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News December 7, 2006
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Governor to attend opening of LIFE Tech center in Thomasville

An open house will be held Thursday, Dec. 7 from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the L.I.F.E. (Life Skills Influenced by Freedom and Education) Tech Transition Center, 2115 Bashi Road in Thomasville.

The L.I.F.E. Tech Transition Center represents a partnership between Gov. Bob Riley's office, the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles, Alabama Southern Community College, Alabama Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation/Human Resources Development Insti-tute, Alabama Department of Rehabilitation Services, the Alabama Department of

Corrections, as well as other state agencies and community resource providers.

Speakers at the open house program include Gov. Bob Riley, Sen. Pat Lindsey, Rep. Thomas Jackson, Mayor Sheldon Day, Alabama Parole Board Chair Sidney Williams and associate members Velinda Weatherly and Robert Longshore, Mental Health and Mental Retardation Commissioner John Houston, Department of Rehabilitation Services Com-missioner Steve Shivers, Alabama Southern Community College President John Johnson, L.I.F.E. Tech Director Darrell Morgan, among others.

The L.I.F.E. Tech Center for male parolees opened its doors on April 1, with the purpose of reducing recidivism by helping parolees make the transition from prison to the community after undergoing extensive mental health treatment, substance abuse treatment, as well, vocational training and Life Skills Training. Currently there are 228 parolees in the program.

Alabama Southern Community College provides all educational training for the Life Tech Institute. The institute trains parolees for successful entry into the world of work and helps reduce Alabama prison overcrowding.

"It's imperative for the safety of our families that we prepare prisoners who are being paroled to have a crime-free and drugfee re-entry into our communities. We can keep our recidivism rate as low as we possibly can and improve public safety. We will no longer give parolees just $10 and a bus ticket, but the skills needed to make a transition back into society," said Riley.

The Life Tech Institute teaches life skills and technical skills to help parolees make the transition from prison to society.

"Alabama Southern provides the education component of the program as well as statewide job placement services in coordination with business and industry," said Dr. John A. Johnson,

President of Alabama Southern Community College. "Housing and other components of the parole transition center are provided by the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles. This partnership is designed to reduce prison overcrowding by preparing deserving individuals for job success and life success, thereby also reducing the likelihood that they will return."
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