Pubdate: Wed, 09 Aug 2006 Source: Detroit News (MI) Copyright: 2006, The Detroit News Contact: http://detnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126 Author: Miriam Aukerman MICHIGAN'S REFORMED PRISONERS GET JOBS A criminal record is a good predictor of future behavior. That's what an executive at a background check company said in the Aug. 7 article, "More felons records erased." But it isn't true. New research from the University of Maryland and University of South Carolina shows that a person who has been crime-free for seven years has essentially the same risk of committing a crime as a person who has never committed a crime. Even though people with old records aren't a threat, we treat them as second-class citizens. Two-thirds of employers will not hire someone with a record, and many jobs -- such as jobs in transportation, schools, health care, daycare, aviation and private security -- are off limits, even if the record is minor or ancient. So it is no surprise that more people are trying to expunge their records. I represent people who are getting expungements, and my clients aren't rapists and murderers. Those folks aren't allowed to get expungements. No, my clients are kids who did stupid things and then grew up. My clients played pranks, wrote bad checks to avoid eviction or failed to report a part-time job while they were on welfare. Many clients have worked for years in fields like health care, but aren't able to work anymore under harsh new laws that deprive them of their livelihood based on old convictions. When people get an expungement, they can go from welfare to work. They can get a job that supports their kids. But to get that expungement, they first have to prove to the judge that they've changed. And people do change. Miriam Aukerman Reentry Law Project Legal Aid of Western Michigan Grand Rapids . - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman