Reentry Anonymous Public Service Announcement


 

Reentry Anonymous Public Service Announcement – Reentry Anonymous is a 12 step program of recovery for men and women struggling with a life destroyed by incarceration and the consequences thereafter as a result of their criminal past, addiction to a life of crime, and the challenges of ex-offender reentry. Reentry Anonymous members share their experience, strength, and hope with each other in order to educate, inform, and support ex-offenders and recover from the hopeless cycle of recidivism through criminal addiction. copyright © 2010-2011. Reentry Anonymous World Service Office Inc All rights reserved.

 

Tickets, not time

Filed under: drug treatment programs in florida for felons

According to a January 2011 report by the Associated Industries of Florida Foundation, the success of the juvenile diversion programs in Leon and Miami-Dade “suggested that the number of juveniles processed through the system could be reduced by 40 …
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3 dropped as voter registration workers after felonies flagged

Filed under: drug treatment programs in florida for felons

Checks by the newspaper turned up 11 people in all with apparent criminal convictions ranging from misdemeanor sexual assault to felony drug possession who have been authorized to register voters in Milwaukee. A person … "It's sort of contrary to the …
Read more on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

 

A crime against criminals

Filed under: drug treatment programs in florida for felons

Most felony convictions are actually due to property and drug offenses. This is not to say that crimes like burglary should be condoned. And I am … In some states like Florida, over a million ex-felons are disenfranchised as of 2010, which is …
Read more on University of Virginia The Cavalier Daily

 

Gio Iannotti Don't warehouse drug offenders

Filed under: drug treatment programs in florida for felons

I was moved by the article, “Scott should follow N.J. and treat drug-addicted offenders,” published in the Orlando Sentinel on 24 August, 2012. Guest columnist, Julie Ebenstein is on the same … It costs $ 20,000 annually to support a prison inmate …
Read more on Tampa Bay Newspapers