About the Report of the Re-Entry Council

3: Incorporating Re-Entry into Organizations' Missions and Work Plans

Change cultures of criminal justice and health and human services organizations so that administrators of these entities recognize that their mission includes the safe and successful return of prisoners to the communities from which they came.

Overview

This policy statement reviews the steps essential to shifting the orientation of government agencies and community-based organizations so that they balance their various obligations with their roles and responsibilities regarding re-entry. Establishing this foundation must precede any significant re-entry initiative.

Recommendations

  1. Determine how each organization's mission relates to re-entry.
  2. Concentrate services and supervision in the communities where releasees live.
  3. Engage community-based organizations, including faith-based institutions, to serve people who are incarcerated and who have been released from prison or jail.
  4. Ensure that releasing authorities comprise experts who understand the value and appropriateness of supervised release and evidence-based decisions.

Related Policy Statements

 Our Publications

How and Why Medicaid Matters for People with Serious Mental Illness Released from Jail

Hundreds of thousands of people with mental illness are released from jail each year. Without continuity of care, they are likely to be reincarcerated. Enrollment in Medicaid increases access to treatment for people with mental illness released from jail, who typically lack other means to pay for those services.

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