Pubdate: Sun, 24 Sep 2006 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2006 The Dallas Morning News Contact: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/117 Author: Dianne Solis, the Dallas Morning News CONVICTS GET HELP GOING STRAIGHT ... TO WORK Project RIO Shows How to Find Jobs After Release The applicants file into a job screening, one by one. There's not a coat and tie in sight. All are clad in a distinct white uniform of elastic-waist pants, pull-on shirts and slip-on sneakers - no belts, buttons or shoelaces. All are inmates at the Hutchins State Jail - and soon they'll be among the 600,000 prisoners released from custody nationwide each year. And they'll be facing the challenge of finding employment with convictions - - or unusual lapses in work histories - on their records. This group is among the more fortunate. They are participating in Project Re-integration of Offenders, or Project RIO - a state job program for ex-offenders that started in 1985 as a pilot in Dallas and Tarrant counties and spread through the state prison system by 1993. "If they want to work and make an honest living, we are here to help them," says Carter MacKenzie, chief executive of BoDart Recruiters Inc., a Lubbock-based private job placement agency that works with Project RIO. As the nation's prison population swells, programs such as the Texas project serve as a public policy laboratory for how ex-prisoners can be helped. The programs are believed to break the spin on the revolving door at prisons. Project RIO cuts recidivism about 17 percent, according to a 2000 study by the Criminal Justice Policy Council of Texas for the Texas Workforce Commission, the project's administrator. "If you look at 600,000 people coming out of prison every year, you realize that this is horrendous," says William B. Eimicke, a public administration professor at Columbia University. "And the recidivism rate shows 40 percent go to prison within one year and two-thirds go back within three years. "No matter where you fall on the political spectrum, people realize we have to do something about this issue." Pitching and Placing But the nitty-gritty details of placement aren't pleasant. At the all-male Hutchins State Jail, potential recruits lined up one recent morning for a pep talk in a classroom full of slogans and viewing windows for the guards. "People can alter their lives by altering their attitudes," reads one placard. Soon, Mr. MacKenzie makes a pitch as blunt as a five-year sentence. "If you go to interview for an oil rig job dressed like you are interviewing for a Snoop Dogg video, that won't cut it. ... And one of the questions that is always asked is, OK, what was he in for? If you give the wrong info - and they double-check - then you will be eliminated from the system." Soon, the interviews begin. Some bob around questions. A man says he was in for "forgery." With probing, it turns out he wrote hot payroll checks. Another man steps in for an interview. His forearms are full of green tattoos - sometimes code for gang activity. Mr. MacKenzie says he's always on the alert for tattoos of gang insignias. Xavier Bland, a 44-year-old muscular man with chiseled cheekbones, steps in next. First question: What are you in for? "I was taking some DVDs and VCR recorders, and it was one of those situations," Mr. Bland explains to the BoDart recruiters. He received six months for the crime, Mr. Bland says, adding that the swing behind bars is "the first and only time, and I don't want to come back." Mr. MacKenzie smiles. "Summer vacation at Hutchins, huh?" Mr. Bland has earned as much as $22.75 an hour as a mechanic for Blackhawk and Osprey helicopters and F-16 fighter planes. Mr. MacKenzie thinks he can place him in a job. Cory Kinnard, a 28-year-old in for cocaine possession, steps in for his interview. He's worked in warehousing and shipping, and hopes to do the same when he is released in late September. Mr. MacKenzie thinks Mr. Kinnard can also be placed in a job. "He's at the right age where I like to get them - in late 20s or early 30s," he says. "He either stays out ... or goes into life [in prison] on the installment plan." 'Age Out of Crime' At Georgetown University, labor economist Harry Holzer tends to agree that there is, indeed, an arc in a criminal career. "The pull of the street is very high," says Mr. Holzer, a specialist on the low-wage labor market and the problems of minority workers. "Most of these guys age out of crime, roughly after 30." A tighter job market helps some as well, Mr. Holzer notes. For 2006, Texas unemployment has averaged 5.1 percent. It was last that low in July 2001. But ex-offenders are still tough to place in jobs. Incentives, such as federal work opportunity tax credits, aren't always enough to entice employers reluctant to do the paperwork, Mr. Holzer says. Employers in Project RIO do receive the federal tax credit of $2,400 after the ex-felon earns his first $6,000. And the ex-offenders are bonded for free for six months against theft or some other form of employee dishonesty. Many Project RIO participants will go through training programs that range from computer education to welding. And special care is made for hands-on, tactile learning, as studies have shown that inmates have problems with visual-auditory teaching. Charlotte Morton, regional administrator for the Windham School District, which runs the training program within the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, said the program has proved its effectiveness by cutting down recidivism. But she acknowledges the hurdles. "Seventy-five percent of these men have never held a job, a legal job, in their life," Ms. Morton says. A Large Pool The pool of ex-offenders is large. Texas prisons hold about 152,000. Last fiscal year, the state, with one of the nation's highest incarceration rates, freed almost 70,000 inmates. During 2006, Project RIO saw 32,380 participants. More than 2,000 participated in job interviews before their release. Mr. MacKenzie said his motivations are financial. BoDart receives a placement fee of $500 to $2,500 per hire, paid by the employer. Some oil-field jobs pay as much as $20 an hour, he noted. "We are going to pay for these folks one way or another," says Mr. MacKenzie, who says the cost of incarceration is roughly $40,000 a year per inmate. Employers Who Believe Among the employers lined up to help ex-offenders are Terry and Dalphine Hogg, who run a Dallas automotive repair shop that specializes in Volvos. Their shop is relatively small, but their need for mechanics was large eight years ago. That's when they turned to Project RIO. They are such big believers in the program that for the last year they've run a training academy for future auto mechanics for the ex-offenders at their shop on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Class begins with some improvised prayer that, God willing, everyone lands a job. "They are people, too," Mrs. Hogg says. "They have feelings. They are not aliens." Mr. Hogg, a former Golden Gloves boxer and track standout, says athletics steadied his life when he was younger. And he wants to do the same for ex-offenders. "The crime in this city is terrible," Mr. Hogg says. "And they could get it under control, if we could give people jobs." Government can turn the situation around, Mr. Hogg contends. "But they've got to get partnerships going with businesses." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake