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For Immediate Release:  
For Further Information:
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September 9, 2008  

Lee Moore
609-292-4791

Office of The Attorney General
- Anne Milgram, Attorney General

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$5 Million Prisoner Re-entry Initiative for New Jersey and Newark - Project launched with key support from non-profit foundations providing matching funds for federal grant

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Newark, NJ – Gov. Jon S. Corzine joined state, Newark and federal officials today in announcing $3 million in federal grants to support prisoner re-entry programs in Newark that are aimed at reintegrating ex-offenders into their community with the help of education, training and job-readiness programs. The U.S. Department of Labor grants will be matched by more than $2 million in funds from non-profit foundations, as well as supplemental programs and services from the state.

Prisoner re-entry programs are a key part of Gov. Corzine’s Safe Streets and Neighborhoods strategy to aggressively attack violent crime and street gangs trafficking in guns and narcotics. Unveiled last October, the anti-crime plan has three components – prevention, enforcement, and re-entry – each of which is indispensable to the state’s overarching strategy.

"Our strategy for safe streets and neighborhoods is based on a comprehensive approach that involves prevention, enforcement and re-entry. Deterring ex-offenders from falling back into a life of crime has to be part of the equation,'' Gov. Corzine said. "The support the state is receiving today from the federal government is an important signal that, to be successful in our fight against violent crime, we have to attack from all angles and form partnerships at all levels of government and with grassroots organizations. It allows for a full range of services to give ex-offenders the support they need to become productive members of their communities."

The federal funding will pay for services to ex-offenders and support the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development’s One-Stop Career Center in Newark. Every year in New Jersey approximately 14,000 adult inmates and 1,600 juvenile offenders are released from correctional facilities, but the recidivism rate is high. Sixty percent of adults released will be re-arrested within three years, and 37 percent of juveniles will return to correctional facilities within two years.

As part of the Governor’s anti-crime strategy, the state – through the Office of the Attorney General -- pulled together the Department of Corrections, the Department of Labor and Workforce Development, and the State Parole Board to reduce recidivism rates through education, counseling, and job training and job readiness programs.

One major state initiative which began earlier this year is called Another Chance, which is a demonstration project involving more than 1,300 inmates who will be returning to Newark, Trenton, or Camden. The project coordinates initiatives that begin while an offender is in prison and continue after release. Another Chance is designed to assess how well prisoners successfully re-enter society when they are supported by intensive diagnostic assessments, and expanded educational, vocational and job-coaching programs.

"This collaborative re-entry effort is not only about turning individual lives around, it's about improving the quality of life throughout entire communities," said Attorney General Anne Milgram. "The more successful we are at helping ex-offenders to become productive, law-abiding citizens by providing them with education, training and hope, the safer our streets and neighborhoods will be."

The federal labor department's Prisoner Re-entry Initiative grants are composed of three individual grants:

  1. a matching grant of $2 million to Newark, for redistribution to community vendors for job-readiness services
  2. $480,000 to the state Department of Labor and Workforce Development to provide technical assistance to Newark and the local One Stop center; and
  3. $300,000 to outside vendors to develop opportunities for other jurisdictions to learn from the Newark PRI experience

The first grant - the $2 million for job-readiness services - is matched by $1.7 million from the Nicholson Foundation, and $300,000 from the New Jersey Council of Grantmakers as well as four other foundations – the Achelis-Bodman Foundation, the Joan Ganz Cooney Foundation via the New York Community Trust, the Victoria Foundation, and the Edison Fund/Edison Innovation Foundation.

The $4 million for PRI services will be distributed primarily to faith-based and community-based organizations that will provide case management, life coaching, and job-mentoring services.

The grant has a 30-month timeline, supporting services to ex-offenders for two years after a six-month implementation period. More than 1,300 ex-offenders are expected to participate during the two- year period.

The state will also make available several hundred thousand dollars in job coaching and job placement services. The state labor department’s One Stop will provide job-placement services. The Department of Corrections, in addition, will work with the city to provide pre-release discharge planning for PRI participants.

Through the Governor’s Another Chance program, the connections between these three agencies have been strengthened in unprecedented ways. These connections, ensuring a seamless delivery of services to ex-offenders, are critical to the success of re-entry efforts.

"Recidivism is a costly proposition, both in terms of human suffering and the inevitable financial burden on New Jersey's taxpayers,’’ said Corrections Commissioner George Hayman. “We all win when public agencies --federal, state, county and municipal -- as well as non-profit foundations work together to assist ex-offenders to overcome barriers to successful community reintegration."

“Research and experience show that re-entry programs work to reduce recidivism and help ex-prisoners become productive, law-abiding citizens,” said State Parole Board Chairman Peter J. Barnes Jr.
“This grant will strengthen the partnerships we have built, to break the cycle of crime and re-incarceration.”

New Jersey Labor Commissioner David J. Socolow said, “Governor Corzine’s Public Safety Plan recognizes that the single greatest factor in keeping offenders from returning to prison is a job. The New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development offers employment assistance to ex-offenders through local One-Stop Career Centers, where trained specialists can help ex-offenders connect with job opportunities.”

Socolow noted that the Department funds Workforce Learning Link Centers in six state correctional facilities. He explained that these Workforce Learning Links enable inmates to better prepare for job opportunities in the workplaces to which they are returning.

“We urge employers throughout the state to maximize the use of the programs and tax incentives that we offer to encourage businesses to hire these individuals, as well as the training grants we offer to help employers train their incumbent and newly hired workers,” Socolow said.

The Prisoner Re-Entry Initiative provides funds to state governments to implement prison and community-based re-entry programs for non-violent offenders. PRI grants are administered by the federal Office of Justice Programs, the Bureau of Justice Assistance, and the U.S. Department of Labor. The Department of Labor grants generally support post-release services such as employment assistance and mentoring.

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