Bill Text: HI HB911 | 2025 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating To Offender Reentry Programs.
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Introduced) 2025-01-23 - Referred to PBS, JHA, FIN, referral sheet 3 [HB911 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2025-HB911-Introduced.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
911 |
THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
Relating to offender reentry programs.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that House Concurrent Resolution No. 85, H.D. 2, S.D. 1 (2016), requested the convening of a task force to make recommendations to the legislature on ways to improve Hawaii's correctional system. The final report of the House Concurrent Resolution 85 Task Force on Prison Reform was submitted to the legislature in December 2018. According to the 2018 report, "the State's correctional system is not producing acceptable, cost-effective, or sustainable outcomes and needs immediate and profound change." Prison populations have risen noticeably since the 1980s, with Hawaii experiencing an eight hundred and seventy per cent increase in prison populations between 1980 and 2018. This increase has had a disproportionate impact on native Hawaiians, with the task force finding that native Hawaiians make up forty per cent of the prison population but only twenty per cent of the overall population in the State. Additionally, prisons are failing to correct unwanted behavior, leading to higher rates of recidivism.
The legislature further finds that the 2019 Recidivism Update to the 2002 Hawaii Recidivism Baseline Study shows that nearly fifty-four per cent of criminals in Hawaii are repeat offenders. The State correctional system's high rate of recidivism, and the corresponding overall increase in prison populations since the 1980s, produces a serious financial burden on local communities. A 2020 study evaluating the corrections system in Hawaii estimates that it costs the State approximately $72,000 to incarcerate an inmate for one year. By lowering recidivism rates, the State could save significant amounts of money that it could invest into other programs, such as education, infrastructure, or social services.
The legislature further finds that offering extensive and high-quality educational and vocational programs to inmates is effective in reducing rates of recidivism and the overall cost of the correctional system.
The legislature further finds that inmate participation in mentorship reentry programs translates to higher rates of employment and lower rates of recidivism. According to a Public/Private Ventures study, inmates who participated in mentorship programs were more than twice as likely to find a job after release than inmates who did not. The same study found that one year after release, participants who were mentored were thirty-five per cent less likely to recidivate than inmates who were not mentored.
The purpose of this Act is to:
(1) Encourage inmates to participate in correctional educational programs and vocational training;
(2) Increase the quality and quantity of correctional mentorship, counseling, educational, and vocational training programs available to interested inmates;
(3) Allow inmates to earn an income and engage in supervised apprenticeship training to obtain licensure and increase marketability and work-force-readiness upon the completion of their sentencing; and
(4) Appropriate funds to expand model programs to include more quality educational and vocational programs.
SECTION 2. Section 353H-4, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"[[]§353H-4[]]
Model programs; department of corrections and rehabilitation. Subject to funding by the legislature, the department
of corrections and rehabilitation shall enhance the State's comprehensive
offender reentry system by developing model programs designed to reduce
recidivism and promote successful reentry into the community. Components of the model programs shall include
but are not limited to:
(1) Earn and learn programs. The department shall expand existing career training
opportunities and work furlough programs to include earn and learn
programs. For purposes of this
paragraph, "earn and learn" programs means programs that allow
eligible inmates to participate in supervised apprenticeships to allow inmates
to work toward licensure while getting paid;
(2) Highly skilled staff who are experienced in
working with offender reentry programs;
(3) Individualized case management and a full
continuum of care to ensure successful reentry;
(4) Life skills development workshops, including
budgeting, money management, nutrition, and exercise; development of
self-determination through education; employment training; special education
for the learning disabled; social, cognitive, communication, and life skills
training; and appropriate treatment programs, including substance abuse and
mental health treatment;
(5) Parenting and relationship building
classes. The department shall institute
policies that support family cohesion and family participation in offenders'
transition to the community, and, where possible, provide geographical
proximity of offenders to their children and families; [and]
(6) Ongoing attention to building support for
offenders from communities, community agencies, and organizations[.];
(7) Programs that encourage inmates without a high school diploma or equivalency certificate to obtain a high school equivalency certificate while incarcerated by matching inmates with an advisor, mentor, or guidance counselor to support the inmates' understanding of incarceration's impact on family, emotions, society, and the self;
(8) Programs that
encourage eligible inmates to attend community college or university by
teaching inmates the benefits of a college education;
(9) Programs that
shift the focus of career training programs to relevant and useful
opportunities, highlight job prospects and benefits that inmates can obtain
after completion of specific career training programs, and teach inmates about
the benefits of stable employment beyond incarceration and its benefits on
themselves, family, and society;
(10) Programs that
work with non-profit organizations and the business community to secure job
positions for inmates that have completed necessary career training programs
and have the required qualifications; and
(11) Programs that compel inmates convicted of a felony to undergo emotional, academic, and behavioral mentoring or counseling by recommending that inmates be granted parole or early release upon completion of the program."
SECTION 3. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $ or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2025-2026 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2026-2027 for the department of corrections and rehabilitation to expand existing model programs to provide more educational and vocational training opportunities for interested inmates.
The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of corrections and rehabilitation for the purposes of this Act.
SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2025.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Recidivism; Offender Re-entry Programs; Appropriation
Description:
Expands programming and training for the comprehensive offender reentry program under the department of corrections and rehabilitation to reduce the rate of recidivism and increase inmate marketability. Appropriates funds.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.