California spent $239 million to transform San Quentin into a rehabilitation-centered prison.
Critics call it an expensive experiment. But what if rehabilitation actually produces a measurable economic return?
A new long-term economic analysis from The Last Mile models what happens if expanded education, workforce training, and structured reentry planning reduce recidivism and increase employment over time. The findings are striking.
The bigger question isn’t whether prison reform is compassionate. It’s whether rehabilitation-based reform may ultimately be cheaper than the status-quo of repeated incarceration.
With @robertproche
Read the full analysis here:
https://t.co/Jw81fBRxjn
On May 14, The Last Mile was honored to have Sway Calloway, a proud TLM board member, and, SiriusXM host of Shade 45.
@RealSway Sway joined us during our visit to San Quentin Rehabilitation Center. Throughout the day, Sway witnessed the impact of education and community, inside SQRC. What stood out most was the amount of love, respect, and appreciation he received from the residents, a powerful reminder of the connection he has built through his voice, his presence, and his belief in people’s ability to grow.
Sway’s support of The Last Mile reflects what this mission is all about: creating pathways for justice-impacted individuals to build skills, reclaim possibility, and prepare for a future beyond incarceration.
Thank you, Sway, for standing with The Last Mile, showing up for the community, and continuing to believe in the power of rehabilitation, second chances, and human potential.
Listen to Sway's full segment here:
https://t.co/ZiGPAEq2Q6
#TheLastMile #SwayCalloway #SanQuentinRehabilitationCenter
Thank you to @kron4news and reporter @pdjegal for covering our recent showcase event at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center and helping bring national attention to the future of rehabilitation.
The segment highlighted The Last Mile's technology in San Quentin’s newly transformed learning center, where incarcerated students are gaining access to education, media production, workforce development programs, and the only secure AI learning platform currently operating inside a prison anywhere in the world.
We’re grateful to everyone helping shine a light on the power of education, opportunity, and second chances — and on the students doing the hard work every day to build better futures for themselves and their communities.
@officialharryo Harris has been a long-time supporter of this mission, and on May 14, we were honored to have him join The Last Mile during our visit to San Quentin Rehabilitation Center.
His presence, dedication, and belief in the power of transformation mean so much to our community and to the work we continue to build every day. Days like this remind us why education, and true rehabilitation matter. When people are given access to real skills, mentorship, and community, pathways open, barriers begin to break, and second chances become life-changing opportunities.
A heartfelt thank you to Michael “Harry O” Harris for standing with us and continuing to support a mission rooted in dignity, growth, and possibility.
#TheLastMile #TheLastMileRadio
Thank you to Alex Bell from ABC10 for going inside San Quentin Rehabilitation Center, and giving viewers a closer look at what The Last Mile has built in the new Education Center.
Her reporting highlights a powerful shift: a space once defined by punishment is now being reimagined around rehabilitation, workforce training, and preparation for life after release. From open classrooms to hands-on learning opportunities, San Quentin’s new rehabilitation-focused learning center represents what’s possible when people are given access to education, skills, and hope.
The Last Mile is proud to be part of that work, helping justice-impacted individuals build real career pathways and return home ready to contribute to their families and communities.
#PavingTheWay #TheLastMile #ABC10
Darryl Norcott, Director of Community Partnerships and Special Projects at AMEND, explains how AMEND uses a public health framework to address harm inside prisons.
Instead of looking only at punishment or control, this approach asks deeper questions: What conditions are causing harm? What environments are people exposed to? And what kind of care, support, and rehabilitation would help people return home healthier, safer, and better prepared for their communities?
Public health is recognizing that people cannot all be treated with the same one-size-fits-all response. Inside carceral settings, true rehabilitation requires individualized care, right support, at the right time, for the right person. When prisons become places of health, learning, and rehabilitation, the impact reaches far beyond prison walls. It strengthens families, improves reentry, and helps create safer communities for everyone.
Watch the full episode on AMEND at The Last Mile Radio at the link below:https://t.co/ey4ZZPW4aY
#TheLastMile #TheLastMileRadio #TheBrennanCenterForJustice #VeraInstitute
Yesterday, The Last Mile hosted an event at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center that had one focus: The Future of Rehabilitation.
80 correctional leaders and industry change-makers from across the country converged to see the most technologically advanced prison educational facility in the world. We were joined by dozens of current SQRC residents who are working every day to build a better future for themselves, their families, and their communities.
We toured a facility that is changing the way we imagine prison educational programming.
We showcased technology that is primed to transform correctional facilities from coast to coast.
Most importantly, the residents had the opportunity to show their remarkable skills and projects to the world, displaying their total dedication to success after incarceration.
With so many incredible people and organizations to acknowledge, we will keep it simple for now - Thank you, to our friends and partners, for joining us. Together, we are Paving The Road To Success.
With @CACorrections@CDCR
#TheLastMile #PavingTheWay
Photo credit: Matthew Kadi
Reentry is the process of returning home after incarceration—rebuilding a life, reconnecting with community, and navigating employment, housing, and identity in a world that kept moving.
Recently, @BrennanCenter For Justice released a national report on Prison Reform that highlights how we can reimagine incarceration in the United States. LB Eisen- Senior Director for The Brennan Center for Justice, explains that outcomes can improve when preparation for release from prison starts on day one.
The research highlights how traditional prison environments limit autonomy and disconnect people from real-world responsibilities, making successful reintegration harder. Normalization shifts that reality by structuring daily life around dignity and practical skills like cooking, communication, and shared routines, helping people build the foundation they need before they ever walk out the door.
Nearly everyone who is incarcerated will eventually return home—to our neighborhoods, and workplaces. Will they return with the tools to work, communicate, and contribute?
Watch the full episode of The Last Mile Radio at the link below:
https://t.co/rzscTvr3sO
@tseelig Seelig sits down with @melrobbins, on The Mel Robbins Podcast to share the work she’s been a part of for over a decade inside San Quentin Rehabilitation Center.
The Last Mile has helped bring entrepreneurship, and coding education to people who are incarcerated—many of whom have faced incredibly difficult life circumstances. Inside these classrooms, individuals begin to see something different for themselves. They learn how to shift their thinking, take ownership of their future, and unlock possibilities they once believed were out of reach.
One shift in mindset can be the moment everything changes for those who are incarcerated.
Catch the full episode on The Mel Robbin's Podcast on your favorite podcasting app: https://t.co/oQojZwLHs7 and to learn more about The Last Mile visit https://t.co/PDpngq8bGY
#TheLastMile #TheMelRobbinsPodcast #SecondChances #Reentry #JusticeReform
Artificial intelligence is transforming the workforce, but individuals impacted by the justice system may be at risk of being overlooked in this rapidly evolving job market. Thank you to @masslivenews and @H_Morrison44 for their in-depth analysis of how The Last Mile, which operates in several states, is providing training for in-demand careers to help incarcerated individuals successfully reintegrate into their communities.
https://t.co/IipBDpKg1X
Normalization is the idea that prison should mirror everyday life as much as possible, where the sentence is the loss of liberty and everything else supports dignity, responsibility, and human development.
The recent Prison Reform report from the @BrennanCenter For Justice makes it clear that daily life inside prison shapes what happens when people come home. When people are denied privacy, dignity, and responsibility, the system reinforces disconnection from real life.
Restoring Promise, a unit-based prison program from the @verainstitute Of Justice, flips that reality by redesigning prison culture around human dignity, mentorship, and everyday routines that reflect the outside world. As described in this episode, normalization can be as simple as privacy, communication, and access to learning, yet those basics rebuild identity and prepare people for success. This is where Director Chloe Aquart stands out, leading work that brings these principles to life and proves that culture change inside prison is possible at scale.
Watch the full episode at the link below:
https://t.co/rzscTvr3sO
With @robertproche
#TheLastMile #TheLastMileRadio #BrennanCenter #PrisonReform #RestoringPromise
What does it mean to rethink incarceration in America?
In our recent episode of The Last Mile Radio, @lbeisen Eisen, Senior Director of the Justice Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, breaks down the thinking behind one of the most comprehensive reports on prison reform released this year.
The @BrennanCenter report examines a system that has failed on multiple levels. It looks at the lived experience of incarceration, the impact on families, and the toll on correctional staff who operate in high-stress, often unsafe environments every day. It also highlights a critical gap, most prisons are not equipped to address the root causes that lead people there in the first place, including lack of education, job access, and mental health support.
At the same time, the report identifies where real momentum for change is sprouting: Across the country, there are programs working inside correctional systems to reduce violence, improve daily conditions, and create pathways for successful reentry.
Organizations like The Last Mile are part of that effort, partnering directly with departments of corrections to build practical, scalable solutions. The report brings these efforts together in one place, showing how different models are beginning to reshape what incarceration can look like when dignity, safety, and opportunity are prioritized.
This is why the report matters. It does not just describe what is broken. It documents what is working, and why it works.
Watch the full episode of The Last Mile Radio:
https://t.co/rzscTvr3sO
As we celebrate Second Chance Month and National Volunteer Week, we invite you to make a meaningful impact in your community! Join us in supporting the incredible journey of justice-impacted people who are paving the way for a brighter future after incarceration.
Visit The Last Mile online today to learn how you can volunteer your time, skills, and passion. Your involvement can help create opportunities for those seeking a second chance. Together, we can empower lives and foster long-term stability!
For more information go to: https://t.co/vk0LUKsIMh
Real rehabilitation requires systems that prepare people for the world they are returning to.
The Last Mile’s 2025 Annual Report shows how education, technology, and reentry support work together to create real pathways forward. Inside, you will see how programs are evolving to match today’s labor market, how the PATH framework builds skills in tech, business, and entrepreneurship, and how reentry support continues beyond release. The report also highlights our remarkable partnerships, experiential learning with leading companies, and a growing national model that connects education to long-term stability and opportunity for justice impacted individuals.
Explore the full report and see how this work is driving change: https://t.co/4vf95N1ZQC
#TheLastMile #TheLastMileRadio #AnnualReport
What if United States prisons centered human dignity over harsh punishment?
Vera experts sat down with @TLM to share Restoring Promise’s work to transform prison cultures and better prepare people for life after release: https://t.co/oHI54ys4vg
The way we design daily life inside prison determines whether people leave prepared for a successful reentry.
In collaboration with the @BrennanCenter, our most recent episode of The Last Mile Radio breaks down the core ideas reshaping incarceration across the country, including normalization, human dignity, and dynamic security.
Grounded in the Brennan Center for Justice’s national report, this episode maps out the design principles driving real change across U.S. prisons, then moves into a deep dive on Restoring Promise as one of its most compelling case studies. The episode breaks down how the Restoring Promise restructures daily life around dignity, mentorship, and preparation, and what that shift means for young adults and staff living and working inside these units.
Founded by the @verainstitute , Restoring Promise is a unit-based initiative that reimagines prison environments for young adults by centering daily life around human dignity, mentorship, and preparation for successful reentry.
Nick Turner, President and Director of the Vera Institute, describes to @robertproche the origin story of Restoring Promise into focus during the episode. His experience visiting German prisons shows what it looks like when systems are built around preparing people for life after release from day one. That exposure led to the creation of Restoring Promise, grounded in the idea that the loss of liberty is the punishment and everything else should support growth.
🎧 Tune in to this episode at https://t.co/rzscTvr3sO
In February, @TLM proudly celebrated ten students at Montana State Prison who graduated from its year-long web development program. The MHTBA congratulates them on this incredible achievement! Watch the MT TLM graduates in action. https://t.co/xUWzc8Xrqp