Bar Association Support to Improve Correctional Services (BASICS) is an offender rehabilitation program sponsored by the BASICS Committee of the State Bar of Georgia. BASICS assists program participants in being able to stay out of jail, by legitimate means, once they are released by providing effective instruction, guidance and employability counseling.
BASICS’ Mission is to aid and steer inmates in the direction of self-rehabilitation. During the classes, we assist with developing career, educational and/or work plans, preparing resumes, setting goals and teaching interviewing techniques. Upon release, we assist with job research, applying for colleges or vocational schools, completing or changing personal action plans, as well as developing financial plans. This decreases the likelihood that these individuals will return to jail.
BASICS World of Work is a 10-week course that teaches motivation, business education and personal development to inmates that are within one year of release. The program offers workshops to residents of Georgia diversion and transitional centers, as well as employability counseling to individuals that participated in the program while they were incarcerated.
BASICS participants are exposed to:
The BASICS program is offered to inmates within the Georgia prison system that are within 12 months of release and residents of diversion and transitional centers. There is no requirement to participate in the program, as it is a voluntary class. The average class size is 20 participants. BASICS graduates 80% of its participants.
Society benefits by having fewer people incarcerated, more individuals paying taxes, more productive citizens and less crime. Whenever a successful BASICS graduate is released into the community and becomes a productive citizen, the community safety is increased and law enforcement and prison costs are reduced. Accordingly, both society and the former inmate-participant benefit from the operation of BASICS.
BASICS instructors are extremely qualified, well-trained professionals, who are dedicated to serving the client population. BASICS instructors meet quarterly to receive relevant training updates, build on each other's strengths and ultimately share experiences that will facilitate the ongoing success of the program. Instructors are individuals with college degrees, most with masters or doctorates, who are business and/or human resource professionals with years of experience with the BASICS program and in private industry, federal, state and local government.
BASICS Initial Outcomes
Participants are prepared to:
BASICS Intermediate Outcomes
Participants:
BASICS Long Term Outcomes
Participants are: