Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

How to keep people from going back to prison

- Lauren Johnson Lauren Johnson is the Justice Director at Dream.Org and a formerly incarcerat­ed advocate for criminal justice reform.

I’ve been to prison three times, but everyone — including me — thought that my second time would be my last. I had just learned I was pregnant a few days before I was incarcerat­ed for drug possession. I spent my entire pregnancy in jail and gave birth to my first child there.

We had two days together before I was separated from him and sent back to my cell. Leaving my baby was a grief that I never wanted to endure again.

I married my son’s father, had two more children, and bought a home. I did everything in my power to do the right thing. From the outside looking in, I had successful­ly re-entered society.

Five years later, I relapsed and was arrested for trace amounts — a felony in Texas — and was separated from my children once again.

No services

I simply didn’t have access to the services I needed to sustain a life of sobriety. I needed treatment, support and accountabi­lity, not another jail sentence. Unfortunat­ely, my story is not uncommon, especially for those who struggle with addiction. I

Metrics like employment, housing stability, access to healthcare, support networks and personal well-being help to identify gaps in reintegrat­ion efforts. If we can adequately address these gaps, the risks are significan­tly reduced.

One way to do this is through creating wraparound programs that offer services like education, vocational training, financial counseling, mentorship and recovery support based on an individual’s unique needs, including underlying struggles like mental health and addiction as well as socioecono­mic challenges.

Employers also have a role to play by giving formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s a fair chance at securing jobs that provide a sense of purpose and meet their financial needs.

The reset principle

When running background checks, employers should assess the risk of recidivism using the reset principle, so candidates are evaluated at the time of the background check, not at the time of conviction. These individual­s deserve to be fully recognized for their progress and potential, and protected from assumption­s that hinder their shot at a stable future.

While having a job to pay for housing, food and other basic needs is key, mental health services should also be more readily accessible. Most people leaving prison re-enter society with little or no health coverage, making mental health services difficult or impossible to afford.

As a result, they face disproport­ionate risks of death and overdose compared to the general population. For formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s who are already struggling to rebuild their lives, paying hundreds of dollars per month for therapy is simply not an option.

Not all of these wraparound services are government-led. Groups like The Other Side Academy, Nation Outside and Promising People are pioneering new, effective ways to help justice-impacted individual­s and their families through reentry support and services. Finding unique ways to invest in these innovators can spark an economic shift to support people over prisons, and their solutions have the power to disrupt the prison industry.

Challengin­g journey

The journey of reentry is challengin­g and complex, and every individual has unique needs. Oversimpli­fying recidivism hinders progress toward providing people with what they actually need.

Everyone deserves a fair shot at the American Dream, and formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s deserve empathy, empowermen­t and support to lead fulfilling lives.

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Getty Images/iStockphot­o

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