In the State of
Massachusetts, a female offender
is likely to be white, in her thirties, and a
custodial parent. She is likely to have committed a
non-violent offense, usually a drug or property
crime. There is a strong chance that she has a
substance abuse problem or a history of physical,
sexual, or emotional trauma. When she leaves prison,
she is likely to lack medical insurance, safe and
affordable housing for her and her children, and
access to reliable transportation. Her options for
employment are likely to be limited to low-paying
jobs that do not offer the flexibility that she
needs in order to care for her
children.1
Just one of these challenges by itself may be
enough to push someone to the limits of her ability
to cope. However, women leaving prison in
Massachusetts are likely to face all of these
challenges simultaneously. It is perhaps due to
these challenges that nearly one-half of female
offenders released from jail or prison re-offend
within three years of their
release.2 There is reason to
believe that to improve female offenders’ levels of
success post-release, the current model of service
provision must change.
This is position taken in Foundations for
Success: Meeting the Needs of Female Offenders
Returning to Massachusetts Communities, a report
released in May 2006 by the Crime and Justice
Institute. Authors Kristin Collins and Meghan Howe
survey the needs of female offenders and suggest
changes to the current system of services to help
female offenders re-enter the community
successfully. Below, we summarize the main features
of the report:3
- Five guiding principles for working
with female offenders,
-
Descriptions of model programs serving female
offenders in other parts of the country,
- A review a sample of programs and services
designed for women that are currently operating in
Essex,Suffolk, and Hampden counties, and
-
Six recommendations to improve service provision to
female offenders upon their release from incarceration.
Guiding Principles/Foundations for Successful
Practice:
1. Assessment of Risk and Needs:
Currently, many
facilities use needs/risk assessments developed for
use with men. However, assessments developed for men
do not necessarily evaluate risks or needs of female
offenders accurately. Women often get involved in
criminal activity through different means than men;
for example, they may get pressured from a partner
to sell drugs. They may have to contend with abusive
relationships or the need to reunify with children
upon release. Therefore, when trying to assess risk
and needs of women reentering the community, these
factors must be addressed. A scientifically tested
and validated risk/needs assessment for women would
help to determine a woman’s needs and risks
post-release.
2. Comprehensive Case Management:
Because women’s needs are interrelated, they must be
addressed simultaneously. For example, providing a
woman with a substance abuse program without
housing, transportation, childcare or healthcare is
only addressing one aspect of her reintegration to
society. It is easy to see how this might heighten a
woman’s risk of re-offending. The report cites the
Women’s Prison
Association, which has developed a
model of the reentry process that spans five
dimensions: subsistence/livelihood, residence,
family, health and sobriety, and criminal justice
compliance.
3. Gender-Responsive Services:It is
important to provide services that consider the
social and historical contexts of women and their
needs. For example, many women offenders enter
treatment with low self-esteem. Therefore
reintegration should be focused on providing
services that foster self-efficacy and competency.
4. Relational Services: It is equally
important to recognize that women benefit from a
relational perspective that fosters strong, trusting
relationships when providing services. Similarly,
transitional programming would ease women through
the sudden termination of relationships formed
within the correctional institution upon their
release.
5. Trauma-Informed Care: The
majority of female offenders have a history of
childhood or
adult sexual, physical, or emotional abuse. These
histories have tremendous influence on their current
lives and prospects for successful reentry. For
example, if a female offender returns to an abusive
relationship upon release from incarceration, she
may have trouble abiding by probation conditions
such as curfews, and she may return to using
substances in order to escape from the trauma of her
relationship.
It is important that all service providers be aware
of trauma histories that female offenders may bring
to their reentry transition. Then they can help to
support the woman’s coping capacities, empower her,
and structure her post-release services as to avoid
re-traumatization.
Promising Policy and Practice
The above recommendations are based on research
with women offenders and have led to the
implementation of new programming in Massachusetts
and in other parts of the United States. The
following are some examples of programming that
could be used as models for programmatic change in
Massachusetts.
Coordinated Case Management
1. Women’s Prison Association, Reentry
Services:
This New York City-based association opened the
Sarah Powell Huntington House Family Reunification
Residence (SPHH) in 1993. This is a residence where
homeless women involved in the criminal justice
system can reunite with their children. SPHH has the
capacity to house 37 women awaiting reunification
as well as post-reunification with their children.
This program does a
comprehensive needs assessment at intake and
connects residents with on-site case management, day
care, recreational activities for children,
counseling for mothers and their children, and
ongoing assistance with securing permanent housing.
This program attends to the variety of needs that
female offenders present all under one roof. This
allows for a smoother reunification process, as well
as a stabilization of the life circumstances for
both mothers and children. (A detailed report
on
this program and a short overview
are available
online.)
2. Family Justice: This is an
organization in New
York City that offers a direct service program
called La Bodega de la Familia. This program
connects families involved in the criminal justice
system with Bodega case managers, government, and
community service providers. La Bodega facilitates
relationships between probation and parole officers,
family members, and other service providers. This
program simultaneously addresses the multiple needs
of families who are involved in the criminal justice
system. Research has shown that families who had
members involved in this program had an overall
reduction in drug use among the participants. More
information if available at
www.familyjustice.org.
Gender Responsive Services
1. Project WAVE (Women Achieving Vital
Empowerment):This is a program operated
through the
Institute for Health and Recovery in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. The theoretical foundation of the
program is the Relational Model of Women’s
Psychology from the Stone Center at Wellesley
College. Treatment is focused on current
relationships and also a woman’s relationship with
her current issues, her past, present and future.
This approach strives to examine all of women’s
relationships and how they interact with each other
in order to address the root cause of a problem,
instead of focusing simply on the outward behavior.
This program offers Integrated Care Facilitators who
are clinicians cross-trained in substance abuse,
mental health, sexual trauma or violence. In
addition clients are given the option of working
with a Family Care Coordinator who helps to identify
and connect clients to necessary services.
2. Forever Free: This is a
voluntary intensive
residential drug addiction treatment and reentry
program for female offenders located at the
California Institution for Women in Corona,
California. The program lasts from 4-6 months during
incarceration and up to six months post-release
while on supervised parole. Forever Free focuses on
relapse prevention and uses the disease model to
understand and treat addiction. Sessions focus on
topics particularly relevant to women: self-esteem,
anger management, assertiveness training,
post-traumatic stress disorder, healthy
relationships, abuse, codependency, parenting, sex,
and health. Research funded by the National
Institute of Justice has found lower rates of
recidivism and drug usage and higher rates of
employment, improvements in parenting and mental
health. More information is available at
www.cdcr.ca.gov/Visitors/fac_prison_
CIW.html.
3. Seeking Safety: Lisa
Najavits of McClean
Hospital and Harvard Medical School developed this
manual-based treatment for co-occurring
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance
abuse disorder. This has been implemented both in
community and correctional settings and focuses on
safety, integrated treatment of PTSD and substance
abuse, ideals, cognitive, behavioral, and
interpersonal therapies with case management and the
relationship with the therapist. More information in
available at www.seekingsafety.org.
Relational Programming
1. Indiana Women’s Prison Family Preservation
Program: This program provides a child
friendly
visiting room, services such as educational and
support groups for mothers and grandmothers, case
management, nursing services, and a staff member who
helps to connect mothers and children with resources
in the community. The goal is to support the
connection between mothers and their children during
incarceration so that the bond between mother and
child can still thrive post-release.
2. Rhode Island Department of Corrections
Mentoring Program: Women who are
within a few months
of their release date from the state facility can
apply to this program and be matched with a trained
mentor in the community. Meetings between offender
and mentor begin during the end of incarceration and
then continue through post-release. The mentor
provides a concrete example of a successful woman
functioning in the community. Immediately upon
release, the relationship is most intense, and
contact decreased the longer the offender is in the
community. Research on this program has shown lower
rates of recidivism for the offenders who
participate.
Trauma Informed Care
1. Helping Women Recover:
This is a substance
abuse treatment program curriculum designed
specifically for women involved in the criminal
justice system by Stephanie Covington. The
foundation for the curriculum integrates theories of
addiction, female psychology, and trauma while also
addressing self-esteem, parenting, relationships,
sexual concerns, and spirituality. Further,
Covington designed the program to be very user
friendly and self-instructive in order to increase
the possibility for implementation across a broad
spectrum of settings. For more information, see
http://www.stephaniecovington.com.
Services Currently Provided in
Massachusetts
It is important to note that many incarcerated
women in Massachusetts are housed in facilities that
are not near their home communities or operated by
the counties in which they live. Consequently, a
woman who was offered particular programming during
pre-release may need but not find that same kind of
programming once she returns to her home town and
county. However, there are some programs and
services currently available to women in Essex,
Suffolk, and Hampden Counties both pre- and
post-release. They are among the following five
service programs that were covered in the
Foundations for Success report.
1. Women in Transition (WIT):
This is a facility
in Salisbury, Massachusetts (Essex County) that
houses twenty-four women in-house and electronically
supervises twenty in a sober housing community. The
facility serves the dual function of minimum
security and pre-release setting for female
offenders. The program was originally designed
specifically for women returning to Essex County,
but they are now accepting applications from women
from other counties.
Women attend weekly group counseling sessions,
many of which are focused on enhancing women’s
self-esteem. There is additional programming such as
yoga, creative writing, and parenting classes and
employment opportunities. Data from the WIT Annual
Report indicates that only 19.7% of the women
recidivated and 80.3% of women achieved successful
reintegration.
2. Community Reentry for Women
(CREW): This is an
eight-week program that operates out of the Suffolk
County Sheriff’s Department and provides case
managers and career coaches to women incarcerated in
Suffolk County. The program is intended to help
women with employment, health care, and life skills
to promote successful living in the community.
Project Place and South End Community Health Center
work as partners with Suffolk County Sheriff’s
Department, providing concrete resources, services
and care to help with the reintegration transition.
3. McGrath House: This is a
pre-release program
operated by the Suffolk County Sheriff’s office
where up to ten women receive case management
services for employment housing, and treatment.
Pre-release women stay approximately three months
and participate in other programming addressing
substance abuse, trauma, and life skills. The
McGrath House also serves as transitional housing
for five female offenders through a contract with
the Massachusetts Parole Board. These women stay an
average of six months and also participate in the
programming mentioned above. Five other female
offenders are provided beds through the Census
Reduction for Ex-Offenders (CREO), which serves
homeless ex-offenders. These five women stay an
average of two months, participate in the standard
programming, and work on finding permanent housing.
4. Women Offender Reentry Collaborative
(WORC):
The Department of Labor funds this program housed at
The Work Place that is located in downtown Boston.
The mission is to assist female offenders returning
to Boston and surrounding areas with assistance with
employment. The program additionally provides
mentoring, counseling, parenting training, life
skills and self-esteem workshops. Each woman’s
individual needs are recognized and services are
tailored accordingly. Women outside of Suffolk
County may participate, but the majority of women
that participate in this program come from Boston
and surrounding communities.
5. After Incarceration Support Systems
(AISS):
For the past ten years, Hampden County has been
offering this program to female offenders serving
sentences at the Hampden County House of Corrections
in Ludlow. In the structure of this program, staff
meet with the women while they are still
incarcerated and prepare a discharge plan. They work
with the women to form plans for reintegration into
the community. Once the women finish their sentence,
they have two caseworkers that provide ongoing
individual and group supportive services. This
program is especially helpful because the women can
remain in it as long as they want or need and can
work up to being a mentor to other program
participant. Research conducted to evaluate the
relationship of this program with rates of
recidivism has revealed a drop in recidivism rates
for 2004 releases.
Recommendations:
1. Employ Validated, Gender-Specific Risk and
Needs Assessment Tool
Corrections should be using these kinds of
instruments to provide services to women.
Furthermore, these instruments should be
administered upon intake so as to begin planning to
discharge as soon as possible.
2. Utilize an Integrated Case Management
Model
Case managers can play essential roles in the
reintegration process. Specifically, they connect
women with a wide range of services while
encouraging her to be proactive in her own discharge
plan can help her develop necessary skills for
living successfully in the community.
3. Integrate Principles of Trauma-Informed
Care
Trauma histories are highly prevalent among female
offenders. It is essential that this be taken into
account when delivering any kind of service.
Moreover, services addressing trauma during
incarceration should be continued after release to
improve women’s long-term chances for success.
4. Utilize Relational Models
Helping women to recognize the network of
relationships in her life and their effect on her
decisions is an important component of service
delivery. Instead of addressing a woman’s issues in
a fragmented way, this would foster insight into how
to achieve goals while still attending to important
relationships.
5. Develop Collaborative Responses
Service providers must collaborate and communicate
in order to deliver continuity of care to women
after they leave jail or prison. Furthermore,
developing a web of supportive relationships can
help to enhance a woman’s chances for success.
6. Provide Services at the Local
Level
Women serving sentences of two years or less
should be housed at the county level to help provide
for a smooth reintegration. Also, there should be
more pre-release facilities for women returning to
their home county from another county. This would
help foster familial relationships and continuity of
care.
The Foundations for Success report provides a
comprehensive view of the experiences of female
offenders as they reenter their communities. It
helps us see that this is an extremely vulnerable
population given their struggles and needs. It is
also clear that the current models of service
provision are not meeting their struggles and needs
adequately enough. Further, the current methods of
service provision can actually cause extra stress
and make women vulnerable to re-offending. Part of
the reason for this, the authors suggest, is that
current services have been designed primarily for
men. For this reason, it is important to revise the
way that services are delivered and programs are
structured. Implementing the recommendations made in
this report could only help foster women’s successes
so that they can make better lives for themselves
and their children.
______________________________
1Kristin Collins and
Meghan Howe,
Foundations for Success: Meeting the
Needs of Female Offenders Returning to Massachusetts
Communities. Boston: Crime & Justice Institute
May 2006. The report soon will be available at
www.crjustice.org
2 Recidivism of 1999 Released
Department of Correction Inmates. Concord, MA:
Massachusetts Department of Correction, Research and
Planning Division, 2005. Cited in
Success:
Meeting the needs of female offenders returning to
Massachusetts communities, May 2006, 7.
3The facts presented in this
article come from
Foundations for Success, unless
otherwise noted.