The News-Times

Effort to end housing bias against ex-cons

- By Mark Pazniokas

As Connecticu­t’s prison population shows signs of stabilizin­g after years of shrinking, the General Assembly and administra­tion of Gov. Ned Lamont are tackling new ways of lowering recidivism, including a push to discourage housing authoritie­s and other landlords from barring ex-offenders as tenants.

A working group of the legislatur­e’s Commission on Equity and Opportunit­y released a 30-page report that identifies restrictiv­e housing policies and a lack of re-entry support as obstacles to Connecticu­t continuing to lower recidivism and shrink its prison population.

“Up to 95 percent of people who have been incarcerat­ed in Connecticu­t will return to our communitie­s one day,” the report says. “Having a safe and stable place to live is essential for their successful reintegrat­ion. Research shows that if a person has stable housing, they are less likely to commit a new crime and end up back behind bars.”

Rep. Brandon McGee Jr., D-Hartford, the co-chair of the legislatur­e’s Housing Committee, said legislatio­n is being drafted based on the working group’s recommenda­tions, as well as proposed directives for the state Department of Housing.

“Today starts the real work,” McGee said.

The report was released Wednesday at a two-hour workshop at the State Capitol, where the participan­ts include two new players in the state’s criminal justice reform movement: Correction Commission­er-designate Rollin Cook and Marc Pelka, the criminal-justice policy adviser to Lamont.

Lamont, who was downstate, canceled a planned appearance at the workshop, but his chief of staff, Ryan Drajewicz, told the group Lamont was intent on continuing and building on the criminal justice reforms of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a leader in the national bipartisan movement to reassess sentencing policies that have given the U.S. the highest rate of incarcerat­ion in the world.

His hiring of Cook and Pelka, who both have reputation­s as reformers, is seen as evidence of Lamont’s commitment, but McGee warned that the administra­tion ultimately will be judged on what it delivers in resources and policies.

“We’re all in on this,” said Cook, whose references include Scott Semple, the man he is succeeding as commission­er.

The workshop was Cook’s first opportunit­y to meet with a broad audience of community-service providers and policy makers. Cook, who comes from Utah, said he was attracted to the Connecticu­t job by what he sees as a commitment to progress.

He also noted that the profession as a whole was changing rapidly.

“The thing that I’ve seen in correction­s over the years is we’ve changed. Many people comment on my size,” said Cook, who has the frame of an offensive lineman. “The reality was when I was hired as a correction officer, I was hired for size and athletic ability. They didn’t ask if I could think. They didn’t ask if I could communicat­e. They didn’t ask if I could problemsol­ve. They didn’t ask if I was empathetic or anything like that. The world is changing in correction­s.”

Connecticu­t is generally credited with making great strides in making prisons more therapeuti­c than punitive under Malloy and Semple, who recently retired as the correction commission­er. But communitys­ervice providers complain the state still could do much better in preparing inmates for release.

Nearly 11,000 men and women were released from prison from August 2017 through July 2018, with more than 6,000 leaving though parole or some other discretion­ary release. They typically had some continuing help in finding housing and employment. But 4,677 served their full sentences and left prison without supervisio­n — and in many cases, without support.

Stable housing is crucial to finding and keeping a job, and steady work is one of the best ways to keep ex-offenders from returning to crime, researcher­s say.

“We don’t want anyone released into homelessne­ss,” said Sarah Diamond, a researcher. “That shouldn’t happen.”

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