House panel advances pilot transitional reentry program for women nearing release
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Summary
HB 168 would create a narrow pilot transitional residential program for female parolees within six months of release, providing structured housing, treatment and employment support. Supporters cited low recidivism in analogous programs; proponents and formerly incarcerated speakers urged robust trauma‑informed services. The committee adopted technical amendments and reported the bill favorably.
Representative Freiberg described HB 168 as a narrowly targeted, public‑safety reentry pilot for women who are already parole‑eligible and within six months of projected release. The program would provide structured residential and therapeutic services to support successful reintegration.
"This is the next logical step in that process," Andrew Hundley of the Louisiana Parole Project told the committee, describing residential reentry programs' role in reducing recidivism and improving outcomes. He said the model has served hundreds of men with low return‑to‑prison rates and that a women‑focused pilot addresses distinct needs.
Proponents from business groups, faith organizations and formerly incarcerated women described the program as a "ladder" to employment and family stability. Formerly incarcerated witnesses said residential step‑down support was critical to their success and urged strong trauma‑informed services.
Committee members adopted technical amendments and reported HB 168 as amended. The transcript records many supporting organization cards and no red cards in committee. Representative Freiberg thanked stakeholders and the chair for collaboration; the bill will proceed to the House floor.
