PRISON FELLOWSHIP BLOG: Advocacy & Reentry

Background Check feature image
  • Reentry
  • Feature Stories
What Makes a Good Employee?

Searching for employment can be a frustrating and difficult experience even in the best of situations. There is always the challenge to present oneself in the most positive light, and assure the employer that you can be an asset to their business or organization.

By Steve Rempe
April 27, 2016
Licensing | National Employment Law Project | National Public Radio | Reentry | Second Prison Project
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Reentry
A Night in Prison

By the time Sgt. Joseph Serna left his position in the Special Forces, he had completed four combat tours in over two decades in Afghanistan. He had nearly been killed on three separate occasions, and received three Purple Heart awards, along with several other commendations for bravery and valor.

By Steve Rempe
April 25, 2016
Fayetteville | Green Beret | Joseph Serna | Lou Olivera | North Carolina | Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder | PTSD | Special Forces | Veterans Treatment Court
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Angel Tree
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
An Enduring Vision

In celebration of Prison Fellowship’s 40 years of ministering to prisoners and their families, we will be taking a look back at the early days of the ministry and remembering the people and the stories that have helped to make Prison Fellowship the nation’s largest prison outreach.  

By Mark Hubbell
April 22, 2016
Angel Tree | In Prison | Mark Hubbell | Reentry
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
From Bags to Butterflies

Building a new life is a real challenge for anyone returning to their communities after a period of incarceration. There is the need to find housing, employment, and support; to avoid past mistakes and old acquaintances, while making new connections to help ensure future success.

By Prison Fellowship
April 22, 2016
denise harris | Detroit | Video Blog | Women's Huron Valley Correctional Facility
Bridge feature image
  • Feature Stories
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
Bridging the Ocean

Numerous studies have indicated that prisoners have a much greater likelihood of not being re-arrested when they stay in contact with friends and family outside the prison walls. Maintaining a connection to the outside world helps to keep incarcerated men and women focused on a life to which they want to return, and keeps them from adopting a “criminal identity.”

By Steve Rempe
April 21, 2016
Arizona | Hawaii | Honolulu | Mahealani Meheula | Marshall Project | Saguaro Correctional Facility
McGee and Collins feature
  • Reentry
  • Feature Stories
A Tale of Forgiveness

Imagine being arrested for a crime you didn’t commit. Imagine being convicted for that crime, and serving four years in prison for it. And imagine finding out after that time served that the police officer who arrested you had admitted to falsifying evidence in order to frame you.

By Steve Rempe
April 19, 2016
Jameel McGee | Michigan | Video
Running for freedom feature
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Feature Stories
  • Prison & Prisoners
Running to Freedom

For many people, running is an opportunity to escape daily pressures—a chance to get out into nature, clear one’s head, and to forget about everything else for a few minutes.

But for Kellie Ike, running takes on a whole different dimension.

By Steve Rempe
April 15, 2016
Kellie Ike | MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility | Marathon | Oregon | Running | Second Prison Project
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
Seeking a Second Chance

In 2000, Dana Bowerman was arrested for her role in a methamphetamine ring in Texas. She was sentenced to 19 years and seven months in prison—a sentence even the judge overseeing the case admitted was very harsh.

“I needed time to get my head straight,” Bowerman admits, reflecting on a life that had gone from being an honor roll student to a 15-year addiction to methamphetamine at the time of her arrest.

By Steve Rempe
April 14, 2016
Daily Signal | Dana Bowerman | employment | mandatory minimums | Reentry | Texas
  • Advocacy & Reentry
The Cost of Candy

Jacobia Grimes has a history of petty theft. Having previously been arrested five times for small-time robberies (and several other times for other low-level crimes), Grimes certainly had to expect that he would be facing some sort of punishment when he was caught stealing $31 in candy bars from a Dollar General store in Louisiana last December.

By Steve Rempe
April 14, 2016
Habitual Offender Law | Jacobia Grimes | Leon Cannizzaro | Louisiana | sentencing
  • Reentry
  • Advocacy & Reentry
Knocking Down Barriers

A diverse collection of companies is collaborating with the Obama administration in an attempt to remove hindrances for men and women seeking employment following incarceration.

The Fair Chance Business Pledge calls for employers to endorse hiring practices that provide former prisoners with an opportunity to succeed.

By Steve Rempe
April 12, 2016
Fair Chance Business Pledge | Koch Industries | National Reentry Week | Obama Administration | Reentry | Second Prison Project | White House
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Reentry
Remembering Merle Haggard

Merle Haggard performing in 2009 (Wikipedia Commons/whittlz).

When Merle Haggard passed away last week on his 79th birthday, country music lost one of its best storytellers.

For decades, Haggard built his legacy as a rough-and-tumble country outlaw, telling stories of his own troubled past, which involved repeated stints in both reform schools and, later, in prison.

By Steve Rempe
April 11, 2016
California | Merle Haggard | Reentry | San Quentin | Second Prison Project
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Advocacy & Reentry
Building Bridges and Playing Basketball

With recent events in places like Ferguson, Baltimore, and Cleveland, it is not surprising that the relationship between law enforcement officers and citizens in many urban areas is at a low point. Mistrust, fear, and resentment from all sides have raised tensions, with criminal acts and threats of violence turning neighborhoods into potential war zones.

By Steve Rempe
April 8, 2016
Neighborhood | Ohio | Restorative Justice
More than a Coffeehouse - Rhonda Bear feature
  • Reentry
  • Feature Stories
  • Prison & Prisoners
More than a Coffeehouse

Rhonda Bear knows the challenges that women who have been incarcerated face as they attempt to reintegrate into society.

A former prisoner herself, Bear was fortunate to have received support and encouragement from Eileen, a volunteer who encouraged her and nurtured her Christian faith while she was still in prison.

By Steve Rempe
April 8, 2016
Oklahoma | Reentry | Rhonda Bear | She Brews Coffee House | Stand in the Gap
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Reentry
Out of Office

Ever question what kind of impact a long-past drug conviction can have on a person’s future? Ask Corey Sanders and Jason Sarasnick.

On the surface, the two men appear to have little in common. Sanders, who is African-American, runs a barbershop in McKeesport, Pennsylvania.

By Steve Rempe
April 6, 2016
Corey Sanders | Jason Sarasnick | MeKeesport | Pennsylvania | Second Prison Project
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Reentry
A Report from the Field

In the coming months, Prison Fellowship will be sharing stories from some of our staff and volunteers around the country, talking about the exciting ways God is working in the lives of prisoners, their families, and the criminal justice system.

The first installment of our new video blog features Denise Harris, Prison Fellowship’s field director for southeastern Michigan.

By Steve Rempe
April 6, 2016
denise harris | Michigan | Out 4 Life | volunteer
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