New York Daily News

Dignity for ex-cons

State-issued IDs would ease postprison life, says pol

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

ALBANY — A New York lawmaker wants to make it easier for ex-cons to get a state-issued ID when they get out of prison.

State Sen. Brian Benjamin (D-Harlem) is proposing a bill that would partner the state Correction­s and Community Supervisio­n Department with the Department of Motor Vehicles to issue nondriving IDs to inmates as they prepare for postprison life.

Currently, those being released are issued a temporary ID by Correction­s that Benjamin says carries a stigma and can make it difficult for someone looking for a job or trying to get an apartment or even just a gym membership.

“It’s a hurdle for someone trying to reintegrat­e into society and do the right thing,” Benjamin told the Daily News.

The temporary good for 120 days.

Parolees or released inmates must then make sure they have their prison papers, a birth certificat­e and Social Security card to get a nondriving ID from the DMV.

But keeping track of such documents while incarcerat­ed can pose a problem and getting new copies postreleas­e can be nearly impossible without other forms of ID, Benjamin pointed out.

Jason Gordon, 37, who spent more than a decade behind bars for robbery, knows the shame associated with a Correction­s-issued ID.

“I got out and was literally trying to get a gym membership and the woman looked at me with, I don’t know, just card is fear, and said, ‘I’m sorry, I can’t accept that,’ ” he said. “The picture is like a mug shot and then it has the expiration date and the word ‘released’ on it.” Gordon (inset), a former Bloods gang member who grew up in South Jamaica, Queens, has since turned his experience­s with the system into action by speaking to inmates across the state about reentry, and is working on a master’s degree in social work at Columbia University.

He said a state-issued ID could be the difference for someone struggling to readjust to life on the outside. “It’s such a small thing, but it’s something that can make a huge difference for someone coming out and trying to get a job or who is trying to get reestablis­hed in society,” he said.

While a spokesman for the Correction­s and Community Supervisio­n Department said the agency cannot comment on proposed legislatio­n, there’s precedent that proves such a program could work.

In the city, the department has already establishe­d a partnershi­p with the DMV that assists parolees in obtaining a nondriver ID.

Benjamin said his legislatio­n would help cut through the bureaucrac­y and simplify the process.

“There’s no public safety reason that anyone can articulate as to why we need to have a two-step process here when what we really need people focused on is reintegrat­ion back into society, finding a job, spending time with loved ones, getting reasserted,” he said.

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