fbpx
Connect with us

National

Georgia Leads A Push To Help Ex-Prisoners Get Jobs

Published

on

A prison classroom (M. Spencer Green/AP Photo)

A prison classroom (M. Spencer Green/AP Photo)

 

(NPR) – In the 1990s, states went on a prison-building binge. Today, millions who spent time in those prisons are back in society — and many are struggling to find work.

Jay Neal is in charge of Georgia’s new office of re-entry. Its purpose is clear: “Helping Georgia’s returning citizens find training, assisting Georgia’s returning citizens find jobs,” he reads off the website.

Returning citizens is America’s new term for ex-prisoners, ex-cons and former inmates.

Six-hundred thousand of these citizens return to society each year, including 20,000 in Georgia, which has the country’s fifth-largest prison system.

READ MORE

SIGN UP TO RECEIVE NEWS UPDATES IN YOUR INBOX


Sign up to receive the latest news in your inbox

* indicates required

Like BlackPressUSA on Facebook

Advertisement

Advertise on BlackPressUSA

advertise with blackpressusa.com