The Durability Economy
Workforce Redesign, Fair Chance Hiring, and Household Stability.
For Leaders Who Measure What Lasts.
Sentenced to Prison
(During my Second Incarceration)
the Blueprint
NARP
Featured Insight
From Policy Theater to Operating Results
The Fair-Chance Paradox: From Policy Theater to Operating Results
The workforce system measures placements. Employers measure retention. Funders measure grant cycles. None of them measure household stability — and that's why outcomes haven't changed in 20 years. This piece names the blind spot and gives you the numbers to fix it.
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Fair-Chance Hiring
The business case, the retention data, and the infrastructure that makes inclusive hiring sustainable — not just symbolic.
Workforce Ecosystems
Systems design for coordinated career pathways — connecting employers, training, support services, and retention infrastructure.
2Generation Economy
The household-centered model that invests in two generations simultaneously — parent careers and child development, aligned.
Policy and Metrics
What we measure determines what we get. Analysis of the incentive structures, funding models, and measurement systems that shape outcomes.
Reinvention and Lived Experience
The personal, the systemic, and the structural — why reinvention is a better frame than reentry.
The Ideas That Run Through Everything
We Measure the Wrong Thing
Workforce systems optimize for placements. Funders optimize for grant cycles. Corrections optimizes for compliance.
None of them optimize for household stability.
When the metric is wrong, the outcome is predictable. Change the metric. Change the outcome.
Household Stability Is the Real Unit of Change
You cannot stabilize a worker without stabilizing their family.
A parent navigating housing instability, childcare gaps, and benefit cliffs is not a retention problem. They are a systems-design problem.
The household is the unit. Everything else is a workaround.
Hiring Is the Beginning, Not the Finish Line
The system celebrates placement. The worker needs advancement.
Second-chance hiring without retention infrastructure is a revolving door with better PR. Wage progression, manager support, and career pathways — that is the finish line.
A job is not freedom. A career is closer.
Systems Must Be Designed for Measurable Outcomes
Good intentions are not a substitute for good design.
If a program cannot articulate its outcomes at 12 months — with numbers, not narratives — it is not ready to scale. It may not be ready to fund.
Design for durability. Measure for accountability. Fund what works.
The ROI of Second Chances — A Data Snapshot
Hard numbers and practical proof. The retention data, the tax credit math, and the business case — in one document.
- Retention comparison: second-chance hires vs. general population
- WOTC tax credit calculation framework
- Cost-of-exclusion model for employers
- Three implementation steps you can start this quarter
Start Here — For Your Role
For Employers
You're building or scaling a second-chance hiring strategy. You need the retention data, the infrastructure framework, and the ROI case to present to leadership.
For Funders
You're investing in workforce and reentry outcomes. You need to know what produces durability — not just activity — and how to structure funding around household stability.
For Policymakers
You shape the rules, the incentives, and the measurement systems. You need evidence that connects policy design to real-world outcomes — with clear metrics and implementation pathways.
For Workforce and Reentry Leaders
You run the programs. You coordinate the services. You see the gaps every day. You need frameworks that work at the systems level — not just the program level.
From Insight to Implementation
The thinking on this page is the foundation. Here's where it becomes action.
Need Strategy?
Consulting engagements for employers, funders, workforce boards, and public agencies. We design systems, build playbooks, and stay through implementation.
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Keynotes, workshops, and executive briefings that challenge systems thinking and move audiences to action. Customized for your event and audience.
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The 2Generation Economy Blueprint — the systems-level blueprint for household-centered workforce development. The full explanation, the phases, and the tools.
Explore the Blueprint →Take the Next Step
Get the Data
The ROI Snapshot — retention numbers, tax credit math, and the business case for second-chance hiring. Request your copy.
Request the ROI SnapshotStart the Conversation
Explore consulting engagements or request a strategy session to discuss your organization's workforce and systems-change goals.
Request a Strategy SessionTrusted By
National Association of Reentry Professionals (NARP) · Bluu Kazi · EC-Council · CypherWorx
Keisha Thompson got a raise last month. One dollar more per hour. Her supervisor signed the paperwork. HR sent the congratulations email. Payroll updated the system.
Nobody modeled what happened next.
That $1/hour raise, $2,080 per year before taxes, pushed her household income from $33,000 to $34,000.
In Ohio, that $1,000 increase triggered the loss of more than $4,600 in public benefits (Sen. Jon Husted, Upward Mobility Act, 2026).
The raise your HR team celebrated just cost her household ...
The cost is already on your books. You just filed it under the wrong line item.
Every employer in the country tracks turnover.
How many left. How many were replaced. What the recruiter cost. What the temp agency charged to fill the gap while the req sat open.
Here is the number almost none of them track: the household condition of the worker who quit.
Not the exit interview answer. The real one. The child care arrangement that collapsed. The rent payment that fell behind. The second shift th...
You placed the worker. You never checked whether the household could survive the offer.
Every fair-chance hiring program in the country has a placement number. How many hired. How many reached 90 days. How many employers signed on.
Here is the number none of them track: the cost of child care in the worker's market against the wage on the offer letter.
That is not an oversight. It is a design failure.
And it is collapsing households faster than your program can count placements.
The Math No...
Your retention metric is hiding a collapse.
Every workforce board in the country has a 90-day retention number.
It sits in grant reports. It shows up in board presentations. It gets celebrated in press releases.
Here is what it actually measures: the minimum amount of time someone has to stay employed before a funder considers the placement "successful."
Not whether the worker is stable. Not whether the household is solvent. Not whether the job will last past month four.
Ninety days meas...
Retention dashboards built around placement metrics miss the most important variable in workforce durability: household stability.
When employers track hires but ignore housing, child care, and transportation barriers, talent disappears within 6 to 12 months;and leadership calls it a pipeline problem.
It is not. It is a measurement problem.
This article breaks down the ROI case for shifting from fair-chance hiring to a full 2Generation talent strategy, with data from the U.S. Chamber of Comme...
I was arrested at 16. I earned my degrees in prison.
I’ve spent the last two decades watching employers announce their “commitment” to Fair-Chance Hiring.
They post the logos. They sign the pledges. They show up at the conferences.
And then they go back to the office and wonder why they can’t fill roles.
Here’s what no one in the room is willing to say:
The frame is the problem.
Fair-Chance Hiring is not a charitable act. It is a talent strategy backed by 80 million potential workers and...
The Durability Index
Free Household Stability Scorecard
Stop measuring placements. Start measuring what lasts. Score five domains across 12–24 months.
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