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Housing Offenders Upon Reentry (H.O.U.R.)

Award Information

Award #
2015-RW-BX-0002
Location
Congressional District
Status
Closed
Funding First Awarded
2015
Total funding (to date)
$600,000

Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2015, $600,000)

The Second Chance Act of 2007 provides a comprehensive response to the increasing number of people who are released from prison, jail and returning to communities, including resources to address the myriad of needs of these offenders to achieve a successful return to their communities. Section 201 of the Second Chance Act authorizes federal awards to states, units of local government, and Indian tribes to improve the provision of treatment to adult offenders in prisons and jails during the period of incarceration and through the completion of parole or other court supervision after release into the community.

The goal of Section 201 of the Second Chance Act is to provide support to eligible applicants for the development and implementation of comprehensive and collaborative strategies that address the challenges posed by reentry to increase public safety and reduce recidivism. The objectives of this program are to provide offenders with co-occurring substance abuse and mental health disorders with appropriate evidence-based services—including addressing individual criminogenic needs—based on a reentry plan that relies on a risk and needs assessment that reflects the risk of recidivism for that offender. Funds may be used for treating co-occurring substance abuse and mental health disorders in prison and jail programs, providing recovery support services, reentry planning and programming, and post-release treatment and aftercare programming in the community through the completion of parole or court supervision.

The grant recipient will use the grant to improve the provision of treatment to adults after incarceration and reduce recidivism. The target population is medium- to high-risk offenders with co-occurring disorders who are chronically homeless and/or at risk of chronic homelessness. Pre-release and post-release services will include screening, assessment, a customized, person-centered selection of evidence-based practices, housing stabilization services, linkage to integrated behavioral health treatment, employment and vocational services, and forensic peer support. The goal is to serve 75 individuals over the life of the grant project.

CA/NCF

Date Created: September 29, 2015