The City of Lansing’s Offender Success (OS) Reentry Program addresses the challenge of reintegrating returning citizens into the community in a way that reduces recidivism and enhances public safety. Many individuals released from incarceration face systemic barriers that put them at high risk of returning to crime, including:

  • Employment discrimination due to criminal records, often leading to underemployment or reliance on illicit income.

  • Housing instability, where public housing bans, private rental stigma, and financial constraints create precarious living situations or homelessness.

  • Behavioral health needs, including substance dependency and untreated mental illness, that often go unmanaged post-release.

  • Social disconnection, where individuals lack supportive networks and may reengage with criminogenic peer groups.

Without structured support, these barriers persist, perpetuating cycles of incarceration and imposing costs on policing, courts, and the broader community. The OS Reentry Program treats reentry as a managed transition, not an abrupt release, providing targeted interventions to build stability and equip returning citizens to succeed.

The program follows a start-to-finish service model, beginning at prison intake and continuing through community aftercare. Key features include:

  • Admission-to-release planning and interventions tailored to each individual’s risk and needs assessment.

  • Allocation of programs and resources to address criminogenic risk factors.

  • Development of individualized transition accountability plans with collaborative participation from program partners.

  • Ongoing follow-up to ensure accountability, support, and engagement in community life.

By combining structured services, collaboration between state, regional, and local partners, and continuous support, the program helps returning citizens achieve self-sufficiency while reducing public safety risks.

Impact or how it will be measured:

The program has successfully reduced barriers to employment, housing, and supportive services while fostering measurable declines in recidivism. The program measures success using metrics aligned with the OS Reentry Program framework, focusing on:

  • Reduction in recidivism rates.

  • Increased employability and successful job placement.

  • Access to stable housing and social services.

  • Completion of individualized transition accountability plans. 

  • Ongoing engagement and accountability in the community after release.

These measures ensure that outcomes directly reflect the program’s mission of equipping participants with the tools, opportunities, and accountability needed for lasting reintegration.