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Cooking School Provides Hope for Future
When Clarissa Haglid completed culinary school at the Delaware Food Bank last summer, it was the first time she had graduated from anything in her life.
Just a few years earlier, a goal like that did not seem within reach. In 2020, she was charged with armed robbery and later sentenced to prison. Haglid told VOA that she "lost everything," including the custody1 of her children.
As she approached the end of her four-year prison sentence, she learned about a restaurant service training program available to people in jail. Haglid started attending culinary school classes at the Food Bank in Newark, Delaware, when she received permission to take part in the work-release program. Through the 14-week program, students learned cooking and life skills to prepare them for a job in the restaurant or hospitality industry.
Some of the students currently at Newark were incarcerated2 like Haglid. Others are in substance abuse recovery programs or underemployed, meaning they have been out of the workforce3 for a long time, said Anna McDermott. She is the Food Bank's Chief Impact Officer.
Haglid and other students learned how to use knives in cooking, correct food preparation, and how to make the five foundational "mother" sauces and other skills. The program also teaches teamwork, work ethic4 and time management.
Those kinds of life skills, also called "soft skills," are taught to "make sure that folks are really familiar with what is expected of them in the workplace to maintain employment," McDermott said. "Getting a job is the easiest part, sometimes. It's maintaining that job."
At the end of the program, students are provided an entry-level job through the state restaurant association. Haglid is an apprentice5 at a nearby hotel, where she receives a paycheck and additional training as a cook.
"This program meant everything to me because...it was a way for me to get not my life back, but a life to begin with," Haglid said. Attending the culinary school started to "bridge the gap of restoration between me and my kids."
Haglid was able to attend the classes through a U.S. Department of Labor6 program called HOPES, Hospitality Opportunities for People Reentering Society. HOPES is operated through the National Restaurant Association Education Foundation (NRAEF), an industry group, which partners with community organizations like the Delaware Food Bank. The group's goal with HOPES is to get incarcerated people training and jobs in the restaurant industry.
Rob Gifford is president of the NRAEF. He said restaurant jobs help prevent recidivism7, the word for returning to prison. Gifford said food service jobs help people released from prison get work and a way to earn money as soon as possible.
Food service, he said, has a "relatively8 low barrier to entry," compared to other jobs that might require more training. Since prisons provide food service, there is already a place to provide training. And unlike other work, restaurant jobs often do not require college or even high school degrees.
"We're allowing these individuals to get on their feet quickly via the restaurant industry, but we're giving them ... transferable skills," Gifford said. "When they decide they're ready to move on to their next opportunity... they're positioned for success."
Employment for formerly9 imprisoned10 people is very important to prevent recidivism. The NRAEF says that formerly imprisoned people who maintained a job for the first year following their release had a 16 percent recidivism rate over three years. That is compared to a 52 percent recidivism rate for those that did not maintain employment. The unemployment rate for people formerly incarcerated is more than six times the national rate.
Gifford said about 1000 people have gone through the HOPES program nationwide, and two-thirds are currently employed.
Haglid, who said she is regaining11 custody of her children, plans to continue her work in restaurants and one day lead a kitchen as a chef. She also said she wants to support the educational and job training programs that helped her find work. She said the programs are needed to prevent recidivism and provide hope for the future.
"When you realize you have the ability to learn, (it) almost creates a hunger in you where you want to absorb as much as you possibly can," Haglid said. "You begin to have a drive that you never had before."
Words in This Story
culinary –adj. related to cooking and the restaurant industry
custody — n. the legal right to take care of a child
incarcerated — adj. currently or previously12 in prison
work ethic –n. the idea that work and employment is good, moral and gives people purpose and meaning
management –n. the ability to plan, organize or supervise something
hospitality — adj.(industry) related to the business of restaurants, hotels, travel and tourism
apprentice — n. a person who is in training for a trade which is learned from an established tradesman
restore — v. to bring a person back to a position or something back to a former condition
transferable skill — n. skills that can be used in everyday life or in any job
opportunity — n. a chance for a new job, project or activity
absorb –v. to take in or learn something
1 custody | |
n.监护,照看,羁押,拘留 | |
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2 incarcerated | |
钳闭的 | |
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3 workforce | |
n.劳动大军,劳动力 | |
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4 ethic | |
n.道德标准,行为准则 | |
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5 apprentice | |
n.学徒,徒弟 | |
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6 labor | |
n.劳动,努力,工作,劳工;分娩;vi.劳动,努力,苦干;vt.详细分析;麻烦 | |
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7 recidivism | |
n.累犯,再犯 | |
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8 relatively | |
adv.比较...地,相对地 | |
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9 formerly | |
adv.从前,以前 | |
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10 imprisoned | |
下狱,监禁( imprison的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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11 regaining | |
复得( regain的现在分词 ); 赢回; 重回; 复至某地 | |
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12 previously | |
adv.以前,先前(地) | |
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