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Serving Homeless Clients with Criminal Justice "Issues": Slowing the Revolving Door

Serving Homeless Clients with Criminal Justice "Issues": Slowing the Revolving Door . Stephan Haimowitz, JD Homeless Veterans Reintegration Project US Dept. of Labor, Veterans Employment and Training Service Burton Blatt Institute Syracuse University

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Serving Homeless Clients with Criminal Justice "Issues": Slowing the Revolving Door

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  1. Serving Homeless Clients with Criminal Justice "Issues": Slowing the Revolving Door Stephan Haimowitz, JD Homeless Veterans Reintegration Project US Dept. of Labor, Veterans Employment and Training Service Burton Blatt Institute Syracuse University Steven Samra, MPA Recovery Specialist, Center for Social Innovation

  2. Disability, Homelessness & Criminal Justice • Mental Illness & Substance Use • significant % of arrestees, county jail detainees, state prisoners • Many stuck in the “revolving door” • Increasingly Iraq/Afghanistan veterans • Research continues on the interplay between disability & crime • Treatment/services are effective for many • Criminogenic factors predominate for others • Violence • Perpetrators vs. victims

  3. Stuck in the Revolving Door • Homelessness • 12% of prison population were homeless when arrested • Female Veterans: 3 times as likely as female non-Veterans • Substance abuse • Largest cause of homelessness among single adults • 25% Veterans aged 18-25 met criteria (1.8 million) • Mental Illness • 20-25% of the homeless population • Veterans • Poverty & homelessness rates exceed general population • Approximately 9% of jails and prison population

  4. The System’s Components • Arrest • Fingerprint = a record = a RAP Sheet • Pre-trial detention – local jail • States have different offense categories: felonies, misdemeanor… • Adjudication • Issues of (a) evidence and (b) constitutional rights • Plea Bargaining – focus is sentence • Sentencing • Probation instead of incarceration • State prison followed by parole

  5. Impacts of a Criminal Record • Numerous, significant, life-long • Voting • Government Benefits • Credit • Public and Private Housing • Child Custody /Adoption

  6. Employment Barriers • Applicant discloses record --> employer won’t hire • Worker does not disclose --> fired for “false job application” • Criminal records are increasingly available • public websites • private search companies • national credit reporting agencies

  7. Debates About Impacts Data on re-offending vs. predicting individual behavior Protecting vulnerable populations If you can’t find work, can’t pay child support…

  8. What Serves the Public Interest? “The whole point is for someone who’s made a mistake to have a chance to reclaim their life.” - Judge Henry Kron, NY

  9. 2008 Second Chance Act: Lowering job barriers lowers recidivism.

  10. Civil Rights Issues • Arrests without conviction: “disparate impact” • US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission • Informal Guidance Letters • Lawsuits in Maryland and Michigan

  11. What Can Homeless Service Providers Do? • Connect with local diversion programs. • Liaise with criminal justice agencies • Participate in cross training • Help clients to address having “a record.” • Learn the strategies that work in your state.

  12. What is diversion? • Human services - criminal justice collaboration • Agencies often struggle serving many of the same people • Employment: key element in recovery http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/cmhs/CommunitySupport/toolkits/employment/ • Primary goal: Address the revolving door • Getting people into individualized treatment services: “different this time” • SAMHSA and other agencies fund a range of program models

  13. Types of Diversion Programs • Police, i.e. Memphis’ “Crisis Intervention Team” • Predominant model • Trained dispatchers and precinct /shift officers • Local Jails • Variable screening and referral mechanisms • Duties handled by jail or community clinical staff

  14. Specialized Courts • Drug Courts • Largest number, most studied • Mental Health Courts • Some advocates have objections • Homeless Courts • Often related to “Stand Downs” • Veteran Treatment Courts • Number is growing rapidly

  15. Jail Diversion and Trauma Recovery – Priority to Veterans • SAMHSA Report and Recommendations (2008) • Use validated Screening instruments • Train front line criminal justice staff • Expand Peer Support • http://gainscenter.samhsa.gov/pdfs/veterans/CVTJS_Report.pdf . • Pilot Projects in 13 states (until 2013) • Strong peer component • State and Local Advisory Committees • Pilot expands state-wide over 5 years

  16. Local Diversion Contacts • National GAINS Center, (800) 311-GAIN • http://www.gainscenter.samhsa.gov/html/ • Council on State Governments’ Consensus Project, (212) 482-2320 • http://consensusproject.org/

  17. Assisting Clients with “a Record” • Expungment, Sealing, etc. • Rules & “waiting periods” vary widely between states • First step – obtain state RAP Sheet • http://criminal.findlaw.com/crimes/expungement/expungement‐state‐info.html • Some states: law requires individualized consideration • Public employers and licensing • Private employers • http://www.hirenetwork.org/resource.html

  18. Assist Clients with “a Record” Bonding Tax Incentives Prepare for job applications and interviews

  19. Federal Bonding Program • Bond gives employers incentive to hire “at risk” individuals • Covers loss up to $5K loss from employee dishonesty • Free to employer for 6 months, then she/he can purchase • Sponsored by US Dept of Labor • Program information http://www.bonds4jobs.com/index.html • Program is state-operated • Contact info for State Coordinators • http://www.bonds4jobs.com/state-coordinators.html

  20. Employer Tax Incentives • Work Opportunity Tax Credit • $2,400 for each new adult hire from a target group • Ex-felon hired w/in 1 year of conviction or release from prison. • $4,800 for each new disabled veteran hire • http://www.doleta.gov/bu

  21. Job Applications & Interviews • Prepare clients to handle the criminal record question • Do not leave application question blank or write “will discuss at interview” • Do practice interviews

  22. Job Applications & Interviews • Answer what is asked truthfully • know the differences - felony, offense, misdemeanor, disorderly person • conviction includes suspended sentence, fines, probation, parole • Give a summary of the offense • Be brief, accept responsibility

  23. Job Applications & Interviews • Fully explain what’s changed & provide documentation • Military service • Rehabilitation/treatment • Education/work • Community service / church involvement • Provide Federal Bonding info • State coordinator’s name, phone and email • Program form and description • Not hired? Send letter, review above, seek reconsideration

  24. For Clients Who are Veterans • Homeless Veterans Reintegration Project • US Dept of Labor – Veterans Employment & Training Services • Specialized programs • Homeless Female Veterans/Veterans with Families • Incarcerated Veterans Reintegration Project • http://bbi.syr.edu/hvrp/grantees/index.htm

  25. Summing Up • Some strategies and resources exist • A “jobs approach” is slowly changing • “Ban the Box” • “Second Chance Act” – new federal policy, reentry grants • State governments looking at the evidence

  26. The Reality Escaping the “revolving door“?

  27. Resources 2008 Second Chance Act http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/D?d110:1:./temp/~bdFPGW::|/home/LegislativeData.php?n=BSS;c=110 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission http://www.eeoc.gov/ SAMHSA resources http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/cmhs/CommunitySupport/toolkits/employment/

  28. Resources U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission http://www.eeoc.gov/ SAMHSA resources http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/cmhs/CommunitySupport/toolkits/employment/ National GAINS Center, Tel:(800) 311-GAIN http://www.gainscenter.samhsa.gov/html/ http://gainscenter.samhsa.gov/pdfs/veterans/CVTJS_Report.pdf

  29. Resources Consensus Project. Tel: (212) 482-2320 http://consensusproject.org/ Assisting Clients in the Hiring Process Obtaining a RAP Sheet http://criminal.findlaw.com/ State Specific Considerations http://www.hirenetwork.org/resource.html

  30. Resources Bonding Programs Federal http://www.bonds4jobs.com/index.html State http://www.bonds4jobs.com/state-coordinators.html Employer Tax Incentives http://www.dol.gov/

  31. Resources Veterans Employment Resources NVTAC (National Veterans Technical Assistance Center) http://bbi.syr.edu/hvrp/grantees/index.htm Department of Labor http://www.dol.gov

  32. Q&A Stephan Haimowitz, Homeless Veterans Reintegration Project, US Dept. of Labor, Veterans Employment and Training Service; Burton Blatt Institute, Syracuse University sjhaimow@law.syr.edu Steven Samra, Recovery Specialist, Center for Social Innovation, ssamra@center4si.com Moderator: Justine Hanson, Deputy Project Director, Homelessness Resource Center, jhanson@center4si.com

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