15PBJA21GG04043SCAX
Formula Grant
Overview
Grant Description
The Detroit Recovery Project (DRP) proposes a three-year initiative to provide quality continuity of care for members of minority populations who are released from correctional institutions to reenter and reintegrate into communities and neighborhoods of the city of Detroit.
Michigan has seen a 40% increase in the number of incarcerated individuals released on parole from Michigan prisons returned to communities in Michigan. Within Wayne County, the majority (2,962 or 80%) of prisoners released to parole returned to Detroit (Solomon et. al 2004).
Ironically, although Detroit receives the highest proportion of returning individuals in the state of Michigan, it is the least well equipped to handle returning reintegration, less connected to community-based structures, and more likely to have medical, psychiatric, and substance abuse problems than the general population. In fact, the prevalence of communicable disease (HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C), mental illness, and substance abuse are disproportionately high among those reentering Detroit's communities.
The difficulties faced by this population are particularly acute, and the associated services in Detroit further impede the returning person's ability to successfully reintegrate.
In order to improve post-release behavioral health and medical status and reduce the likelihood of continued involvement in the criminal justice system, linkages must be established for these reentry populations to substance abuse services, mental health care, and medical treatment. To achieve these aims, the proposed RISE (Recovery, Integration, Support, and Empowerment) initiative will provide pre and post-release services to 100 individuals reintegrating directly from jail, prison, or individuals involved in community corrections. The target areas are the cities of Detroit, Highland Park, and Hamtramck, all located within Wayne County, Michigan.
RISE will work collaboratively with the Wayne County Jail, courts, or community corrections to determine eligibility, conduct pre-screenings, and begin re-entry interventions pre-release. It will utilize evidence-based interventions to provide the following services: substance abuse treatment (including outpatient and MAT as needed), peer recovery coaching, recovery support, referrals to inpatient treatment, primary health care screening and treatment, family support services (parent skills, family reunification), case management, cognitive-behavioral therapy, housing support, mental health counseling (individual, group, and family), employment assistance (including life skills development, education, vocational training, job readiness, placement, transportation, etc.), and linkage for individuals and families/significant others to other essential community-based services.
This reentry initiative will include formative process and short-term outcome evaluations to assist the program in achieving its specific aims and to document its clinical and social effectiveness.
Michigan has seen a 40% increase in the number of incarcerated individuals released on parole from Michigan prisons returned to communities in Michigan. Within Wayne County, the majority (2,962 or 80%) of prisoners released to parole returned to Detroit (Solomon et. al 2004).
Ironically, although Detroit receives the highest proportion of returning individuals in the state of Michigan, it is the least well equipped to handle returning reintegration, less connected to community-based structures, and more likely to have medical, psychiatric, and substance abuse problems than the general population. In fact, the prevalence of communicable disease (HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C), mental illness, and substance abuse are disproportionately high among those reentering Detroit's communities.
The difficulties faced by this population are particularly acute, and the associated services in Detroit further impede the returning person's ability to successfully reintegrate.
In order to improve post-release behavioral health and medical status and reduce the likelihood of continued involvement in the criminal justice system, linkages must be established for these reentry populations to substance abuse services, mental health care, and medical treatment. To achieve these aims, the proposed RISE (Recovery, Integration, Support, and Empowerment) initiative will provide pre and post-release services to 100 individuals reintegrating directly from jail, prison, or individuals involved in community corrections. The target areas are the cities of Detroit, Highland Park, and Hamtramck, all located within Wayne County, Michigan.
RISE will work collaboratively with the Wayne County Jail, courts, or community corrections to determine eligibility, conduct pre-screenings, and begin re-entry interventions pre-release. It will utilize evidence-based interventions to provide the following services: substance abuse treatment (including outpatient and MAT as needed), peer recovery coaching, recovery support, referrals to inpatient treatment, primary health care screening and treatment, family support services (parent skills, family reunification), case management, cognitive-behavioral therapy, housing support, mental health counseling (individual, group, and family), employment assistance (including life skills development, education, vocational training, job readiness, placement, transportation, etc.), and linkage for individuals and families/significant others to other essential community-based services.
This reentry initiative will include formative process and short-term outcome evaluations to assist the program in achieving its specific aims and to document its clinical and social effectiveness.
Awardee
Funding Goals
THE SECOND CHANCE ACT (SCA) IMPROVING ADULT REENTRY EDUCATION, EMPLOYMENT AND RECOVERY OUTCOMES PROGRAM PROVIDES GRANT FUNDING TO STATE, LOCAL, AND TRIBAL GOVERNMENTS, AS WELL AS NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS TO IMPROVE THE PROVISION OF EDUCATIONAL AND CAREER TRAINING SERVICES AS WELL AS TREATMENT FOR SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS AND CO-OCCURRING SUBSTANCE USE AND MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERS DURING INCARCERATION AND REENTRY TO THE COMMUNITY. APPLICANTS SEEK TO IMPROVE: 1) THE USE OF STANDARDIZED SCREENING AND ASSESSMENT FOR CRIMINOGENIC RISK AND NEEDS, EDUCATION NEEDS, JOB READINESS, AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NEEDS; 2) COLLABORATIVE, COMPREHENSIVE AND INDIVIDUALIZED CASE MANAGEMENT; AND 3) PRE- AND POST-RELEASE EDUCATIONAL AND EMPLOYMENT SERVICES AND PROGRAMMING AND TREATMENT AND RECOVERY SERVICES THAT ADDRESS SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND CO-OCCURRING MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Highland Park,
Michigan
48203
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 09/30/24 to 09/30/25 and the total obligations have decreased 50% from $1,800,000 to $900,000.
Detroit Recovery Project was awarded
Formula Grant 15PBJA21GG04043SCAX
worth $900,000
from the Bureau of Justice Assistance in October 2021 with work to be completed primarily in Highland Park Michigan United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years and
was awarded through assistance program 16.812 Second Chance Act Reentry Initiative.
The Formula Grant was awarded through grant opportunity BJA FY 21 Second Chance Act: Adult Reentry Education, Employment, Treatment and Recovery Program.
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 7/25/24
Period of Performance
10/1/21
Start Date
9/30/25
End Date
Funding Split
$900.0K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$900.0K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to 15PBJA21GG04043SCAX
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
15PBJA21GG04043SCAX
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI NOT AVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
15PBJA OJP BUREAU OF JUSTICE ASSISTANCE
Funding Office
15PBJA OJP BUREAU OF JUSTICE ASSISTANCE
Awardee UEI
SZY9KM9HH687
Awardee CAGE
52HZ4
Performance District
MI-13
Senators
Debbie Stabenow
Gary Peters
Gary Peters
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State and Local Law Enforcement Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, Justice (015-0404) | Criminal justice assistance | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $900,000 | 100% |
Modified: 7/25/24