The reentry crisis isn't a statistic—it's a systematic failure that destroys lives, families, and communities. Here's what's happening in South Carolina, and how we're fighting back.
of formerly incarcerated individuals return to prison within 5 years
struggle to find work in the first year post-release
in the first year after leaving prison
Behind every statistic is a person—a father who can't find work, a mother separated from her children, a young adult who made one mistake and can't escape the cycle.
Recidivism isn't just a criminal justice issue. It's a public health crisis, an economic drain, and a moral failure. When someone leaves prison with $50 and a bus ticket, what choice do they really have?
You walk out with $50 gate money, a bus ticket, and a list of requirements from your parole officer. You need: housing, employment, transportation, food, ID, healthcare. You have: nothing.
If you're lucky, you have family who will take you in. If not, you're couch surfing, in a shelter, or on the street. You're supposed to report to your PO, but you don't have a phone, address, or reliable transportation.
You apply everywhere. "Have you been convicted of a felony?" Check yes, and the application goes in the trash. Check no, and you're violating parole. Even honest employers hesitate when you have no address, no recent work history, and gaps in your resume.
No income. No stability. Maybe you missed a parole meeting because you couldn't get a ride. Maybe you couldn't pay the "program fees" at the halfway house. The old crew is calling. The stress is overwhelming. You need money NOW.
It wasn't supposed to be like this. You wanted to do better. But the system is designed for you to fail—and now you're back inside, another statistic, another $100,000+ taxpayer cost, another family torn apart.
| The Traditional Approach | Why It Fails | The Sanctuary Difference |
|---|---|---|
| Referrals to services "Here's a list of phone numbers" |
Overwhelming, impersonal, and requires transportation/phone/time that people don't have | Integrated services Housing, work, and support in one place |
| Job training programs 8-week courses, no immediate income |
You can't eat a certificate. Bills don't wait for graduation. | Earn while you learn Immediate income through micro-businesses |
| Shelters Temporary beds, no stability |
Chaos, lack of privacy, no path forward. Often feels like prison-lite. | Transitional community Stable housing with structure and dignity |
| Case management Monthly check-ins |
Not enough support when crisis hits at 2 AM | Daily mentorship Staff living on-site, 24/7 support |
| "One size fits all" Same program for everyone |
Ignores individual needs, trauma, and circumstances | Personalized plans Individual goals, flexible timelines |
We don't believe in "fixing" people. We believe in removing the barriers that prevent people from fixing their own lives. Our three-pillar approach addresses the root causes of recidivism.
You can't heal if you're homeless.
We provide 6-18 months of transitional housing in a communal, supportive environment. Not a shelter—a home. Residents have their own space, shared responsibilities, and the stability to focus on building a future instead of surviving the night.
Result: 95% of our residents maintain stable housing throughout their stay, compared to the national average of 50% for reentry programs.
Poverty is the pipeline to prison.
Our micro-businesses—pallet resale and pet waste removal—provide immediate, dignified work. Participants earn $200-600/week from day one while learning business skills. No waiting for training to finish. No begging for a chance. Just work, income, and dignity.
Result: 100% of participants earn income within their first week. Average savings after 6 months: $2,400.
You can't do this alone.
We provide mentorship, legal advocacy, help with expungement, and connections to employers who hire second-chance workers. Plus, you're surrounded by people who understand—peers on the same journey, staff with lived experience, and a community that has your back.
Result: Participants report 80% reduction in feelings of isolation and hopelessness within 30 days.
Good intentions aren't enough. We're committed to rigorous tracking and honest reporting of our outcomes.
76% recidivism isn't inevitable. It's the result of a system that sets people up to fail. We're building the alternative—one bed, one job, one life at a time.