Skip to content.
You are here: Home News IFI Iowa Receives a New Blow
Document Actions

IFI Iowa Receives a New Blow


Last modified 2008-04-02 04:13

In February, the Iowa Department of Corrections (DOC) announced that it will cancel the contract for the InnerChange Freedom Initiative. In making the decision, prison officials cited contract provision that allows the DOC to cancel the programme if the enrolment is less than 60 participants. With 27 participants graduating on March 14, 2008, this occurred.

The DOC decision comes after long legal battle over the constitutionality of a religious based programme receiving funding from a government entity to provide programme services. An appellate court decision in late 2007 ruled that the programme could continue if it received no funding from the state government or if the state government developed or contracted with a secular rehabilitation programme that was as comprehensive as IFI’s.  IFI Iowa had been operating from privately donated funds since July 2007.

While the DOC’s decision to close the programme is a blow to PF USA and the IFI programme, Norm Cox, Vice President of Reentry Initiatives, said that the churches and volunteers who have been working with IFI will continue to provide evening programming through the prison chaplaincy. He also said, “We have committed to a continuation and possible expansion of re-entry services in the community to include mentoring.”



April 2008

Spotlight

View these items of interest from www.pficjr.org

Saving New Zealand-- the Role of the Church and Faith-Based Organizations in Criminal Justice

What is Human Valorisation?

Improving Conditions in Overcrowded Prisons

Restorative Justice at Work

Sycamore Tree Project®

Communities of Restoration

What is restorative justice?

Restorative justice is a theory of justice that emphasizes repairing the harm caused or revealed by criminal behaviour. It is best accomplished through cooperative processes that include all stakeholders.

Practices and programs reflecting restorative purposes will respond to crime by: (a) identifying and taking steps to repair harm, (b) involving all  stakeholders, and (c) transforming the traditional relationship between communities and their governments in responding to crime. more