[Congressional Record Volume 153, Number 113 (Monday, July 16, 2007)]
[House]
[Page H7826]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]


                              {time}  2000
               PROVIDING FOR INDIVIDUALS A SECOND CHANCE

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Davis) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. DAVIS of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, as I was leaving a friend of 
mine's home on Sunday morning, a young fellow was across the street on 
the other side and he flagged me down and said, ``Can I talk to you for 
a moment?'' And so I waited for him to come across the street, and he 
did. And I asked what I could do for him, and he says, ``Well, I am 
trying to find a job.'' And I inquired as to his educational 
background, what kind of things that he could do, and what kind of jobs 
that he had. And he says, ``Well, I had a job, but then my employer 
discovered that I also had a felony conviction and he didn't know that 
when I got hired.'' And, ``Of course,'' he says, ``I have lost my job, 
lost my house, lost my car, lost my wife, and I am in the process of 
losing my children.'' And as I listened to him on Sunday morning, it 
reinforced for me how important it is that we try and provide for 
individuals like this young man a second chance.
  As a matter of fact, our country is the most imprisoned nation on the 
face of the Earth. More than 2 million people languish in our jails and 
prisons across the country.
  More than 650,000 of them come home every year, and, like this young 
man, oftentimes find every avenue blocked that prevents them from 
leading normal lives. Of course, many of them do what we call 
recidivate, that is, if they don't get any help within 3 years, 67 
percent of them will have done what we call re-offend; that is, 
committed another offense against society. More than 50 percent of them 
will be re-incarcerated, costing our taxpayers enormous sums of money.
  And so I felt compelled to come to the floor and urge my colleagues 
to support the Second Chance Act, to urge the leadership to bring that 
legislation to the floor, so that this young man and thousands of 
others like him can, indeed, experience a second chance.

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