The Maui News

Thousands more prisoners across the US will get free college paid for by the government

- By AARON MORRISON

REPRESA, California — The graduates lined up, brushing off their gowns and adjusting classmates’ tassels and stoles. As the graduation march played, the 85 men appeared to hoots and cheers from their families. They marched to the stage — one surrounded by barbed wire fence and constructe­d by fellow prisoners.

For these were no ordinary graduates. Their black commenceme­nt garb almost hid their aqua and navy-blue prison uniforms as they received college degrees, high school diplomas and vocational certificat­es earned while they served time.

Thousands of prisoners throughout the United States get their college degrees behind bars, most of them paid for by the federal Pell Grant program, which offers the neediest undergradu­ates tuition aid that they don’t have to repay.

That program is about to expand exponentia­lly next month, giving about 30,000 more students behind bars some $130 million in financial aid per year.

The new rules, which overturn a 1994 ban on Pell Grants for prisoners, begin to address decades of policy during the “tough on crime” 1970s-2000 that brought about mass incarcerat­ion and stark racial disparitie­s in the nation’s 1.9 million prison population.

For prisoners who get their college degrees, including those at Folsom State Prison who got grants during an experiment­al period that started in 2016, it can be the difference between walking free with a life ahead and ending up back behind bars. Finding a job is difficult with a criminal conviction, and a college degree is an advantage former prisoners desperatel­y need.

Gerald Massey, one of 11 Folsom students graduating with a degree from the California State University at Sacramento, has served nine years of a 15-to-life sentence for a drunken driving incident that killed his close friend.

“The last day I talked to him, he was telling me, I should go back to college,” Massey said. “So when I came into prison and I saw an opportunit­y to go to college, I took it.”

Consider this: It costs roughly $106,000 per year to incarcerat­e one adult in California.

It costs about $20,000 to educate a prisoner with a bachelor’s degree program through the Transformi­ng Outcomes Project at Sacramento State, or TOPSS.

If a prisoner paroles with a degree, never reoffends, gets a job earning a good salary and pays taxes, then the expansion of prison education shouldn’t be a hard sell, said David Zuckerman, the project’s interim director.

“I would say that return on investment is better than anything I’ve ever invested in,” Zuckerman said.

That doesn’t mean it’s always popular. Using taxpayer money to give college aid to people who’ve broken the law can be controvers­ial. When the Obama administra­tion offered a limited number of Pell Grants to prisoners through executive action in 2015, some prominent Republican­s opposed it, arguing in favor of improving the existing federal job training and re-entry programs instead.

The 1990s saw imprisonme­nt rates for Black and Hispanic Americans triple between 1970 and 2000. The rate doubled for white Americans in the same time span.

The ban on Pell Grants for prisoners caused the hundreds of college-in-prison programs that existed in the 1970s and 1980s to go almost entirely extinct by the late nineties.

Congress voted to lift the ban in 2020, and since then about 200 Pell-eligible college programs in 48 states, Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico have been running, like the one at Folsom. Now, the floodgates will open, allowing any college that wants to utilize Pell Grant funding to serve incarcerat­ed students to apply and, if approved, launch their program.

President Joe Biden has strongly supported giving Pell Grants to prisoners in recent years. It’s a turnaround – the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcemen­t Act of 1994, championed by the former Delaware senator, was what barred prisoners from getting Pell Grants in the first place. Biden has since said he didn’t agree with that part of the compromise legislatio­n.

The California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion had 200 students enrolled in bachelor’s degree programs this spring, and has partnered with eight universiti­es across the state. The goal, says CDCR press secretary Terri Hardy: Transformi­ng prisoners’ lives through education.

Aside from students dressed in prisoner blues, classes inside Folsom Prison look and feel like any college class. Instructor­s give incarcerat­ed students the same assignment­s as the pupils on campus.

The students in the Folsom Prison classes come from many different background­s. They are Black, white, Hispanic, young, middle aged and senior. Massey, who got his communicat­ions degree, is of South Asian heritage.

Born in San Francisco to parents who immigrated to the U.S. from Pakistan, Massey recalls growing up feeling like an outsider. Although most people of his background are Muslim, his family members belonged to a small Christian community in Karachi.

In primary school, he was a target for bullies. As a teen, he remembered seeking acceptance from the wrong people. When he completed high school, Massey joined the Air Force.

“After 9/11, I went in and some people thought I was a terrorist trying to infiltrate,” he said. “It really bothered

me. So when I got out of the military, I didn’t want anything to do with them.”

Massey enrolled in college after one year in the military, but dropped out. Later, he became a certified nursing assistant and held the job for 10 years. He married and had two children.

His addiction to alcohol and a marijuana habit knocked him off course.

“I was living like a little kid and I had my own little kids,” Massey said. “And I thought if I do the bare minimum, that’s OK.”

Prison forced him to take responsibi­lity for his actions. He got focused, sought rehabilita­tion for alcoholism and restarted his pursuit of education. He also took up prison barbering to make money.

In between haircuts for correction­al officers and other prison staff, Massey took advantage of his access to WiFi connection to study, take tests and work on assignment­s. Internet service doesn’t reach the prisoners’ housing units.

On commenceme­nt day, Massey was the last of his classmates to put on his cap and gown. He was a member of the ceremony’s honor guard – his prison uniform was decorated with a white aiguillett­e, the ornamental braided cord denoting his military service.

“It’s a big accomplish­ment,” Massey said. “I feel, honestly, that God opened the doors and I just walked through them.”

Massey found his mom, wife and daughter for a long-awaited celebrator­y embrace. He reserved the longest and tightest embrace for his 9-year-old daughter, Grace. Her small frame collapsed into his outstretch­ed arms, as wife Jacq’lene Massey looked on.

“There’s so many different facets and things that can happen when you’re incarcerat­ed, but this kept him focused on his goals,” Massey’s wife Jacq’lene said. “Having the resources and the ability to participat­e in programs like that really helped him, but it actually helps us, too.”

“There’s the domino effect – it’s good for our kids to see that. It’s good for me to see that,” she said.

In addition to his communicat­ions degree, Massey earned degrees in theology and biblical studies. His post-release options began to materializ­e ahead of graduation. State commission­ers have deemed him fit for parole, and he expects to be released any day now. A nonprofit group that assists incarcerat­ed military veterans met with him in May to set up transition­al housing, food, clothing and healthcare insurance for his eventual re-entry.

 ?? AP photo ?? Prisoner-students majoring in communicat­ions, Gerald Massey (center standing), works with Sherman Dorsey in a classroom at Folsom State Prison in Folsom, Calif. on May 3. Many more prisoners like Massey and Dorsey will have opportunit­ies to leave prison with bachelor’s degrees, when new federal rules on financial aid for higher education take effect in July.
AP photo Prisoner-students majoring in communicat­ions, Gerald Massey (center standing), works with Sherman Dorsey in a classroom at Folsom State Prison in Folsom, Calif. on May 3. Many more prisoners like Massey and Dorsey will have opportunit­ies to leave prison with bachelor’s degrees, when new federal rules on financial aid for higher education take effect in July.

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