Formerly incarcerated? This small business grant helps employers hire justice-impacted employees

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Daily News | Philadelphia’s Fair Chance Hiring Initiative hopes to lower recidivism, provide employment for previously incarcerated

to available jobs in the city and provides employers with financial incentives to help pay their wages and retain employees. The program is available forWho is eligible for the Fair Chance Hiring Initiative?

Any Philadelphia-based company can participate in the Fair Chance Hiring Initiative as long as the company:Hires a Philadelphia resident who was incarcerated, on parole or on probation for any offense in the last seven years, due to a court sentence.There are requirements for both the employer and employee to adhere to within the 90-day grant term, otherwise, both parties won’t be eligible for wage reimbursement or retention bonuses.

Released from incarceration or placed on parole or probation that was part of a court sentence. This must have taken place within seven years of their first day of work.How much is the Fair Chance Hiring Initiative grant? To receive the financial incentives of this program, employers and FCHI employees need to adhere to program requirements and retain employment for at least 90 calendar days. If both parties successfully complete the 90-day grant term, then both employers and FCHI employees receive financial incentives. Here’s the breakdown.: The city will reimburse employers $6 for every hour an FCHI employee works, up to 960 hours within 180 calendar days of being hired.

. From there, staffers with the commerce department will work around the employer’s schedule to enroll them into the program and get the connected to possible hires. Here’s a breakdown.

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