A man talks on the phone and looks at his family through a window at a jail.
Gary Kirksey visits with his daughter and mother while incarcerated at the Milwaukee County Community Reintegration Center. (Devin Blake / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service)
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Gary Kirksey could see his 6-year-old daughter’s pink sweater – her favorite color – through the glass.

He could also see that her shoes matched the sweater.

It’s details like these that people who are incarcerated can’t gather from a mere phone call.

“It’s like right here. It’s almost like I can touch them,” Kirksey said.

Jan. 7 was the first time Kirksey and his daughter were able to see each other face-to-face since he’s been incarcerated at the Milwaukee County Community Reintegration Center, or CRC, one of the county’s correctional institutions.

Visitations to the CRC, formerly known as the Milwaukee County House of Corrections, were discontinued roughly a decade ago.

While their return in December involved various stakeholders at the county level, this change is part of the overall vision of Chantell Jewell, the facility’s superintendent.

‘Social connections’

Over her nearly 30-year career in criminal justice, Jewell has learned “the importance of family and those social connections, and what that means to individuals who are justice-involved, especially those who are incarcerated,” she said.

There are roughly 1,000 individuals incarcerated at the facility.

“That support, and those connections, are critical to those who are incarcerated and really impacts their success upon release,” she said.

Kirksey’s mother, Tamara Lee, understands this all too well. Lee, who has picked up the slack with child care duties, said the hardest part of her son’s incarceration is seeing him and her granddaughter be apart.

In the case of visitation, Jewell points to a body of research that draws connections between strong families and successful re-entry into the community.

Jewell cites, for example, an analysis by the National Institute of Justice that concluded that there is a 26% decrease in recidivism for adults who were visited in prison compared to those who were not.

The institute is the research, development and evaluation agency of the U.S. Department of Justice.

Jewell said she wanted to reimplement visitation earlier in her tenure but could not because of COVID-related restrictions.

She said she believes that the criminal legal system, as a whole, does not allocate sufficient resources to support families of people who have been incarcerated.

“So now that I’m in a leadership position … I want to do everything I can to help strengthen those family bonds,” Jewell said. 

Jewell said the return of visitation would not be possible without the ongoing support from Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley, who appointed her to the position of superintendent in November 2020.

The return of visitation has been life-changing for  people like Gill Wing, who also is incarcerated at CRC.

He said seeing his son face-to-face has served as  “a wake-up call.” 

“I just had to step back and really humble myself and see where I need to go and the path that I need to follow, to be able to be a provider for him,” Wing said. 

Other changes

In a news release announcing the return of visitation at CRC, Crowley said that he is “committed to making sure that people in our care at the Community Reintegration Center re-enter society better than they were before.”

To this end, Crowley has made other decisions that further support those who are incarcerated.

Crowley’s budget recommendations for 2024 included funding to help relieve families and loved ones of some of the costs associated with calling someone who is incarcerated, both at CRC and the Milwaukee County Jail.

Without this financial support, the cost to those making the calls is 16 cents per minute for a phone call and 40 cents per minute for a video call.

Lee, Kirksey’s mother, said she welcomes this change as well. Paying for calls has been a difficult cost to pay, as her income depends on social security benefits.

The county budget ultimately adopted for 2024 includes funding for 390 minutes per month for phone calls and 60 minutes per month for video calls. 

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Devin Blake started as a journalist at Patch, writing about the Southern California neighborhoods he grew up in. He focused on local business communities throughout the area and was drawn to stories about unemployment, worker resources, and businesses that were filling unmet needs in their communities.

Watching the homelessness crisis continue to deepen over those years, he began working as a resource and information coordinator for community groups and nonprofits so they could better serve populations without stable housing—populations that included the elderly, developmentally delayed and those with HIV/AIDs, among others.

Blake has contributed to a number of publications, including New York magazine, The Onion, and McSweeney’s. He loves spending time with his wife and negotiating with his 2-year-old son.