Jacob's House

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A nonprofit fundraiser supporting

The Epicenter Initiative
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Epicenter is securing a home for Second Lookers returning back to society. Help make this possible!

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$250,000 goal

Our residential project, called "Jacob's House," is premised on the 1 Corinthians 13:11 (NET) standard of transformational living:

"When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. But when I became an adult, I set aside childish ways."

Under Texas “tough-on-juvenile-crime” legislation enacted in the mid-1990s, many youthful offenders between the ages of 14 and 17 were prosecuted as adults and placed into the adult prison system with extreme (40+ year) sentences. Currently, approximately 1,400 Second Lookers are serving virtual life or capital life sentences in Texas adult prisons. They are legislatively excluded from the benefits of earlier parole through earned “Good Conduct Time” and “Work Time” credits. They must serve a minimum of 30 or 40 years, respectively, before becoming eligible for parole. Even then, the current parole process does not take youthfulness into account as a mitigating factor, which means many will languish in prison for 40+ years with no hope in sight. Passage of the Second Look bill in 2021 would allow earlier and more meaningful parole eligibility for Second Lookers at 20 years or half of their sentence, whichever is shorter.

While Texas “tough-on-juvenile-crime” politics attempted to resolve immediate youth crime concerns, they failed to factor in the long-term ramifications of extreme prison sentences. Long-term incarceration has not only proven to increase the dangers of institutionalization, including both mental and physical health deterioration, but it suppresses the formation of normal social skills and etiquette, limiting the acquisition of real-world job training and technological prowess. Incarcerating juvenile offenders until they are 40, 50, or 60 years old is counterproductive toward goals of prisoner rehabilitation and recidivism rate reduction.

By the time these youthful offenders reach parole eligibility, many of their family and friends will have either died or abandoned them. With little to no support, they will be ill-prepared for life in the real world. As a result, homelessness is the primary immediate concern for many long-incarcerated juvenile offenders paroling from prison:

- Parolees are often denied paroling into the city in which they were convicted because of protesting county officials, which isolates some of them from their only available support.

- Most parolees are unable to pay the membership fee usually required by private halfway housing.

- Parolees are rejected by most apartment rentals and homeowner associations.

- Often, prisoners granted parole can remain incarcerated for an extra six months to a year while waiting on available placement into limited state halfway housing.

Considering how Texas “tough-on-juvenile-crime” legislation fails to account for the post-release aftercare of long-incarcerated youthful offenders, many of them face an increased likelihood of becoming welfare-dependent, resorting to criminal survival and recidivating, succumbing to drug and alcohol abuse, and/or perhaps even suicide.

Because extreme sentences aren't minor, our advocacy for youth justice reform (Texas “Second Look” legislation) aligns with neuroscientific evidence indicating that juvenile offenders should not be held to adult standards of culpability and punishment. According to the National Research Council and Institute of Medicine, most juvenile offenders can be expected to “age-out” of criminal behavior. We seek to assist the successful reintegration of long-incarcerated juvenile offenders paroling back into society by providing them with an affordable place to live where they may begin their lives. Unlike the negative environments and scarce reentry service support of traditional halfway houses, our faith-based post-release residency project, “Jacob's House,” aims to provide a more positive and nurturing residential program with less of an institutionalized atmosphere.

Located in Galveston County, our capital project site is unique because, according to the TDCJ Reentry Services Division, it resides in a county that has zero post-release housing programs. “Jacob's House” will then be the only post-release residency program in Galveston County. It will be within a residential and commercial zoning area, making it within walking distance for quick access to the business district. More importantly, it will be surrounded by 110 chemical plants, numerous construction sites, and the Houston Port Authority, making it a particularly employment-friendly area to returning citizens.

Although placement into "Jacob's House" will be rent-free for each resident's first 60 days, we do have a sustainability plan for low incremental rent increases based on residency duration and earned income. We are looking to raise funds through grants and private donors. If you or an organization you know could assist in these efforts, please contact Deanna Luprete at deannaluprete@secondlooktexas.org

In memory of Jacob Blackmon 07/14/1978 - 11/03/2020

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