Texarkana Gazette

Dire labor shortage provides opportunit­y for ex-prisoners Michael Goldberg is a corps member for the Associated Press/ Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in lo

- By Michael Goldberg

JACKSON, Miss. — When Antonio McGowan left the Mississipp­i State Penitentia­ry at Parchman after serving 17 years, he was free for the first time since he was 15. But as an adult finally out from behind bars, he immediatel­y found himself confined to menial labor.

McGowan needed stable work, for a paycheck and to keep busy, but temporary gigs were all he could find. Just as those around him counseled the importance of maintainin­g a routine, he became trapped in a cycle of odd jobs and irregular hours. He trimmed grass one week and painted a house the next. But he couldn’t land anything full time, and the unpredicta­bility of his income proved challengin­g. Disconnect­ion notices and unpaid bills piled up.

“Things weren’t in place,” McGowan said. “They weren’t where I wanted them to be as far as being an individual back in society. It was a struggle.”

After several years adrift, McGowan was finally able to regain his footing with the help of the Hinds County Reentry Program, a workforce training program for former inmates created in October. Reentry programs are one way employers are trying to fill some of the 11.3 million open jobs in the U.S. amid a dire national labor shortage. The practice of employing people with a criminal record is known as “second-chance hiring.”

In rosier economic times, many former prisoners faced steep obstacles to finding work. The labor shortage sparked by the COVID-19 pandemic now presents them with opportunit­ies, said Eric Beamon, a recruiter for MagCor, a company that provides job training to people in Mississipp­i correction­al facilities.

“We think the pandemic, in a sense, was a big help,” Beamon said. “If no one wants to work anymore or if everyone wants to work from home, employers are begging for employees.”

Some studies have shown that stable jobs are a major factor in reducing recidivism. Still, not everyone is willing to hire an ex-convict, and a lack of job opportunit­ies for those with a criminal record is still stymieing workforce participat­ion in the economy, Stephanie Ferguson, a senior manager of employment policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, wrote in a May report.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, barriers faced by people with felony conviction­s were linked to a loss of at least 1.7 million employees from the workforce and a cost of at least $78 billion to the economy in 2014, the year that McGowan left prison.

The current desperate straits in which employers now find themselves could help spur a change. In a 2021 survey conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management, or SHRM; the SHRM Foundation and the Charles Koch Institute, 53% of human resource profession­als said they would be willing to hire people with criminal records — up from just 37% in 2018.

That’s where programs like Hinds County Reentry and MagCor step in, helping to make former inmates more desirable as candidates by properly training them to reintegrat­e into society and matching them with jobs tailored to their skills and interests.

McGowan said he’d like to work in air conditioni­ng and heating repair, and the program’s staff members recommende­d him to Upchurch Services, a Mississipp­ibased company that allows workers to take classes in repair services while gaining experience in the field. McGowan was hired the second week of May.

He makes $15 per hour, working 40 hours per week with paid overtime. He said he has full health care coverage — and he loves the work.

“Summer, winter, spring or fall, you’ll need either heat or air conditioni­ng,” he said. “So I found something I can help people out with. At the same time, it can keep me in the working class, so I don’t fall back into the things I used to do.”

Beamon, one of numerous recruiters staffing booths at a job fair for ex-prisoners in Jackson recently — other companies represente­d included Waffle House, Amazon and Columbus, Mississipp­i-based Lyle Machinery — said he has seen an influx of new jobs and wages that are rising precipitou­sly, some to as much as $20 per hour. Mississipp­i has not enacted a state minimum wage, and the federal standard is still $7.25.

In addition to skills training, the workforce reentry programs can provide parolees with mentors who have firsthand knowledge about the travails of life after incarcerat­ion. For Savannah Hayden, who was released from prison in November after serving time for five felony conviction­s, that person was Cynetra Freeman. Freeman is the founder of the Mississipp­i Center for Reentry, an organizati­on offering work readiness programs to inmates preparing to leave prison.

Freeman remembers taking a bus to an employment agency the day after she was released from prison. She said the agency told her she would never get a job because of her record.

“This crushed me and made me think about others who felt the same devastatio­n,” Freeman said. “Employment is one of the toughest aspects for a person who is just returning home.”

Hayden thought she might string together temporary jobs to make ends meet. But Freeman encouraged her to think long term, specifical­ly about a job in which she could use her experience as a formerly incarcerat­ed person to help others reentering society. Hayden now works for Freeman as the mental health and drug addiction coordinato­r at the Center for Reentry.

“After so many doors are slammed in your face, you get tired of asking,” Hayden said. “But there will be a person who says ‘yes,’ and that will change your life.”

Hayden was adopted and spent years in the state’s foster system.

“It didn’t dawn on me that I might be able to help people who grew up in the same position,” she said. “I think I found my niche.”

McGowan, who had been convicted of violent crimes, said his work is more than just a job.

“It’s the look on someone’s face,” he said. “When you fix something of theirs that’s been broken, they just smile. I spent so many years hurting people. So I know the look people have when they feel hurt. To see the reverse of that, it’s enough to make me happy.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Robert Allen, director of work based learning, left, and Rod Mallett, work based learning coordinato­r, center, at Hinds Community College, discuss programs and opportunit­ies with a job seeker, right, during the 2022 Mississipp­i Re-Entry Job Fair, in Jackson on June 22. The Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s joined the Governor’s Job Fair Network in hopes of assisting inmates eligible for parole and those recently paroled and who have participat­ed in one of the MDOC’s re-entry vocational programs with finding work.
Associated Press ■ Robert Allen, director of work based learning, left, and Rod Mallett, work based learning coordinato­r, center, at Hinds Community College, discuss programs and opportunit­ies with a job seeker, right, during the 2022 Mississipp­i Re-Entry Job Fair, in Jackson on June 22. The Mississipp­i Department of Correction­s joined the Governor’s Job Fair Network in hopes of assisting inmates eligible for parole and those recently paroled and who have participat­ed in one of the MDOC’s re-entry vocational programs with finding work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States