Andres Idarraga’s and the prison-to-school pipeline


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dre dare tedxThere will always be those people who feel nobody should get out of prison, or that they should not get parole, or not get opportunities like an education.  Andres Idarraga is someone who got out on parole.  He began educating himself while at the A.C.I. using his own money and ingenuity.

After his release, Andres spent the next seven years earning degrees from Brown and Yale. In a recent TedX Talk at Moses Brown he explains his journey up from and out of poverty, yet why that isn’t enough; why he felt the need to start Transcending Through Education Foundation (TTEF) and support other folks, inside prison and recently released, who also want to pursue a Prison-to-School pipeline.

In full disclosure, Andres is a friend of mine and co-founder of TTEF.  Our friendship has spanned almost two decades, inside and out of prison, fueled by the power of inspiration.  Along with Noah Kilroy, we started this foundation with our own time, effort, and money.  The donations we seek are to stabilize and expand what we do.

When people talk about economic development, education, homelessness, and unemployment, they could easily add in the problem of reclaiming a major lost community resource: people.  Criminalizing Rhode Island residents, beyond the punishment of a crime, is weighing down the state as a whole.

Many of the people being punished by the criminal justice system are, like I once was, broken and hopeless.  As trite as it may sound, but “Hope” is a rare commodity in many places- especially prison- yet Hope is what TTEF creates.  We can’t help everyone that wants an education, nor will an education ensure a job, a home, or happiness.  Hope is just fuel for the journey.

Taveras still popular outside of the chattering class


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The State House in late November. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Influential progressives and others from the chattering class may be turning away from Providence Mayor Angel Taveras, but their suspicions haven’t seemed to seep into the minds of average Rhode Islanders yet.

After a rough first few weeks running for governor, Taveras still seems to be the most popular candidate, according to a new Fleming Associate poll paid for by the Providence Journal and WPRI.

But while the poll shows a plurality of people believe Taveras is best equipped to fix the economy and he enjoys the highest favorability ratings of the five assumed candidates, the most telling indicator for the left may be that 60 percent don’t yet know enough about Clay Pell. In the entire poll, the only thing respondents agreed on more was that they don’t yet know Ken Block.

Here’s the Providence Journal story on the poll and here’s the WPRI version. Maybe the most fascinating thing about this poll is how the two rival news agencies handle the exact same data?

But please comment below and let us know what you think is the most interesting thing about the latest look into what regular Rhode Islanders think of the field and some of the issues.