Alabama to Open First State-Run Rehabilitation Facility Exclusively for Women
MONTGOMERY,Ala. – The Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Paroles (ABPP) is preparing to open a rehabilitation facility specifically designed for women,addressing a critical gap in the state’s reentry services and acknowledging the unique challenges women face post-incarceration.The facility, announced recently, will offer services mirroring those available to men, with added programming focused on family reunification and job training tailored to women’s preferences.
The move comes as national data highlights disparities in recidivism rates and the distinct needs of formerly incarcerated women. A 2018 Bureau of Justice Statistics study of 24 states found that 44% of formerly incarcerated men were rearrested within one year of release,compared to 34% of women. After three years, those numbers shifted to 31% for men and 29% for women.
Though, experts emphasize that these numbers don’t tell the whole story. Stephanie C. Kennedy,policy director at the Council on Criminal Justice,an independent,nonpartisan think tank,argues that the availability of supportive services is especially crucial for women. “They don’t have a safe place to land to get everything done, so they are going back to an abusive parent, they are going back to an abusive partner, and that complicates everything,” Kennedy said. “Women’s experience of trauma is much more interpersonal, more likely to include sexual violence, intimate partner violence, so when we are thinking about reentry, we need to be using a trauma-informed lens.”
Women leaving incarceration are statistically more likely to struggle with substance abuse, economic instability, homelessness, limited job history, and lower educational attainment than their male counterparts. Data presented by Kennedy underscores the severity of the situation: women are 5.5 times more likely to experience a fatal overdose within two years of release compared to women in the general population, while the risk for men is 3.3 times higher.
Adding to these challenges, women are disproportionately likely to be primary caregivers. ”When they are leaving confinement, they are having to do all the things that we ask everyone to do, find a job, get an address, but they are also needing to reunify, to work a case plan for child welfare, to navigate the transition back to caretaking from a parent or a sibling, or a friend to get their children back,” Kennedy explained.
The ABPP facility aims to address these specific needs. According to ABPP officials, the new program will include services like family reunification support and job training geared towards fields showing strong interest from women, such as commercial driver’s license (CDL) training.
The opening of this facility marks a significant step towards a more equitable and effective reentry system in Alabama, recognizing that a one-size-fits-all approach fails to adequately support the unique needs of women returning to their communities after incarceration.
This article was originally published by the Alabama reflector, an independent, nonprofit news association.