HR-8548-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would authorize the Attorney General to award grants to community-based nonprofit organizations to create "one-stop" reentry centers that provide a wide range of services — including employment assistance, housing, education, mental health, and legal aid — to people after conviction or release from incarceration. It would also authorize separate grants to states, Indian Tribes, and local governments to operate 24/7 toll-free reentry services hotlines. The bill would authorize $10 million per year for reentry centers and $1.5 million per year for hotlines from fiscal years 2027 through 2031, for a total of $57.5 million over five years.
Who benefits
Formerly incarcerated people and those with conviction records who need help navigating employment, housing, education, and legal services after release. Families of returning citizens who may receive support services. Communities with high concentrations of returning residents, which may see reduced recidivism. Nonprofit organizations in those communities that would receive grant funding. People with prior convictions who could be hired to staff the centers or hotlines. Employers who partner with job placement programs. Taxpayers, to the extent reduced recidivism lowers future incarceration costs. Indian Tribes and rural communities, which are explicitly included in equitable distribution requirements.
Who is hurt
Competing nonprofit organizations or service providers that do not qualify as "eligible entities" under the bill's geographic and expertise criteria. Taxpayers who bear the cost of the $57.5 million authorization. Existing reentry service providers that may face increased competition for clients or staff. Organizations that do not prioritize hiring formerly incarcerated individuals may be disadvantaged in the grant preference system. States and localities that do not receive grants may face pressure to match services without federal support.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the period immediately following release from incarceration is the highest-risk window for reentry failure, and that fragmented services force returning citizens to navigate dozens of agencies alone — a barrier that drives recidivism. They contend that consolidating employment, housing, legal, mental health, and benefits assistance under one roof addresses this coordination gap directly, and point to existing research showing that comprehensive reentry programs can reduce reoffending by 20–30%. They further argue that hiring formerly incarcerated staff builds community trust and creates an economic pathway for a population that faces severe employment discrimination.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill authorizes a new federal grant program without evidence that centralized nonprofit-run centers outperform existing state and local reentry infrastructure, potentially duplicating programs already funded through Second Chance Act grants and other DOJ initiatives. They contend that the $57.5 million authorization, while modest, sets a precedent for expanding federal involvement in what has traditionally been a state and local function, and that the preference for hiring formerly incarcerated staff — while well-intentioned — may create legal complications for nonprofits operating in states with occupational licensing restrictions or background check requirements.