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Who’s Helping The 1.9 Million Women Released From Prisons And Jails Each Year? [witnessla.com]

 

By Wendy Sawyer, Witness LA, July 30, 2019

Given the dramatic growth of women’s incarceration in recent years, it’s concerning how little attention and how few resources have been directed to meeting the reentry needs of justice-involved women. After all, we know that women have different pathways to incarceration than men, and distinct needs, including the treatment of past trauma and substance use disorders, and more broadly, escaping poverty and meeting the needs of their children and families. In recognition of these differences, and in an effort to reduce the harms of incarceration and the likelihood of re-incarceration, many prison systems have begun to implement gender-responsive policies and programs. But what’s being done to help women get the support they need to rebuild their lives after release?

A handful of programs have sprung up in communities around the country to meet the needs of women returning home: some founded by formerly incarcerated women themselves, some running on shoestring budgets for years, and all underscoring the need for greater capacity to meet the demand of over 81,000 releases from prison and 1.8 million releases from jail each year.

In 2016, about 81,000 women were released from state prisons nationwide, and women and girls accounted for at least 1.8 million releases from local jails in 2013 (the last year all jails were surveyed). While many people are released from jail within a day or so and may not need reentry support, jail releases can’t be overlooked, especially for women, who are more likely than men to be incarcerated in jails as opposed to prisons. (Moreover, jails typically provide fewer programs and services than prisons, so individuals released from jails are even less likely to have received necessary treatment or services while incarcerated than those in prison.)

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During my [1968-72]  'Youthful Offender' ["No Criminal Record"] incarceration in N.Y.State, I began writing what was later formally titled: "The Prisoner's Employment Assistance Brochure for N.Y. State"-it listed agencies or organizations in every N.Y. county that help prisoners locate employment for parole eligibility. Having met one released Female 'Youthful Offender' [she'd been in one of the state women's prisons, as a juvenile/youthful offender for "Being in danger of becoming 'morally depraved'"...--It was hard for me to imagine that, as she was from the town where our National Women's Rights Memorial is now located-just 'down-wind' from where Susan B. Anthony was 'locked up']. During my parole, a few inmates working in the print shop at Attica requested to reprint it. Apparently, the warden at Attica shared it with other NY prison wardens, as the warden at Comstock prison wrote me-at the Law Office I was working at, asking for permission to reprint the one done in the print shop at Attica-which I did authorize him to do [it did not have a copyright, but I appreciated him asking]. A woman physician-who availed 'free second opinions' to Women prisoners-when she frequently traveled to the other N.Y. state Women's Prison in Bedford Hills, with an attorney of the Civil Liberties Union Prisoner's Rights Project  based in NYC- may have shared her copy of the brochure there too. Our local 'Prison Action Group' endeavored to 'spread the word', with other Prisoner Advocacy groups.... Later, one woman [with a Ph.D. in Early childhood education] and myself were the two former 'prisoners' on a multi-gender/racial 'Prison Dispute Mediation Team' organized by the American Arbitration Association's National Center for Dispute Settlement in Rochester--in an attempt to avoid repeats of the [1972] Attica 'Uprising'/Negotiation...

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