The Justice Department has awarded more than $62 million in
grants to strengthen efforts to help people returning from prison rejoin their
communities and become productive, law-abiding citizens. This grant announcement was made by Attorney
General Eric Holder today while in St. Louis, where he visited Project EARN, a
Drug Reentry Court program. Attorney
General Holder delivered remarks to the program’s graduates and emphasized that
successful reentry is a top priority at the Justice Department and a central
part of his new “Smart on Crime” initiative.
“Over the course of my career, I’ve seen just how important
– and powerful – reentry programs can be,” said Attorney General Eric
Holder. “I learned how this cycle
weakens communities, tears families apart and destroys individual lives. If more communities adopt reentry programs
like the one I witnessed today in St. Louis, it will reduce criminal justice
spending, ensure the fairest possible outcomes, and forge the stronger, safer
communities that all of our citizens deserve.”
Later today, Attorney General Holder will travel to Peoria,
Ill., to attend a pre-court meeting with judges and pretrial service
officers. He will also deliver remarks
at an alternative to detention court hearing.
The Office of Justice Programs (OJP) made these 112
competitive and supplemental Second Chance Act (SCA) awards to state, tribal
and local governments, and non-profit organizations to reduce recidivism,
provide reentry services, conduct research and evaluate the impact of reentry
programs. The SCA programs, administered
through the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) and the Office of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), are designed to help communities
develop and implement comprehensive strategies to reduce recidivism and address
the challenges faced by incarcerated adults and youth when they return to their
communities following release from confinement.
“Effective reentry services are critical to helping formerly
incarcerated individuals remain crime-free and become productive, law-abiding
citizens,” said Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Justice Programs
Karol V. Mason. “The awards continue
this Administration’s commitment to achieving sustainable reductions in
recidivism and improving the safety of our communities.”
“We must continue to
draw on the science of recidivism reduction and what works to ensure that the
right people get the right integrated interventions at the right times,” said
BJA Director Denise E. O’Donnell.
Of the over $62 million in funding provided, more than $57
million (91 BJA awards and 19 OJJDP awards) supports smart probation projects,
treatment of returning adult and juveniles with co-occurring substance abuse
and mental health disorders; adult and juvenile reentry demonstration projects;
adult mentoring programs; technology career training projects for incarcerated
adults and juveniles; and demonstration field experiments to test a parole
reentry model. The remaining $5.4 million
supports two awards for evaluation activities and training and technical
assistance for Second Chance Act grantees and the reentry field in general.
OJJDP awarded more than $9.7 million in Second Chance Act
Juvenile Reentry Program grant awards to reduce recidivism and assist youth in
successfully returning to their communities after secure confinement. This includes $176,000 to assist four
jurisdictions in planning a juvenile reentry program, and $6,573,177 for ten
jurisdictions to implement evidence-based reentry programs that provide a comprehensive
range of services for juveniles up to 18 years of age. This also includes $2,977,252 for five
community programs to reduce long-term alcohol and other substance abuse among
youth in secure confinement facilities and to increase drug treatment and
mental health services for these youth.
“Too many young people caught up in the juvenile justice
system fail to return to school, find a job, or live healthy, drug-free lives
after being confined,” said OJJDP Administrator Robert L. Listenbee. “These grants will help them find a path out
of crime and delinquency and begin to make positive contributions to their
communities.”
OJP will also continue to provide reentry resources to the
field through the National Reentry Resource Center (NRRC), through a
cooperative agreement with the Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice
Center, administered by BJA. The NRRC
offers training and technical assistance for SCA grantees, provides distance
learning and other reentry resources to the field, and administers the “What
Works in Reentry Clearinghouse.” NRRC
collaborates with other federal agencies focused on reentry activities and with
the Attorney General’s Federal Interagency Reentry Council and its staff
working group.
For a list of all OJP grant awards, please visit:
www.ojp.gov/funding/funding.htm.
For more information on the NRRC, please visit:
www.nationalreentryresourcecenter.org.
For more information on the Federal Reentry Council, please
visit: csgjusticecenter.org/nrrc/projects/firc/.
The Office of Justice Programs, headed by Assistant Attorney
General Karol V. Mason, provides federal leadership in developing the nation’s
capacity to prevent and control crime, administer justice, and assist
victims. OJP has six components: the
Bureau of Justice Assistance; the Bureau of Justice Statistics; the National
Institute of Justice; the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention; the Office for Victims of Crime; and the Office of Sex Offender
Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking.
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