Strategies for Successful Release
Published June 01, 2009 @ 11:26AM PT

I recently finished reading When Prisoners Come Home by Professor Joan Petersilia, who is now a Professor of Law at Stanford Law School. This book really opened my eyes to the struggles I can expect to face when prison gates finally open for me. I recommend it to readers at change.org, as it vividly illuminates the need for meaningful prison reform.
From this book I became aware of statistics that should concern every American citizen. One is the rapidly growing number of people who return to society from jails and prisons in each year. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reported that in 2000, American jails and prisons released 606,000 people. By 2005, that number had grown to 698,500 people. The Pew Charitable Trust estimates that by 2011, American jails and prisons will release 750,000 people each year.
What really troubles me about these numbers is that government statistics show that one in three of all released prisoners will face a new arrest within six months. During the first year of release, 44 percent will face a new arrest. Within three years, the government records show that 67.5 percent of all people released from jails and prisons will face a new arrest.
As a long-term prisoner, I cannot help but scratch my head with anxiety and frustration when I read these dire predictions about the obstacles that await my release. They should concern every prisoner and every citizen. Some readers live with misperceptions that anyone can succeed in society if they really want to live a straight life. Professor Petersilia’s book clearly identifies how the obstacles that all prisoners face complicate such possibilities.
The two most reliable factors that can influence success upon release from confinement include employment prospects and community support. Those who languish in prison for years or decades at a time, however, face colossal hurdles in preparing for viable employment prospects and in nurturing community ties because of administrative policies.
By blocking or hindering opportunities for prisoners to prepare for law-abiding lives upon release, it feels as if administrative policies in prisons across America condition failure rather than corrections. It is as if prisoners come to the end of their terms with their hands and feet shackled. Prison gates open and the prisoner drops into a sea of despair. Recidivism rates show that most cannot swim, though the system of corrections shrugs off the failure and calls for more control.
Finding a job is critical to success upon release from prison. Yet those with criminal records face significant barriers to employment. They have lower education levels and minimal work experience. They return to poor communities where unemployment levels are high. They lack networks in legitimate society that can open employment prospects. Another factor that intensifies these hurdles is that studies show employers express reluctance in hiring those with a felony conviction. Professor Petersilia’s book shows that 80 percent of ex-offenders in California remain jobless after being released from prison for one year.
Prison reforms should address this failed public policy of isolating and punishing offenders in ways that condition them for further failure upon their return to society. With 750,000 prisoners scheduled to return to American communities each year, or 2,000 every day, the cost is simply too great for Americans to accept recidivism rates of 67.5 percent. It makes sense for taxpayers to consider prison reforms that will prepare more offenders to return as law-abiding citizens.
Some suggestions would include mechanisms through which offenders could use to earn their freedom. Rather than extinguishing hope, administrators ought to allow policies that would encourage offenders to work toward creating marketable job skills. They ought to support both work- and study-release programs. Instead of erecting barriers that restrict inmate access to telephones and visits, prison reforms should encourage the building of community ties.
Such prison reforms would lower recidivism rates and make society safer. Implementing them would require fundamental change in our nation’s prison system.
Share this Post
Related Posts
Comments (5)
Comments on Change.org are meant for further exploration and evaluation of the ideas covered in the posts. To that end, we welcome constructive comments. However, we reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive, abusive, or off-topic; that contain ad hominem attacks; or that are designed to subvert or hijack comment threads rather than contribute to them. Repeat offenders may be permanently removed from the site at our discretion.
Author
-
Michael G. Santos has been incarcerated since 1987. He has earned an undergraduate and a graduate degree during his confinement, and he contributes to society through his writings about prisons, the people they hold, and strategies for growing through confinement. His daily entries are at prisonnewsblog.com.
Facebook
Twitter
Digg
StumbleUpon
Delicious
Email


















Dear Michael:
I really appreciate your writing on this. A close family member of mine was in prison, and he had a difficult time when he got out. Luckily, his community helped, and now he is a successful heavy machinery operator and works in his community to restore watershed levels so salmon can spawn successfully. I am a teacher and a poet, and the works of Jimmy Santiago Baca have greatly influenced how I perceive life on the outside, and as a the mother of someone who was on the inside. I continue to feel frustrated with US prison policies as well as horrified at the statistics....as many of those who fill our jail cells would not be there if not only the policies were different, but if there were more supportive communities out there.
Sincerely,
Evie Romero Montoya
Posted by Evie Romero Montoya on 06/02/2009 @ 05:21AM PT
You must be signed in to report content.
The length of time it requires to resume a stabilized life is conditioned upon the mental attitude of the released prisoner. After years in prison cells throughout the nation, prisoners become bitter and resentful of a society that has shunned them and banished them from "the free world." Often times this resentment is built up frustration from a prison system that is designed to keep prisoners down and does absolutely nothing to encourage positive advancements. Additionally, this resentment is profound mostly because of the amount of time served for these petty "non-violent" drug offenses.
These decade's that these young men spend in prison for a small miniscule amount of drug activity is antithetical to growth because there are no programs within the system to teach them the necessary skills to function in a free society.
It is only through the grace of god, my mentors at the Salvation Army, and a loving wife that I have been able to become a thriving contributing member of society. Rehabilitation of prisoners is not a "program" you can teach, it requires self determination and an unequivocal desire to remain free at all costs.
One of the most distinguishing factors that enabled me to remain free, was the one smart thing I did upon release. I moved from my comfort zone, put all friends, acquaintances and family aside and left. Not everyone is capable of doing this because the policies of this government prevent relocation and inhibit new fresh beginings.
Spending more than 20 years behind bars, in cages, rat holes, being taunted by the guards and beaten by these unscrupulous monsters we employ to care for "our children" taught me one thing, in spite of what evil they brought upon me, I would never return to give them the satisfaction of seeing me "fallen" again. Many times, sitting in some barren segregation unit, darkness would come, and sweet sleep would take me from the prison cell and provide light to my life.
The best times in prison, of course, is seeing your loved ones. Had my wife not been so faithful, supportive and had the resolute determination to "stand by her man" I would have surely failed and returned to this demonic system. I ached for the pain I had caused because of what she must endure to just visit me, subjugated to strip searches, just to see her man, asked on dates by the guards... And we, as taxpayers, actually pay these people to work.
It is a cruel and viscious world, these prisons we build, teaching nothing to our youth but fear, hate and resentment, and then society asks that once we are released, with no job, no money, no place to live, we go and sin no more.
If nothing else, prisons do teach us one thing, we, as a nation, do not care about those imprisoned because we continue to build these monstrous money sucking cathedrals to house millions of our youth and teach them nothing in the way of survival skills.
Michael, I know your pain, and I really hope and pray that your light at the end of this dark tunnel comes soon.
Posted by mark schmanke on 06/02/2009 @ 06:59AM PT
You must be signed in to report content.
So you are telling me that sitting in the yard and looking at all the prisoners in your view, that at least 67% would not return to prison regardless of present prison conditions? Whether due to personal choices or circumstances? If so prisons have changed in the last 30 years. Since you have earned a pair of degrees while in the system I think you disprove your argument.
Posted by James Thompson on 06/02/2009 @ 08:39PM PT
You must be signed in to report content.
Did you notice it took him 22 years to get those degrees?? You should be commending him for doing a positive thing in his situation. I believe it is people like you that hold this country back....what do you give back to society Mr Thompson?
Posted by carolyn brown on 06/15/2009 @ 05:44PM PT
You must be signed in to report content.
I have no idea, nor do you, when he began his change and his commendable educational journey. He does not dispute that he earned his time so what is your point? I do not dispute that some changes in our prison systems may be needed, my point is still valid. Our high rate of recidivism is due more to the personalities of the prisoners than the conditions of the prisons. It was true 30 years ago and, I believe, it is true today. Your reaction to me is silly and based on a single paragraph you didn't understand.
Posted by James Thompson on 06/16/2009 @ 11:36AM PT
You must be signed in to report content.