WARREN (AP) — Fourteen inmates are receiving college diplomas Monday during a ceremony at the Maine State Prison.
Eight of the inmates are receiving associate degrees in liberal arts while six are receiving Bachelor of Arts degrees. The degrees are being awarded by the University of Maine at Augusta, and were earned through the Maine State Prison college program.
The program is fully funded by the Sunshine Lady Foundation, a nonprofit foundation founded by philanthropist Doris Buffett, sister of billionaire investor Warren Buffett. Funding allows instructors from University College at Rockland, which is part of the University of Maine System, to teach classes inside the prison, located in Warren.
The last prison graduation was held in 2011, when nine inmates got degrees.
Inmates who earn college degrees or just take part in the program are more likely to succeed when they’re released from prison, said Deborah Meehan, director of University College of Rockland. All of the inmates who have taken part in the program since Meehan first became involved in 2006 have stayed out of trouble after they were released, she said.
“None of them have been re-incarcerated,” she said.
This year’s commencement speaker is the Rev. T. Richard Snyder, chairman of the Restorative Justice Institute of Maine and a former dean of New York Theological Seminary.
Among those expected to attend are Doris Buffet, Corrections Commissioner Joseph Ponte and University of Maine at Augusta President Allyson Handly, as well as nearly 70 guests of the graduates.
Send questions/comments to the editors.
Comments are no longer available on this story