[SpecialTopics 887] Re: Building and sustaining personalrelationshipsfor good referralsKatherine kgotthardt at comcast.netWed Mar 19 06:15:15 EDT 2008
Steve, for those of us out of the Capitol Hill loop, could you please explain what the Second Chance Act is and does? Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt www.luxuriouschoices.net ----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Steurer" <SSteurer at ceanational.org> To: <specialtopics at nifl.gov> Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 10:41 PM Subject: [SpecialTopics 884] Re: Building and sustaining personalrelationshipsfor good referrals I have been reading the various excellent emails about correctional education and community education and looking for an opportunity to make a brief but important and unique comment. So here goes. One of the things that has surprised me is how no one has talked about the one of the most impotant recent legislative achievements on Capitol Hill. Last week, March 12th, the Senate passed the Second Chance Act. The House had done so earlier. Now the fight is on for appropriations to back it up. The Bush administration has backed the Second Chance Act for some time. Ironically, the name of the bill comes from one of President Bush's state of the union speeches. How long has it been that Democrats and Republicans have come together to support correctional programming instead of correctional institution building and longer sentences? Is this some kind of watershed? If the Second Chance Act receives decent funding it could be one of the most important pieces of legislation to build the prison to community connection and to help inmates who have received education and training while incarcerated to make the transition to community and a positive life. On March 12th CEA sponsored a trip to Capitol Hill from its CEA Leadership Forum in Annapolis. Gene Guerrero, who works for the Open Society Institute, has worked tirelessly leading the campaign for passage of this act. He spoke to correctional educators at a midday meeting in the Rayburn House Office Building. He noted that Senator Shelby of Alabama was holding up the bill in the Senate. Two of our delegates, John Stewart and Susan McKee of Alabama, went directly to Shelby's office, found him and, apparently, helped convince him to support the Second Chance Act. He removed his hold and the Senate passed the bill the same night. CEA is proud to have played a role in passing the Second Chance Act. I would like to hear what our participants think of the possible impact of this new federal effort. Steve Stephen Steurer Ph.D., Executive Director Correctional Education Association 8182 Lark Brown Road Suite 202 Elkridge, MD 21075 Tel: 443-459-3081 Fax: 443-459-3088 www.ceanational.org "Transforming Lives Through Education" -----Original Message----- From: specialtopics-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:specialtopics-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of David J. Rosen Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 7:44 PM To: specialtopics at nifl.gov Subject: [SpecialTopics 882] Building and sustaining personal relationshipsfor good referrals Colleagues, Bill Anthony points to the importance of personal connections to community resources. I wonder if our guest experts -- and other participants -- have examples of state or county corrections institutions and community-based institutions where personal relationships have been built and sustained over time so that a referral phone call or an email about an inmate who is being released results in a warm welcome to the community-based education program, perhaps as part of a number of community services (housing, employment, health care, counseling) provided on release. If so, what enables these relationships? What sustains them? What undermines them? David J. Rosen Special Topics Discussion Moderator djrosen at comcast.net On Mar 18, 2008, at 6:20 PM, Bill Anthony wrote: > David Rosen, > > Regarding your question below -- > > I was involved with Federal Correctional Education for some 25 > years. I believe we did a relatively good job of preparing inmates > for release with GED, Vocational. counseling and Pre Release > programs. But, we did not do a particularly good job of "handing > inmates off" to the appropriate community education resources. > Many years ago we had release furloughs for lesser security inmates > to allow them to connect with release plans in their release > community. Given increasing security concerns and the increase of > Half Way Houses or Community Treatment Centers I believe we lost a > step. We began turning people over to halfway houses with no > direct contact and probably very poor procedures for delivery of > institutional education records to the half way houses. > > The half way houses were often just an interim step between prison > and final relief destination. They helped in getting jobs, > clothing tools , and rent money; but they ultimatley had to also > "hand off" many ot their clients to a final release area many miles > away. > > We can take some solace in the fact that, as a federal instituion, > we were releasing inmates all over the country and a personal > handoff to local resources was particularly difficult. State > Prisons should have it a little easier and county jails should be > able to actually maintain personal contacts with community > resources. But I think a real key is to be able to provide > personal connections to community resources. In a county jail > situation it would seem that it might be possible for direct > relationships among prison staff and county educational > resources . I'm sure the issue of privacy concerns might be raised > but it would seem inmates would have the right to waive such concerns. > > I also believe that there are a number of availabe education > resources that qualify as "Lifelong Learning" resources. That > is, we can provide resources in the prison that can be continued > on the streets. If we train the inmates to use a system such as > the Public Broadcasting, Educational TV, and Literacy Link > materials for GED and Workplace Skills; the inmates can continue > to use the same resources on their own after release and possibly > get help from community Adult Education programs where necessary. > I know the computer security issues in higher security prisons but, > we are really at the point where we need to find ways to give > inmates the skills to use internet resources. Can we hook inmates > up with more internet resources that can go with them where ever > they go and whenever their schedule permits? Use of this type of > resources can also help improve "Family Literacy". I suspect we > all know that many inmate families could use educational help also. > > > Bill Anthony > SYNSOL at cableone.net > > ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > > For all our guests: > > When an inmate who has been in an education program inside a state > corrections institution or county jail and is released, what needs to > happen for him or her to connect to and stick with a community-based > education program? Do these events need to happen immediately mon > release or can they be phased in over time after housing, shelter, > counseling and job needs are met? Are you aware of any exemplary > models of connections between inside education and community based > education programs? Can you tell us about them? What can community- > based education programs do to partner with corrections education > programs that release inmates back to their communities? > > David J. Rosen > Special Topics Discussion Moderator > djrosen at comcast.net > > ------------------------------- > National Institute for Literacy > Special Topics mailing list > SpecialTopics at nifl.gov > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/SpecialTopics > Email delivered to djrosen at comcast.net David J. Rosen djrosen at comcast.net ------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Special Topics mailing list SpecialTopics at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/SpecialTopics Email delivered to ssteurer at ceanational.org ------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Special Topics mailing list SpecialTopics at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/SpecialTopics Email delivered to kgotthardt at comcast.net
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