New York Post

CRIME DOES PAY!

City promises a job for every ex-con

- By YOAV GONEN and SHAWN COHEN Additional reporting by Danika Fears

It's a guarantee any city school graduate would love to have — New York will spend $10 million a year to give every inmate who served time at Rikers or another city jail a job and pay their salaries for eight weeks.

Every inmate who leaves a Big Apple jail after serving a sentence will have a job waiting for him or her under a new cityfunded initiative, Mayor de Blasio announced Wednesday.

When asked why ex-convicts were being guaranteed work over unemployed residents who haven’t broken the law — including city high-school and college graduates — Hizzoner insisted the initiative, which will cost taxpayers $10 million a year, is a “smart investment for everyone.”

“Getting out of the cycle of crime and incarcerat­ion is in everyone’s interest,” he said.

“It’s part of life and we have to do better and better at breaking that cycle. And that is in the taxpayers’ interests, that’s in the community’s interests, that’s humane, that fits our faith traditions.”

He urged unemployed people to head to a Workforce Career Center for job advice.

Under his Jails to Jobs initiative, “transition­al employment” — which is voluntary and lasts up to eight weeks — will be offered to an average of 8,500 excons a year in an array of fields.

For some former inmates who lack basic skills, the gigs will be nothing more than paid job training, the city said.

One organizati­on the city will be working with, the Fortune Society, has helped ex-inmates get positions in food services, maintenanc­e, advocacy and media.

No one will be disqualifi­ed from the program based on their past criminal history, even if they have gang ties or were sex offenders, according to Department of Correction Commis- sioner Joseph Ponte.

During his announceme­nt, de Blasio cited research showing that connecting ex-cons to jobs can reduce recidivism by 22 percent.

“Transition­al employment often leads to longer-term employment and, again, an opportunit­y to have counseling, peer mentoring along the way,” he said.

In addition to the short-term jobs, inmates leaving city jails will be paired up with “peer navigators” — former inmates who have “successful­ly stabilized” after spending time behind bars, the city said.

Convicts entering the jail system will also meet with counselors from the start of their sentence and participat­e in five hours of “vocational, educationa­l, and therapeuti­c programmin­g” every day to help them prepare for their release from prison.

The Correction Officers’ Benevolent Associatio­n blasted de Blasio for focusing on an education initiative when, its leaders claim, he can’t keep inmates and guards safe in jail.

“The mayor has apparently given up on keeping the jails safe for both correction officers and inmates, as evidenced by the 18 percent increase in slashings and stabbings last year,” said COBA President Elias Husamudeen.

“His reforms to make the jails safer have failed miserably, so these same inmates have a greater chance of being stabbed or slashed by other inmates than they do making it to a job interview.”

Of the $10 million per year budget, $7 million will go toward wages for the ex-inmates, $2 million will be for tuition support and $800,000 will pay for the peer navigators.

The wage money will go directly to the nonprofits, which will either pay ex-inmates directly or pay their employers.

Other nonprofits the city will be working with include Housing Works, Strive Internatio­nal and Friends of Island Academy.

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 ??  ?? FAIR SHAKE: Mayor de Blasio’s Jails to Jobs initiative will help around 8,500 former inmates a year find positions in a variety of fields.
FAIR SHAKE: Mayor de Blasio’s Jails to Jobs initiative will help around 8,500 former inmates a year find positions in a variety of fields.

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