Executive summary
Project RESTORE works with up to 75 non-custodial fathers who are in jail for nonpayment of child support. The program provides job training, parenting and life skills programs.

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Executive summary

Project "Restore" is a program targeted annually on a maximum of seventy-five (75), 18-35 year old, non-custodial fathers who reside within the boundaries of the federally designated Enterprise Community (EC), and who are incarcerated for non-payment of child support. Project "Restore" is a 120-day on-the-job training, parenting and life skills program. Through this program, men are attempting to change the kinds of lifestyles that led to their incarceration. In addition to working 35 hours a week in the construction trades, these men are heavily involved in learning to be responsible parents and to become productive members of their community.

Project "Restore" is physically and emotionally located in the EC. The EC has a population of 22,544 of which more than 80% are African American. According to the 2000 Census data, the poverty rate for individuals living in the Enterprise Community was more than 45% -three and a half times the national rate. Twenty percent of all households in these neighborhoods received public assistance, and females headed 2/3 of all families with children less than 18 with no husband living at home. Less than 50% of the young people in the EC graduate from high school. Crime, and drug abuse are common. The unemployment rate is 13% in a city with a current unemployment rate of less than 4%. More than 50% of young African-American males in the EC have been involved with the criminal justice system.

Project "Restore" focuses on job training in the construction trades, substance abuse counseling, help with transitional housing, parenting skills, peer support groups, and as many other services as possible to aid men in feeling comfortable and competent in their fathering role. Those participants who successfully complete the 120-day program and show aptitude and interest are then placed in apprenticeship programs for 4-6 months. In these apprenticeship programs the participants begin to specialize in a particular construction trade such as electrician, plumber, carpenter, or painter etc.

All of the participants join Project "Restore" while they are incarcerated. All participants have a court order releasing them from the detention center each morning and returning them each evening. The participants also have orders releasing them from detention on Saturdays to attend on-the-job training classes. All of their wages (stipends) while they are in the detention center minus money for canteen & food (lunches/dinners) is sent to the court to pay their current child support and to lower their arrearages. This is the only program of its kind in South Carolina.

One of the unique aspects of Project "Restore" is the formation of a partnership consisting of the lead executives from the various agencies involved in the lives of the men. This includes the Administrative Judge of the Ninth Circuit Family Court, the Director of Case Management at the Department of Social Services (DSS), a prosecuting attorney from the Child Protective Services component of DSS, the Administrator of the Charleston County Detention Center, the Assistant Sheriff and the Director of Project "Restore". This partnership meets monthly, first Tuesday, to keep current on the progress of the project and to solve any problems that might have arisen during the month. Each of the partners are also available to each other during the month if issues arise that cannot wait for the monthly meeting. The partnership has made it possible to successfully manage a program of this complexity. The family court system has demonstrated its support for Project "Restore" by agreeing to release from detention the men who have completed the 120-day program to the satisfaction of Project "Restore" staff regardless of the amount of time remaining on their sentences. The same court order mandates their continued participation in the evening and Saturday classes until the end of their normal date of release.

A for profit participant-owned construction company (Peithos) has been formed that will eventually be managed and is currently staffed by the graduates. The construction company is currently demolishing and/or renovating houses for the City of Charleston and the P.A.S.T.O.R.S., Inc. organization. Through the P.A.S.T.O.R.S., Inc. organization, the City has supplied an opportunity for Project "Restore" participants and Peithos to work in various disciplines on 60 houses. Because Project "Restore" is a training facility, it is able to take advantage of "sole sourcing" and does not need to participate in the City's or the Federal (HUD) bidding process for new housing construction and renovation using government dollars.

The formation of the construction company and the job skills component of Project "Restore" had been supported by two grants. Project "Restore" received funding from the Department of Labor's Welfare to Work (WtW) Program. This grant funded a wage ($7.00 an hour) for the men while they are participating in this 16-week program. It also paid a portion of staff costs, rent, supplies, and most of the construction training costs. Project Restore" was also funded through a Job Opportunities for Low Income Individuals (JOLI) grant from the Department of Health and Human Services. The purpose of this grant was to create jobs in low-income areas. The construction company (Peithos Construction Company) was formed through funding from this grant. During their initial 120 days of training, all of the participants in Project "Restore" were employed by this construction company. The President of Peithos Construction Company is also the construction-training supervisor for Project "Restore". At the end of the 120-day training period, the construction supervisor hired the men to work for Peithos Construction Company, placed them with another company or arranged for them to receive additional training through our "On the Job Training program". The funding for this program comes through a grant from the South Carolina Center Fathers & Family.

   

R.E.S.T.O.R.E., Inc.
MSC Box 1007
701 East Bay Street, Suite 3A-100
Charleston, S.C. 29403
Fed. Tax ID#: 57-1088108
Phone: 843.853.1090 | Fax: 843.853.0060 | email: info@agapeministriesofcharleston.org

 
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