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How ‘Good Character’ Provisions Create Bad Outcomes
Michigan Capitol Confidential ^ | 2/12/2017 | Kahryn Riley

Posted on 02/14/2017 10:36:29 AM PST by MichCapCon

States that make it harder for someone to work legally, typically through licensing requirements, tend to have higher levels of unemployment. Two studies released this past November show how these barriers are a particular problem for ex-offenders, thereby increasing their likeliness to reoffend.

Scholars from Arizona State University and the Kaufmann Foundation studied the relationship between occupational licensing and recidivism. They discovered that states that require licenses for a greater number of jobs also experienced a higher recidivism rate. This suggests that efforts to reduce recidivism rates and other criminal justice reforms should take into consideration the impact of occupational licensing laws.

The authors note that many states are like Michigan in that they are working to improve their prison inmates’ re-entry preparedness by offering high school diplomas, college degrees and vocational training. But they point out that these programs are pointless if an inmate’s criminal record makes him ineligible for a license to work.

Many licensing laws contain morality clauses that prohibit anyone with a criminal conviction from ever receiving a license, even if their crime was nonviolent or completely unrelated to the type of work they would do. Other states do not use these morality clauses but allow their licensing boards to deny licenses to people with a criminal history. In Michigan, a felony record often makes a person ineligible for a license, and even a misdemeanor could damage someone’s chances of obtaining a license.

Making it harder for ex-offenders to be legally employed makes it more likely they’ll reoffend. As Stephen Slivinski, one of the authors of one of the studies, explains, “For ex-prisoners who have an unusually difficult experience scaling the barriers to entry in the labor market, returning to crime could be the better alternative.”

In other words, employers often refuse to hire anyone with a criminal record, which is their right. But if a person then wants to go work for themselves and cannot obtain a license to do such work, they could be permanently barred from re-entering the workforce in their most preferred profession.

In Michigan, about 88 percent of our 43,000 prisoners will eventually return to society. The Department of Corrections reports that only about a third of the formerly incarcerated who are n parole are currently employed, which is down from 2001 when over half the parolees had jobs. Reducing the burden of occupational licensing laws is one clear option for helping ex-offenders matriculate back into society, reducing the likelihood that they’ll reoffend.


TOPICS: Politics
KEYWORDS: crime; michigan

1 posted on 02/14/2017 10:36:29 AM PST by MichCapCon
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To: MichCapCon

kids need to be told, taught these things from (at least) elementary school age.

Schools/Education is mandatory at least thru elementary grades and are to help prep them for adult life. It should be routinely impressed upon them that if they do certain things against the laws and character/moral rules of society it will greatly hinder their chances of gainful employment and success int he future.

Parents should be teaching their kids these things but being there is no mandatory parenting style, at least the schools could try to educate kids about it, instead of the dumbing down, self focused, me first stuff they do teach these days.

For current adults with legal judgements against them that are being hindered (i know of some) they are finding ways to work and get ahead. It’s doable. God helps those who seek Him and who do what they can to help get themselves on a better path.


2 posted on 02/14/2017 10:52:47 AM PST by b4me (If Jesus came to set us free, why are so many professed Believers still in chains?)
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To: b4me

You are correct. But I also believe in giving people a second chance. These laws tend to just perpetuate the cycle.
If a man has done his time and paid his debt to society he should be afforded the opportunity to make an honest living. These laws make that virtually impossible.


3 posted on 02/14/2017 11:56:02 AM PST by sean327 (God created all men equal, then some become Marines!)
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