Baltimore Sun

Business group seeks work for ex-offenders

In report, Greater Baltimore Committee proposes series of job-creation initiative­s

- By Lorraine Mirabella lorraine.mirabella@baltsun.com

With the goal of removing barriers to jobs for ex-offenders, a Baltimore business group is proposing programs to build entreprene­urial skills, incentives for employers to hire those with criminal records and the creation of a state office to ease re-entry into society after incarcerat­ion.

Those are among the wide-ranging recommenda­tions for businesses, nonprofits and government agencies included in report released today by the Greater Baltimore Committee.

The report argues that ex-offenders need to find stable work as quickly as possible to break a cycle that too often leads back to crime and prison. More than 20,000 people are imprisoned in Maryland at a cost of almost $1 billion per year, according to Justice Policy Institute figures cited in the report.

For the thousands who return to the city after prison each year, “most will return to their former neighborho­ods, often with little or no employment prospects and limited job skills or training,” the report said. “Some will lack stable housing options, while many face a difficult transition period as they attempt to readjust to society.”

The GBC formed the Coalition for a Second Chance with experts from nonprofits, businesses, service providers, and state and local government­s after the April 2015 riots drew attention to poverty and unemployme­nt in the city’s most impoverish­ed neighborho­ods.

The report “underscore­s the fact that increasing opportunit­ies for returning citizens is really a win for returning citizens, a win for employers and a win for the overall economic health of the region,” said Donald C. Fry, GBC president and CEO. “The business community really needs to become involved to a greater extent than it has been. … Stable employment influences whether someone is drawn back into criminal activity.”

The GBC blueprint represents a longterm commitment from the group to address “what has been a complex public policy issue,” Fry said. “We have to debunk the myths that are out there.”

One in five job seekers in the Baltimore region reported that their criminal record is a barrier to employment, the report found.

Former inmates struggle with lack of access to jobs with family-supporting wages, unfair stereotype­s, lack of transporta­tion, decreased job skills, lack of child care and discrimina­tory hiring practices, the report said. Someone who lands a job paying $10 per hour or more within two months of release has just an 8 percent chance of being convicted again — a third of the probabilit­y of someone without a job.

The coalition proposed the state establish an Office of Re-entry within the state Department of Public Safety and Correction­al Services to coordinate services for inmates before release.

A “peer network” should be set up as well, the report said, staffed by exoffender­s who would help former prisoners find housing, vocational training, child care, jobs, and mental health and substance abuse treatment. The report suggested the state Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation should coordinate with the correction­s department to align prison workforce training with employers needs.

In the private sector, companies are being asked to sign the “Fair Chance Pledge,” agreeing to policies that encourage considerin­g job applicants’ criminal records in the proper context and training human resources staff to consider appli- cants with criminal background­s. The Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Hospital and Under Amour have signed the pledge.

Danko Arlington Inc., a nearly centuryold Park Heights-based manufactur­er of custom casts and parts for military ships, tanks, submarines, planes and missiles, began recruiting ex-offenders about a decade ago when it faced a labor shortage as skilled tradesmen retired.

Needing more workers, Danko began hiring ex-offenders through more than a half- dozen Baltimore-area nonprofit groups, which work with the job applicants to ensure they are drug-free. About a third of the company’s 68 workers are ex-offenders, he said.

“We started getting into this kind of workforce hiring because when you’re down and out and you need a job, you’re willing to do anything,” said John Danko, president of Danko Arlington. “There are a lot of misconcept­ions about ex-offenders.

“We’ve found ex-offenders to be extremely loyal and eager to learn,” he said. “We don’t judge anybody; we feel they’ve done their time and repaid their debt to society.”

City residents make up 10 percent of the state’s population but account for more than a third of the admissions to Maryland’s prisons, the GBC report found. Five communitie­s with the highest rates of incarcerat­ion include Sandtown-Winchester/Harlem Park, southern Park Heights, Greater Rosemont, Southwest Baltimore and Clifton-Berea.

The report noted that a number of programs run by nonprofit groups and government agencies help with the reentry process, such as The Living Classrooms Foundation’s Project SERVE, which starts working with inmates and continues with on-the-job training at community revitaliza­tion projects upon release.

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