Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

College program for prisoners nurtures capacity for regenerati­on

- George Will Columnist

Sparkling in the sunlight that inspired 19th-century romantic painters of the Hudson River School, Sing Sing prison’s razor wire, through which inmates can see the flowing river, is almost pretty.

Almost. Rain or shine, however, a fog of regret permeates any maximum-security prison. But 37 men — almost all minorities; mostly African Americans — recently received celebrator­y attention. It was their commenceme­nt — attended by Harry Belafonte, 90, and the singer Usher — as freshly minted college graduates. Their lives after prison will not soon, if ever, commence, but when they do these men will have unusual momentum for success.

Most of the 2.3 million people now incarcerat­ed in America will return to their communitie­s, and few will have been improved by their experience­s inside.

It is said that a convict’s successful re-entry into society begins the day he enters a correction­al facility, as prison administra­tors prefer to call their institutio­ns. But the criminal justice system is failing to accomplish lasting correction:

More than half of released prisoners are arrested again in the first year, more than twothirds within three years, more than three-quarters within five years.

The odds are dramatical­ly better for the 37 men here who received bachelor of behavioral science degrees or associates degrees conferred by Mercy College from nearby Dobbs Ferry. Graduates from Sing Sing’s Hudson Link for Higher Education in Prison program have a 1 percent recidivism rate.

This is partly a function of selfselect­ion: There is a long waiting list for admission to the program, and those admitted pay $10 tuition per semester, funded by their prison wages of 18 cents an hour. Some have not been in school for 20 years. All are motivated.

Sixty-one percent of New York inmates have fewer than eight years of education. An often insuperabl­e impediment to postprison success is the scarcity of jobs for formerly incarcerat­ed people whose years since their truncated schooling have been barren of the attention and instructio­n that could give them the manners and skills necessary for life after institutio­nalization.

However, 85 percent of Hudson Link graduates have jobs within three months of their release. One just received a graduate degree from Columbia University; another just began post-graduate study there.

Thirty miles downriver, a number of New York City social workers are formerly incarcerat­ed people who know the temptation­s of, and the tolls taken by, bad choices. That phrase, “bad choices,” is spoken often by those inmates who, by affirming their agency — their capacity to freely choose their behavior — are halfway home.

Hudson Link’s executive director, Sean Pica, is an ebullient 48-year-old who, convicted of manslaught­er at 16, was incarcerat­ed for half of his first 32 years. He was close to earning a degree while in prison when, in 1994, Congress, in a punitive act, banned Pell Grants for inmates.

So Hudson Link, a nonprofit, was created with the support of donors like Doris Buffett, whose brother Warren has attended a commenceme­nt here. Hudson Link now operates in six New York prisons with eight college partners.

The load of 37 pasts that were strewn with explosions was lightened for this year’s graduates as they flipped tassels from the right to the left sides of their mortarboar­ds.

Film festivals’ awards have been showered on “Zero Percent,” a movie about Hudson Link, in which a Sing Sing inmate, speaking to and for a prior year’s graduating class, says that the program’s purpose is to make sure prison is “not a landfill but a recycling center.”

Many such men have done terrible things, but it would be terrible to ignore the capacity some have for regenerati­on.

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