In 2011 with the passage of AB 109, a.k.a. The Public Safety Realignment Act of 2011,
California embarked on one of the greatest experiments in the nation. With state
prisons filled at approximately 200 percent capacity, and under federal court order
to reduce to 137.5 percent capacity, this realignment effort called for the reduction of
overcrowding of state prisons by committing people convicted of lower level offenses to
local county jails instead of state prisons, and shifting greater control and responsibilities of
incarceration and community supervision to local county governments. The public safety
system’s reaction to this new law provided an opportunity to understand and determine how
to best serve people convicted of lower-level offenses—would we re-incarcerate them in local
jails or allow them back in the community to rebuild their lives?
This article will discuss some of the lessons learned and progress made now six full years
into implementation AB 109. It will also shed light on the role that community development
can play not just in California, but also nationally to choose to support people in rebuilding
lives disrupted by incarceration through investment in reentry.
The Three Legged Stool of Investment in Reducing Mass Incarceration:
Preventative, Restorative and Constructive
A cross sector partnership between the public safety and community development
sectors can have a positive effect on reducing recidivism. The United States has the highest
rate of incarceration among developed countries. Over the 40 years between 1972 and 2012,
the U.S. prison population grew over 700 percent from 175,000 state inmates to almost 1.4
million,1
representing a cost of $53.5 billion to state governments.2
The emphasis on incarceration,
which disproportionately affects communities of color and poor people, is a moral
and economic crisis that needs to be addressed conscientiously.
A thoughtful coordination of investments that target restorative, constructive, and
preventative interventions is critical to lowering overall incarceration rates in the U.S., as
well as eliminating the disparate impact experienced in particular by socially marginalized
and economically disadvantaged communities.
Preventative: Shifting Investments Upstream
Preventative investments can target early interventions to improve upstream outcomes
like the likelihood of finishing high school. Poor academic performance and school disengagement
are early indicators for youth who are at risk of engaging in anti-social behavior,
and punitive school policies that similarly suffer from bias become pipelines for young people
into the criminal justice system. However, preventative investments are not limited to K-12
education. Successful programs seek to engage not only the youth but also their families
and the broader community in which they live. Improving academic performance, involving
at-risk youth in pro-social activities, and connecting them with positive role models and
mentors are proven strategies to redirect youth onto a positive track towards adulthood.
Many community and faith-based programs demonstrate evidence of rehabilitating and
motivating youth at the greatest risk of police contact. Reducing the number of youth in the
juvenile justice system is less costly than incarcerating adults and creates healthier and more
vibrant communities. Further, incarcerated youth are more likely to be later incarcerated as
adults, compared to youth who commit crimes but are not detained.3
Youth programs such as Boys and Girls Clubs, Big Brothers Big Sisters, Conservation
Corps, Youth Build, as well as neighborhood-based strategies that involve sports, arts, literacy,
and job training, are just a few examples of programs that can generate a positive return on
investment. Shawn Riggins, director of youth programs at Fresno EOC, noted that the cost
of enrollment in a Youth Build or Conservation Corp program is about $25K4
compared to
over $233K spent annually to detain a youth in Los Angeles County juvenile hall.5
Restorative: Investing in Rehabilitation
Restorative investments focus on rehabilitation while people are in custody. Although
incarceration serves a community’s goal of punishment and removing the person from the
public sphere, incarceration alone fails to seize the opportunity to invest in people in order
to increase their chances of success upon release and decrease recidivism in our communities.
For example, diagnosing and stabilizing people with mental illness or addressing substance
abuse issues can be more beneficial to public safety and individual health than incarceration
alone. But if individuals who are incarcerated are to have a chance at successful reentry,
investments must be made in education, vocational skills, cognitive thinking and effective
reentry planning prior to release. In addition, the individual needs to be effectively linked
to a continuation of services and resources once they return to the community. This is even
more critical for individuals who are returning to communities that are the most economically
vulnerable as a result of long term disinvestment, segregation and poverty.
This type of evidence-based restorative approach is used in Germany and the Netherlands
and may be instructive for the United States’ corrections system. These two European
nations view incarceration as an opportunity for re-socialization and rehabilitation,
favoring various forms of diversion over incarceration, shorter sentences that include vocational
training and education, and very limited use of solitary confinement. Prison staff
undergo extensive training of no less than two years to learn the skills that will reinforce an
environment of rehabilitation. In 2013, an American delegation representing three states
(CO, GA, PA) visited these countries to observe their facilities and practices and hopefully
identify ideas for reform here.6
Although the United States is far from the scale and style of
these European models, they demonstrate that restoration of mind and spirit portend better
outcomes upon release.
In California, prior to 2011, this responsibility to restore adult offenders fell within
the purview of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). It
is worth noting that the “R” is a more recent addition to the name of this state agency
only since 2005. However, with the passage of AB109, responsibility is either shared or now
rests with the 58 counties in California. The premise for this shift in responsibilities is that
communities, if properly resourced, are better equipped to understand and address their own
local issues and develop tailored strategies, thereby delivering better outcomes than one large
statewide agency.
Constructive Investments for Long-Term Reintegration
Constructive investments fund resources and programs that facilitate successful reentry
and form the foundation for long term reintegration following incarceration. This is also
where the greatest opportunity exists for cross-sector collaboration between public safety
and community development, given the expertise and infrastructure that exists within the
community development field. Many community development nonprofits have numerous
years of experience financing, developing, and managing housing and other facilities for
low-income communities and can immediately deploy investments from public safety
organizations.
The most important opportunity for constructive investments is housing. Many men and
women leave incarceration without a stable housing arrangement. The reasons are numerous
and complex but often hinge on two key challenges: a scarcity of affordable housing and
discriminatory renting practices. Most cities already struggle to provide sufficient housing to
existing residents and are often unequipped for the added challenges of housing people who
are in reentry from incarceration.
It is our personal view that more of the money from state legislative fixes such as AB 109
and Prop 47 should be prioritized for housing programs and services that benefit the formerly
incarcerated. Not with the goal of open-ended housing provision, but in conjunction with other programs and services designed to increase the client’s opportunity to become self-reliant
and independent. Unfortunately, too many communities lack the capacity to develop
such programs, and the partners and organizations available to manage these programs are
very few and often unsophisticated. But it’s a Catch-22; without funding, programs can’t get
started. Investment from state and local officials must lead in order to develop the provider
capacity for housing development.
A study from Stanford Law School found that in fiscal year 2011-2012, California’s counties
spent an average of 23 percent of their AB109 realignment allocation on programs and
services, and an average of 34.9 percent on Sheriff and Law Enforcement.7
One factor in
this spending disparity was the uncertainty of the impacts of realignment on local public
safety. Now, six years into realignment, counties have a better understanding of not only
the impacts on crime rates, but also the needs of the formerly incarcerated as they attempt
to re-enter their communities. As a result, counties are constantly assessing their local needs
and adjusting resources accordingly. Alameda is the only county in California that has taken
the bold step of allocating 50 percent of its AB 109 funding for community-based programs.
This funding has provided critical support for the expansion of programs that are helping
men and women get reestablished in communities and reconnected to family.
Funding for housing facilities and programs is not the only barrier for people in reentry,
statutory rules and limited information are significant challenges that perplex housing seekers
and providers alike. To address this very specialized issue, Root & Rebound (R&R), based in
Oakland, provides legal resources, tools, and education to people in reentry and preparing for
release, as well as to the family members and loved ones, community-based service providers,
supervision agencies, and other advocates who support them. R&R offers reentry support
through three key programs: direct services (including the only reentry legal advice hotline in
the country); public education;8
and systems and policy reform. Of the thousands of phone
calls and letters received through R&R’s direct service programs since 2014, approximately
38 percent have questions related to housing access, discriminatory landlords and tenancy
policies, residency restrictions imposed on people on parole and people who have to register
as sex offenders, and other housing issues. Clearly, the demand for affordable housing information,
resources, and legal support for individuals with criminal records is an essential and
grossly under-resourced issue in the reentry landscape. If stable housing isn’t secured for
people returning to their communities from prison and jail, obtaining employment, going
back to school, and reunifying with family members can be difficult or impossible.
Steady employment is also critical to reentry success. In California, discretionary dollars
could be invested in nonprofit social enterprises which often prioritize men and women with a criminal record and limited skills, providing a credible reference and employment
history. One such organization, Rubicon Programs based in Richmond, CA, provides pathways
for people reentering the community to develop skills and move out of poverty. Their
multi-pronged approach focuses on achievement in four areas: assets, income, wellness, and
connections. Rubicon prepares and connects recently incarcerated men and women with
transitional employment, on-the-job training, and other experiential opportunities that allow
individuals to stabilize their lives by earning immediate income and acquiring professional
experiences. The majority of the 350 clients that Rubicon serves annually are people who
were formerly incarcerated. Once individuals achieve stable employment, Rubicon helps
them work on other critical aspects of long-term mobility such as: identifying a career goal
and the appropriate educational training to achieve it; addressing legal barriers to employment;
improving physical and emotional health; and developing personal and professional
networks to weave a safety net that can help in times of trouble. This kind of holistic engagement
takes time—up to three years—and considerable resources. The return is well worth it,
creating self-sufficient tax-paying income earners versus the cost of housing, health care,
food, and other services that the government pays for incarceration.
On a national level, REDF is the only venture philanthropy in the U.S. that invests
exclusively in the growth of social enterprises—double bottom-line businesses that provide
jobs and support to people who want to work but face formidable barriers to employment.
Since 2011, REDF has invested in the Center for Employment Opportunities (CEO) which
provides comprehensive employment services to men and women with recent criminal
convictions to help them regain the skills and confidence needed for successful transitions to
stable, productive lives. In a random assignment evaluation conducted by the independent
research firm MDRC, after three years of follow-up, CEO was shown to create statistically
significant reductions in all measures of recidivism for individuals recently released from
prison, including arrests, convictions, and incarceration.9
The findings showed a 20 percent
reduction in reconvictions and returns to incarceration. In addition, the study also found
that CEO created total taxpayer benefits of up to $3.85 for every $1.00 spent, primarily in
the form of reduced criminal justice expenditures. REDF has actively partnered with CEO
to expand into California, enabling them to provide hundreds of jobs for people coming
out of the criminal justice system, demonstrating the scalability of social enterprise and the
CEO model. Since joining REDF’s portfolio in 2011, REDF’s work and investment has
helped CEO employ nearly 900 more people, and open up three additional offices. REDF
continues to work with CEO to explore and develop new business and financing opportunities
in California to further demonstrate the positive benefits and cost savings of social
enterprise employment for people coming out of incarceration.
But, the public and nonprofit sectors can’t shoulder the entire burden. The private sector
also has a role to play. Historically, the private sector has relied heavily on background checks
which have a less favorable impact on individuals with a criminal record, especially because
most background check companies are not mandated to update their databases when an
individual has successfully cleared or expunged their record, and inaccuracies are plentiful.
In many cases, otherwise qualified job candidates are unable to overcome the rejection of
the background check. This inability to find stable employment increases the likelihood of
returning to criminal activity. Without access to employment and opportunity, people and
communities suffer.
If this nation is serious about lowering the rate of incarceration in America, we must strike
a balance between the needs of employers and the needs of those with a criminal record.
Employers should be able to appropriately disqualify job applicants with a criminal record
that is relevant to the job for which they are applying; yet those with a criminal record must
have a fair and equitable opportunity to obtain meaningful employment in order to support
themselves and their families. Organizations like Rubicon, REDF and CEO can reinforce
these efforts by supporting the development of soft skills such as teamwork, communication,
conflict resolution, and problem solving that companies hope their employees will bring to
the job. Additionally, Root & Rebound’s recently launched Employers’ Fair Change Hiring
Initiative, which includes a toolkit for employers and supplemental in-person and online
trainings, teaches potential employers and community members about the benefits of hiring
people with records, as well as ways to protect themselves against negligent hiring lawsuits
and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s protections for people with records
against discriminatory hiring practices.
Moving Forward, Making Progress
In an effort to highlight promising models and encourage investment of AB 109 dollars
for restorative activities, the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco hosted the first statewide
cross-sector conference on reentry solutions in Sacramento in 2015, spearheaded by
Lena Robinson, who was the Northern California Community Development Regional
Manager at the time. This was followed by a larger second conference in 2016 which brought
together almost 500 practitioners from across sectors. These two statewide conferences coincided
with similar efforts of the Federal Interagency Reentry Council which was formed in
2011 under President Obama to assist those who return from prison and jail in becoming
productive citizens. These examples of state and federal level coordination signal that efforts
toward collaboration have already begun. They highlight the opportunity for every private
employer, government agency and nonprofit organization to be deliberate about creating
explicit policies for dealing with the formerly incarcerated. If not, unconscious stigma and
unintentional bias will continue to unnecessarily marginalize this population. Many funders
may be unaware of how many programs explicitly or circumstantially serve ex-offenders and
how important their charitable contributions can be for enabling successful reintegration. These types of programs could potentially be considered eligible to receive positive consideration
under the Community Reinvestment Act given that formerly incarcerated clients are
highly likely to be low-income. Robinson would like to see more explicit acknowledgement
of ex-offenders as a target population for community development efforts, as she believes
expanded CRA investments are critical for supporting individuals in successful reentry.
The Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco (FHLBSF), a government-sponsored
enterprise, and co-sponsor of the California reentry conference, is a great example of how
one agency is adapting programs to serve the formerly incarcerated. It expanded the definition
of “Housing for the Homeless” for its very competitive Affordable Housing Program
to include formerly incarcerated individuals, who could potentially be housed in these
projects. Additionally, the FHLBSF has awarded AHEAD economic development grants
to a number of programs targeting ex-offenders with various services. For example, Planting
Justice, a nonprofit based in Oakland, CA, received an AHEAD grant to help train and hire
formerly incarcerated individuals from nearby San Quentin prison into living wage jobs in
a landscaping social enterprise. Another grantee, Asian Neighborhood Design, received an
AHEAD grant to support a successful construction workforce training program for reentry
populations in San Francisco, CA. Finally, the East Bay Community Law Center in Berkeley,
CA was awarded an AHEAD grant to support the Clean Slate program, which provides
direct legal assistance to the formerly incarcerated to help erase past records which can lead
to better employment prospects.
The grand experiment kicked off by federally-mandated reduction of prison overcrowding,
a.k.a. Realignment, remains a long way from fully embracing the restorative and constructive
investments that would preclude additional investments in jails. Although the responses
from counties may vary, the engagement of diverse organizations and individuals continues
to expand and become better integrated. Organizations such as the California Reentry
Council Network have emerged to break down silos and foster better coordination of local
programs and resources that counties can turn to as community partners. Elevating the issue
of reentry beyond the purview of parole and probation enables other sectors, agencies, and
industries to engage in the systemic changes and broad investments that are necessary for a
comprehensive reentry strategy.
The authors would like to thank the following individuals for their contributions to this article: Sonja
Tonnesen, Root and Rebound; Jalpa Patel, REDF; Jane Fischberg, Rubicon Programs; Christopher
Ferreira, Federal Home Loan Bank San Francisco; and Shawn Riggins, Fresno EOC.
1. Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), Prisoners in 2011 (Washington, DC: BJS, 2012).
2. National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO), State Expenditure Report 2010-12 (Washington, DC: NASBO, 2012), 52.
3. Anna Aizer and Joseph Doyle, “What is the long term impact of incarcerating juveniles?” VoxEU, Center for
Economic Policy Research.
4. Email correspondence with Shawn Riggins, March 2017.
5. Garrett Therolf, “L.A. County spends more than $233,000 a year to hold each youth in juvenile lockup,” Los
Angeles Times, February 23, 2016.
6. Ram Subramanian and Alison Shames, “Sentencing and Prison Practices in Germany and the Netherlands:
Implications for the United States,” Vera Institute of Justice, October 2013.
7.Joan Petersilia and Jeffrey Lin, “Follow the Money: How California Counties Are Spending Their Public
Safety Realignment Funds, 2013.” (Stanford Criminal Justice Center Report, Stanford, CA, 2013).
8. R&R’s public education includes its flagship Roadmap to Reentry legal guide that teaches users how to
navigate legal barriers to reentry across nine key areas of life including housing, employment, getting ID,
family reunification, parole and probation, and more.
9. Cindy Redcross, Megan Millenky, Timothy Rudd, and Valerie Levshin, “More Than a Job: Final Results from
the Evaluation of the Center for Employment Opportunities (CEO) Transitional Jobs Program.” OPRE
Report 2011-18. Washington, DC: Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children
and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Lena Robinson is director of community development for First Republic Bank where she works to identify
community development opportunities that support affordable housing, economic development and
asset building in the Bank’s core markets. Ms. Robinson is tasked with supporting the implementation
of key CRA-eligible lending and investments initiatives, and with overseeing First Republic’s CRA
employee engagement program. Prior to joining First Republic, Ms. Robinson worked at the Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco for 17 years in varying roles culminating as the Regional Manager
overseeing community development in Northern California. In this capacity she worked to increase
investments and improve access to capital, credit and banking services for low-income communities and
households. While at the Federal Reserve, Lena was instrumental in spearheading and implementing a
number of innovative private-public joint initiatives that effectively addressed some of the most pressing
challenges in underserved communities, including Bank on San Francisco, revitalization of distressed
commercial districts, and reintegration of formerly incarcerated individuals. Lena holds a master’s
degree in international affairs with an emphasis on rural African development from Ohio University,
and a bachelor’s in Japanese from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies
Mark A. Hake was appointed Chief Probation Officer of Riverside County in 2013 and has nearly
28 years of experience within the Riverside County Probation Department. He began his distinguished
career in 1989 as a Group Counselor at Riverside Juvenile Hall. He gained experience as a Deputy
Probation Officer, Senior Probation Officer, Supervising Probation Officer, Assistant Division Director,
Division Director, Chief Deputy Probation Officer, and Assistant Chief. His leadership was instrumental
in the implementation of SB 678, Evidence Based Probation Supervision Program; and AB
109, Public Safety Realignment. Chief Hake is chairman of the Riverside County Community Corrections
Partnership Executive Committee and a current member of the Chief Probation Officers of California,
Association of Riverside County Chief of Police and Sheriff, Riverside County Law Enforcement
Administrators Association, Community Connect Advisory Board, and CA Forward Justice
Systems Change Initiative Executive Steering Committee. Chief Hake holds a Bachelor’s Degree from
the University of California, Riverside.