Advocates push for wage subsidies for employees recently released from
incarceration
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[March 18, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Members of the Workers Center
for Racial Justice held a rally in front of the Capitol Wednesday
morning demanding the Illinois General Assembly pass the Safer
Communities Act.
The measure, House Bill 3215, offers job providers wage subsidies for
hiring formerly incarcerated individuals at a living wage over a
five-year period.
Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, said that when people come home after being
institutionalized, their “second sentence” begins due to lack of
opportunities and programs in place to help them integrate back into the
community.
The bill’s current status as of Thursday was “re-referred to Rules
Committee,” a legislative designation that generally means such a
measure is unlikely to move, at least in the current General Assembly.
But the advocates urged that the program be included in the final budget
package.
The bill would provide a living wage job creation program for up to
20,000 formerly incarcerated workers for the duration a five-year pilot
incentive period, which would begin on March 1, 2023, and end on Feb.
28, 2028. It would allow businesses that hire formerly incarcerated
individuals on a union contract or at a wage of $20 hourly plus benefits
to receive wage subsidies for those employees.
A maximum of 10,000 participants would consist of individuals released
from prison on or after Jan. 1, 2022. The other 10,000 participants
would consist of individuals released from prison between Jan. 1, 2012,
and Dec. 31, 2021.
The businesses would receive a $1,250 monthly wage subsidy for an
employee hired in a “disproportionately impacted area,” meaning a census
tract with high rates of arrest, conviction and incarceration among
residents, and $850 monthly in other areas.
Those seeking to participate in the pilot program would be required to
register with the Department of Employment Security on or after Jan. 1,
2023.
Jimmy Miller, longtime member of the Chicago-Based grassroots
organization WCRJ, said when reintegrating into society after
incarceration, he found it difficult to find a job. The passage of the
HB 3215 would help provide job opportunities and employment resources to
other formerly incarcerated individuals like himself, he said.
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Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, joins members of the
Workers Center for Racial Justice outside the Illinois State Capitol
Wednesday in support of a wage subsidy program for individuals
recently released from incarceration. (Capitol News Illinois photo
by Grace Kinnicutt)
“Community is important, not only to myself but for those who will be
newly released,” Miller said.
The bill caps the expenditures during the five-year incentive period at
$1.5 billion. If requests exceed that amount, subsidies would be given
on a first-come-first-served basis.
Applicants who hire participants as a full-time employee during the
incentive period could apply for a certificate of eligibility for the
wage subsidy on or after the date of hire. The applicant must provide
the department the names, social security numbers, job descriptions,
salary or wage rates, dates of hire and state whether each participant
is registered in the pilot program.
Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, said investing back in Black and brown
communities and building the local economy through the living wage job
creation program could help end mass incarceration.
According to the data from the Illinois Department of Corrections, as of
Dec. 31, 2021, there were 27,970 people in prison. More than half,
15,204 or 54.4% of those individuals, were Black, according to the data.
Avalon Betts-Gaston, project manager for the Illinois Alliance for
Reentry and Justice, said that individuals should “never be judged by a
conviction in a system that was designed to mass incarcerate Black,
brown and poor people.”
Members of WCRJ called on legislators to secure funding in the fiscal
year 2023 budget for the Safer Communities Act.
In the proposed budget for FY23, Gov. JB Pritzker proposed $250 million
in federal funding for the Reimagine Public Safety Act that would help
fund early intervention programs. He also proposed $50 million to the
competitive violence prevention grant program to provide resources to
Illinois’ community partners to help stop the pattern of violence in
areas disproportionately impacted.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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