Articles
& News
May 21, 2008
Program aims to help parolees
By TESA CULLI, tesa.culli@register-news.com
INA — For a portion of the inmates getting ready to go back out into
society a new program on lifestyle redirection has offered an
important commodity — hope.
“I now have hope,” five time offender Ed said. “I was hurting other
people around me ... I’ve started learning to love myself. ... I
always thought life was a punishment. Now I realize I have choices
every day.”
The Reentry Summit held at the facility is part of a larger
first-time program in Illinois called Lifestyle Redirection which
endeavors to teach inmates how to succeed in society and address
recidivism.
“The recidivism rate is something like 70 to 75 percent,” Paul, a
first-time offender said. “For us, it’s either 0 percent or 100
percent. You either stay out or you come back.”
Paul Carlson, the District 5 Parole Supervisor, spoke with all those
who have become involved in the program since it began earlier this
year.
“You know the rules of parole; you have the list,” Carlson told the
100-plus inmates at BMRCC. “There are things you do, choices you
make, which will determine if you are successful. Don’t put yourself
in situations to fail. ... You may be standing on the corner having
a good time with a bunch of the guys, a squad car comes by and
stops, and one of the guys has drugs. Guess who’s going to jail?
Understand that you will be searched. Understand that you will have
to report to your parole agent. Understand you will can’t use drugs
— period. Understand that you can’t be around places where drugs are
sold. You can’t lose weight hanging around a Dairy Queen and you
can’t stay clean hanging around crack houses. You won’t stay out of
here hanging around with the same people who got you here in the
first place.”
Carlson said one of the biggest ways to determine if someone will
succeed after prison is their willingness to change.
“What you were doing before obviously wasn’t working or you wouldn’t
be here,” Carlson said. “You have to change. You keep running into
the wall doing the same thing. ... Just change direction and walk
through a door. I’m here to tell you that change works, it really
does. ... You have to take control of your life. There’s no
difference between you and I. The only differences are the decisions
that were made.”
In addition, once inmates are out on parole, they have to have
courage, Carlson said.
“I’m not talking about the courage you think you had for going out
and doing something to someone who couldn’t fight back,” Carlson
said. “I’m talking about the courage it takes to stand up and say
no. ... You have to be able to do that, and it’s not going to be
easy. I wish it was.”
Greg Eubanks, counselor at BMRCC, explained that those inmates who
participate in the Lifestyle Redirection program attend a 12-week
course every day for two hours and focus on items such as men’s
issues, criminal thinking and anger management. The summit also
included social service agencies with information on how those on
parole can tap into the services which help provide clothing, jobs
and housing.
“There’s a whole new philosophy coming out of the state now,”
Eubanks said. “The larger program is broken into smaller segments.
Track 1 is the beginning program that is introduced when they hit
the door. Then there’s the Lifestyle Redirect, and Job Prep where
they can get time on the computer and help with building resumes.
There’s also the Parole School which meets two times. It’s set up to
explain what is expected when they’re out on parole. Each program
intermingles with the other programs and are only successful with
teamwork with the education and vocational programs.”
Charles, an inmate who is now a peer presenter with Lifestyle
Redirect, said he’s never experienced a program that is as “honest.”
“I’m a repeat offender,” Charles admitted. “Prior to this, I never
got in no programs. When the opportunity presented itself, I saw the
plusses. I been in lots of joints in Illinois and I never heard of
anything like Lifestyle Redirect.”
Charles said in the years prior to the program, he blamed society,
his upbringing, what he didn’t have and the system for his being in
jail.
“For once, I had to honestly look at myself,” Charles said. “I was
under the impression that my self esteem was way up here. But I
found out, it was really down here. When you live a certain way for
a long time, you begin to think that’s the norm.”
Paul, at 43 years old, said he also learned a lot about himself and
how his alcoholism was getting in the way of staying out of jail.
“I felt like I had wasted my whole life,” Paul said. “I had to deal
with my victims, and things I had choose not to think about. ...
They threw us a lifeline, and are giving us the tools. Now it’s up
to us to decide what to do.”
For Robert, getting away from his former associates that encouraged
his drug dealing will be harder.
“I sold drugs, and was living in the projects,” Robert said. “Me and
my family were tight, but none of them were working. I sold to take
care of my family and they wanted it that way. I felt like I had no
choice. ... I still think about my family ... but now I’m willing to
put myself forward in a better way. I can see my family
differently.”
Jim got his wakeup call that something in his life had to change
when he woke up one morning in the Cook County Jail and didn’t
remember how he got there.
“I have two reasons to be involved in this program and any program I
can get in,” Jim said. “I’m here because of a direct result of my
alcoholism and like most alcoholics, at the time I was in complete
denial that I even had a problem. ... You can lead a pretty minimal
life and not come back to prison, but I’m at the age now where I
think about what would someone say at my funeral? Would they think,
this guy lost a lot of opportunities or this guy threw his life
away. My other reason is my three daughters. In our background, it’s
not normal for dad to be in prison. I’ve embarrassed and shamed them
by being in prison.”
Jim said he has written to his children about the programs.
“One of my daughters wrote to me and said, ‘I’m proud of you,’” Jim
said.
“I didn’t feel like I deserved it. But, it’s also motivation. I want
to be worthy of my kids and I want them to know I’ve changed. ...
Someday I want to be sure to teach them that you can make positive
changes even when you’ve made a very bad decision.”