Our blog has an exciting new feature -- what is it?How a coalition of stakeholders is reducing recidivism and enhancing public safety in Upper Manhattan
The Harlem Community Justice Center's Reentry Services are located in East Harlem
The choir started off the celebration this year at the Reentry Court Graduation
During the summer, we host a block party and celebration for Reentry clients and their families
Young man thanks his Parole Officer for keeping him on track
Families join to celebrate the accomplishments of graduates
Our blog has an exciting new feature -- what is it?
Christopher Watler is the Project Director at the Harlem Community Justice Center.
Tomorrow, Frontline (PBS) will air a piece about the particular challenges that reentrants with serious mental health issues face upon release from incarceration.




Thanks to our colleague Ben Smith, who manages the Changing the Court blog at Bronx Community Solutions, for tipping us off!

Tomorrow from 10:40 - 11:00am, "Ms. O," a parole officer at our own Harlem Parole Reentry Court, will be interviewed by Brian Lehrer on WNYC. She will be joined by Parole's Director of Downstate Operations to discuss reentry and parole efforts in New York State.

Today's NY Times has an article discussing a law enforcement community education program for seniors in Newark. [We seem to be a bit obsessed with Newark recently -- forgive us. There are so many interesting things happening there.]
The New Jersey Star Ledger’s blog has an interesting editorial today on reentry in Newark, entitled "Prisoner Re-entry in Newark: It Takes a Community." According to the editorial, Newark has “the highest per capita number of parolees of any U.S City.” The post also highlights that just two percent of New Jersey’s corrections budget is dedicated to education and vocational programs. A report by the New Jersey State Employment and Training Commission highlights the educational and workforce challenges facing inmates in New Jersey prisons and recommendations for addressing these challenges.
Recently, we introduced you to Cramon Milline, the Reentry Associate here at the Harlem Parole Reentry Court. The second participant in the Reentry Court when it began in 2001, Cramon has turned his life around: having successfully completed parole, Cramon is now pursuing his GED and working as a kind of ombudsperson for men and women who have recently returned from prison.


From this New York Times article:
"Researchers in Brooklyn have recently accomplished comparable feats, with a single dose of an experimental drug delivered to areas of the brain critical for holding specific types of memory, like emotional associations, spatial knowledge or motor skills.
Phones these days have a lot of capabilities, sometimes called "applications." On Apple's iPhone, for example, there are applications for Facebook, for finding recipes on the spot, for listening to public radio, and for tons of other (perhaps useless) tasks.Some open questions include whether these would actually be useful tools -- and whether enough people uptown have the technological capability to access them. In the vein of "using technology for public good," please pass along any successes you've had with the many tech tools at our disposal.
When she started at Legal Aid, she said, she handled 70 to 80 cases at a time. Eventually, that number climbed to between 110 and 115 cases, meaning that she sometimes had to make 5 to 10 court appearances a day, she said. Cases were delayed for months or years, she said, while her clients sat in jail or rearranged their lives around court appearances.
She said she left Legal Aid for private practice because she was overburdened and because she needed to make more money to pay off student loans.
“It was becoming impossible to do that job,” she said. “Clients suffered enormously.” '
John Feinblatt, former director of the Center for Court Innovation and current Criminal Justice Coordinator for the NYC Mayor's Office also makes the good point that caseloads have to be considered alongside enhancements to technology for capturing accurate data about defendants.
For more background on the state of public defense in the US, see this excellent article published by the Times last November.
Robert Walsh is a United States Probation Officer and the Community Resource Specialist for the Southern District of New York. A member of the Upper Manhattan Reentry Task Force, Robert very kindly sat down with us to answer some questions about being a probation officer.
IdeaBlob

Thanks to our friends at United States Probation, Southern District, we got some interesting information about the number of probationers in Upper Manhattan zipcodes. Check out the map to the left for the stats (as of March 31, 2009).