Current:Home > InvestNorth Carolina joins an effort to improve outcomes for freed prisoners -Blueprint Money Mastery
North Carolina joins an effort to improve outcomes for freed prisoners
View
Date:2025-04-27 12:04:58
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina has joined a nascent nationwide effort to improve outcomes for more prisoners who return to society through an approach focused on education, health care and housing.
Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, signed an executive order Monday that seeks to reduce recidivism through formal training and workforce tools for incarcerated people so more can succeed once they are freed.
More than 18,000 people are released annually from the dozens of North Carolina adult correctional facilities, the order says, facing obstacles to a fresh start from their criminal record.
“Every person deserves the opportunity to live a life of joy, success and love even when we make mistakes,” Cooper said at an Executive Mansion ceremony. “Every single one of us can be redeemed.”
The order aligns with the goals of Reentry 2030, which is being developed by the Council of State Governments and other groups to promote successful offender integration. The council said that North Carolina is the third state to officially join Reentry 2030, after Missouri and Alabama.
North Carolina has set challenging numerical goals while joining Reentry 2030, such as increasing the number of high school degree and post-secondary skills credentials earned by incarcerated people by 75% by 2030. And the number of employers formally willing to employee ex-offenders would increase by 30%.
“This is the perfect time for this order, as employers really need workers for the record numbers of jobs that are now being created in our state,” the governor said. “Our state’s correctional facilities are a hidden source of talent.”
The executive order also directs a “whole-of-government” approach, in which Cabinet departments and other state agencies collaborate toward meeting these goals. For example, the state Transportation Department is directed to help provide the Department of Adult Correction information so that incarcerated people can learn how to get driver’s licenses and identification upon their release.
And Cooper’s order tells the Department of Health and Human Services to create ways to prescreen prisoners for federal and state health and welfare benefits before they are freed, and look into whether some Medicaid services can be offered prior to their release.
The order “charts a new path for us to collaborate with all state agencies to address the needs of justice-involved people in every space,” Adult Correction Secretary Todd Ishee said in a news release.
The governor said there is already funding in place to cover many of the efforts, including new access to Pell Grants for prisoners to pursue post-secondary degrees and land jobs once released. But he said he anticipated going to the Republican-controlled General Assembly for assistance to accelerate the initiatives.
Republican legislators have in the past supported other prisoner reentry efforts, particularly creating mechanisms for ex-offenders to remove nonviolent convictions from their records.
Cooper and other ceremony speakers touched on the spiritual aspects of prisoner reentry.
NASCAR team owner and former Super Bowl champion coach Joe Gibbs talked about a program within the “Game Plan for Life” nonprofit he started that helps long-term prisoners get a four-year bachelor’s degree in pastoral ministry so they can counsel fellow inmates.
And Greg Singleton, a continuing-education dean at Central Carolina Community College in Sanford, is himself an ex-offender, having served four years in prison in the 1990s. The college has educational opportunities inside the state prison and county jail in Sanford. Plans are ahead to expand such assistance to jails in adjoining counties.
“What if God didn’t give second chances — where would any of us be?” Singleton asked. “Oh, but thank God he did, thank God he did.”
veryGood! (31724)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Watch as abandoned baby walrus gets second chance at life, round-the-clock care
- California advances landmark legislation to regulate large AI models
- Tropical systems Gilma and Hector have weakened but still pose threat to Hawaii
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Stephen Curry agrees to $63 million extension with Warriors for 2026-27 season
- Good Luck Charlie Star Mia Talerico Is All Grown Up in High School Sophomore Year Photo
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword, Water Signs (Freestyle)
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Horoscopes Today, August 28, 2024
Ranking
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Caitlin Clark sets WNBA rookie record for 3s as Fever beat Sun and snap 11-game skid in series
- Jinger Duggar Wants to Have Twins With Jeremy Vuolo
- Wizards Beyond Waverly Place Premiere Date and New Look Revealed
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Details Revealed on Richard Simmons’ Cause of Death
- Man whose escape from Kansas prison was featured in book, TV movie dies behind bars
- Falcons trading backup QB Taylor Heinicke to Chargers
Recommendation
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Man whose escape from Kansas prison was featured in book, TV movie dies behind bars
Real Housewives of Orange County's Alexis Bellino Engaged to John Janssen After 9 Months of Dating
Zzzzzzz: US Open tennis players take naps before matches, especially late ones
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Wendy Williams spotted for the first time since revealing aphasia, dementia diagnoses
Real Housewives of Orange County Alum Lauri Peterson's Son Josh Waring's Cause of Death Revealed
Escaped killer who was on the run in Pennsylvania for 2 weeks faces plea hearing