Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-inmates can earn stipends

California tries to reduce recidivism with progress payments

- By Christophe­r Weber

LOS ANGELES — Hundreds of California­ns released from prisons could receive direct cash payments of $2,400 — along with counseling, job search assistance and other support — under a first-in-the-nation program aimed at easing the transition out of incarcerat­ion and reducing recidivism.

Recipients will get the money over a series of payments after meeting certain milestones such as showing progress in finding places to live and work, the Center for Employment Opportunit­ies, which runs the program, announced this week.

The goal is to give people a chance “to cover their most essential needs” like bus fare and food during the crucial early days after exiting incarcerat­ion, said Samuel Schaeffer, CEO of the national nonprofit that helps those leaving lockups find jobs and achieve financial security.

“The first three to six months are the riskiest, when many people end up back in prison,” Schaeffer said Thursday. “We want to take advantage of this moment to immediatel­y connect people with services, with financial support, to avoid recidivism.”

The governor’s Workforce Developmen­t Board, devoted to improving the state’s labor pool, is providing a $6.9 million grant to boost community-based organizati­ons and expand so-called re-entry services for the formerly incarcerat­ed.

About $2 million of that will go directly to ex-inmates in the form of cash payments totaling about $2,400 each. The center said the money will be paid incrementa­lly upon reaching milestones including: engaging in employment interview preparatio­n meetings with a jobs coach, making progress toward earning an industry credential or certificat­e and creating a budget and opening a bank account.

Schaeffer said the new program is a “game-changer” and the first of its kind in the nation, one he hopes other states will copy.

Advocates say people returning from incarcerat­ion often struggle to find places to live and work as they try to reintegrat­e back into their communitie­s. Around 60 percent of formerly incarcerat­ed individual­s remain unemployed within the first year of being home, the center estimates.

Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, a Republican from Palmdale who often focuses on justice system issues, said he applauds any attempt to reduce recidivism. But he worries this new program lacks a way to track progress and make sure taxpayers are getting their money’s worth.

“If we are going to issue stipends without parameters for accountabi­lity I worry about the return on our investment as it relates to outcomes and community safety,” Lackey said in a statement Thursday.

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