturday, the Federal Bureau of Prisons acknowledged that the jail was experiencing a partial power outage, but said that the institution was “operating on emergency power, cells have heat and hot water, there is lighting in the common areas and inmates are receiving hot meals.”
Inmates have access to “essential personal hygiene items and medical services” but “access for inmates to phones and inmate messaging, as well as commissary is temporarily affected,” the statement read.
“Con Edison has been dealing with numerous power emergencies in the community. MDC Brooklyn is working with Con Edison to resolve the issue as soon as possible,” the statement read.
However, Con Edison said they were not having power issues on their end and any electrical issues at the jail were internal and the jail’s responsibility to fix.
Bob McGee, a Con Edison spokesman, told NBC News: “We understand there was an issue with the electrical equipment inside the Metropolitan Detention Center. Con Edison stands ready to reconnect the Center once they’ve completed their repairs.”
In response to reports of extremely cold conditions, Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, called on the jail to move inmates to a location where their needs would be met and to fix the issues inside the facility immediately.
“It is shocking that the government would hold people for days on end in a dark, freezing jail during one of the coldest weeks in memory,” Lieberman said in a statement. “People incarcerated at the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) deserve to be treated with dignity and respect, not forced to struggle to survive in dangerously freezing temperatures.”
On Friday, New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson tweeted that he and fellow politicians New York Rep. Nydia Velázquez, Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon, Councilmen Brad Lander, Carlos Menchaca, Justin Brannan — all of whom represent parts of Brooklyn — were at the jail to see the situation for themselves, according to a tweet from Johnson.
On Saturday, Lander tweeted that he and other politicians would be protesting with other demonstrators outside the jail.
“#SunsetParkGulag must end today,” he wrote.
As reports of the heat and power issues began to circulate, local activists, politicians and officials shared their indignation on Twitter.
New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand retweeted a video taken outside the jail, in which it seemed that inmates could be heard banging on the walls on the facility in protest.
“This is inhumane and a violation of the detainees’ constitutional rights. The Bureau of Prisons needs to fix this immediately,” Gillibrand wrote.
New York City Mayor Bill de Balsio tweeted on Saturday afternoon that he was sending city agencies to the jail to assess the situation.
“The federal government has massively failed the people being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center,” he wrote.
Hours later, de Blasio followed up his initially tweet, writing that the Bureau of Prisons was refusing the city’s help “even as their incompetence is on full display for the world.”
“The human beings inside the MDC deserve better and they need it NOW,” de Blasio wrote.
Later on Saturday, New York Attorney Gideon Orion Oliver tweeted a court document that showed U.S. District Judge Analisa Torres had directed the Bureau of Prisons to appear in court on Feb. 5 as part of an evidentiary hearing on Feb. 5 after a defense attorney submitted letters to her office that inmates were being kept in “disturbing living conditions.”
Orion Oliver did not immediately return a request for comment made by NBC News about the hearing.