Executive Order 124 creates a sufficient expectation of eligibility for release through a furlough program to call for certain due process protections. The Court adds to the Executive Order the protections summarized on pages 6 to 7 and detailed on pages 33 to 36 of the opinion to comport with due process. The Court also notes that inmates may challenge the DOC’s action, a final agency decision, by seeking review before the Appellate Division. The agency’s decision is entitled to deference on appeal. Individual inmates may also seek relief independently under Rule 3:21-10(b)(2). They do not have to exhaust the remedies available under the Executive Order before they may file a motion in court. As to sentences imposed on juveniles who are in the custody of the Juvenile Justice Commission (JJC), those individuals may seek relief from the court on an individual basis. To the extent the opinion calls for trial judges to rule on motions and the Appellate Division to review agency decisions, the Court exercises its supervisory authority to require that applications be heard and decided in a matter of days and urges the Commissioner and the Parole Board to act as expeditiously as possible.