Texarkana Gazette

Little Rock jobs program puts former inmates back to work

- By Eric Besson

LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—A new Little Rock program paid for with federal tax dollars will connect former prison inmates with constructi­on, restaurant and other high-demand jobs—and cover their minimum-wage paychecks for four months, officials said.

Mayor Mark Stodola has touted the $1.2 million Department of Labor grant as one way the capital city is addressing a surge in violence, in addition to ongoing efforts to fill Police Department vacancies, lobby for tighter state laws and better direct public assistance to dangerous neighborho­ods.

The Arkansas DemocratGa­zette reports Arkansas’ recidivism rate is 53.3 percent, according to the state’s probation and parole department, meaning more than half of ex-inmates return to prison within three years of their release. Stodola has said Pulaski County receives an “inordinate” number of parolees compared with the rest of Arkansas.

The Labor Department in late June awarded $72.8 million to 32 programs focused on helping prisoners re-enter society. Little Rock was the only Arkansas city to receive money, and it was one of four programs to receive the lowest amount awarded, along with peers in Oklahoma City, north Georgia and southeast Pennsylvan­ia.

Stodola highlighte­d so-called re-entry programs as part of his July 20 news conference that laid out the city’s short- and longterm plans to combat violence.

“Formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s face a number of barriers for re-entering society,” Stodola said.

“They include criminal background checks, strained family relationsh­ips, trouble finding housing, just to name a few. Because of these barriers, there’s an increased potential for them to re-offend.”

Little Rock, with 43 homicides this year, is on pace to have its deadliest year since 1993. The 1,653 reported cases of aggravated assault as of Aug. 7 represent a 30 percent increase from the same time last year, amid a 19 percent year-to-year increase in all violent incidents, according to Police Department data.

The Little Rock Workforce Developmen­t Board will coordinate the new three-year program, which will extend the agency’s existing job-aid programs specifical­ly to convicted criminals for the first time, Executive Director W.J. Monagle said.

Called the Rock City Reentry Project, the initiative joins similar services offered in Little Rock, including a 4-year-old City Hall program and others offered by social services groups Our House and Goodwill Industries.

Monagle expects the program to start before Nov. 1. It aims to enroll 150-175 people who have been released from prison within 180 days, who are 25 or older, and who live in high-poverty or high-crime neighborho­ods, officials said.

Although he wasn’t convicted of a violent crime, 57-year-old Kenny Hopson said the stain of a prison stay couldn’t be scrubbed off. Potential employers could see it, and so could he.

Hopson, convicted of forgery, a felony, spent nearly four years in Arkansas prisons before his 2015 release.

He then returned to Hope, where his family owns property, and “did a little self-employment,” such as cleaning a friend’s rental houses after tenants were evicted or moved on. He applied for more stable jobs but didn’t get them.

Hopson stopped checking in with his parole officer, he said. After a run-in with his family, he left for Little Rock, without a plan or a home, on the gamble that the state’s largest city would provide the most opportunit­ies.

He slept on the street and then in homeless shelters.

In February, he showed up to Our House—where he still lives in a shelter—and began six months of job-skills training at the agency’s career center.

The center, which is open to the public, has a specific, city-funded course focused on helping people with criminal histories secure work. Participan­ts take daily classes in employment training, education, finances and health and wellness, said Rachael Borne, who coordinate­s the program.

The program has served 710 people since 2013, and twothirds secured employment, Borne said.

Hopson, who is close to getting a job at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, pending a background check, would be among the latest.

Hopson passed a drug test last week, and Borne said she believes he will pass the background check even with the forgery conviction because it’s been more than five years. Hopson disclosed the conviction when he applied.

“They really didn’t ask me too much because when I did my applicatio­n, I was honest about it,” Hopson said. “I was convicted of forgery. I’m not proud of what I did, and I served my time.”

Hopson credited the program for teaching him how to put together a resume and prepare for an interview.

He said it gave him a daily routine and taught him how to handle “being turned down and rejected for being a convicted felon.”

He also participat­ed in a job working in the Our House guard shack.

“I needed to build up my confidence again to go back out in society, to redefine my independen­ce again,” Hopson said.

Hopson said the full-time job at UAMS would pay him $13 per hour to stock medical supplies. He would put the first check in his savings account, which accrued nearly $1,000 during the six months he worked at Our House, he said.

“I buy what I need. I don’t buy what I want,” Hopson said. “I learned that.

Rock City Reentry will tie together existing job-aid programs like the one at Our House, direct them specifical­ly at newly released inmates, and provide financial rewards to former prisoners and the companies that hire them.

The Little Rock Workforce Developmen­t Board will work with Our House and Goodwill— as well as the University of Arkansas-Pulaski Technical College, AR Food Jobs and the Arkansas Constructi­on Education Foundation—to offer broad and industry-specific job training.

““I needed to build up my confidence again to go back out in society, to redefine my independen­ce again.” —Kenny Hopson, a former Arkansas prison inmate who is closed to getting a job at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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