Jobs For Felons

Helping Felons Make Money

Connecticut No Longer Requires Criminal History Disclosure on State Job Applications

Posted on | July 19, 2010 | 1 Comment

More good news on the jobs for felons front. The State of Connecticut has just passed a new law abolishing the requirement of an applicant to disclose whether or not he or she is a convicted felon on most State job applications. The exemptions are for police and school jobs. Private employers, however, are not bound by the law and still have the right to asked whether or not you have a felony conviction.


Norwalk resident and convicted felon Bernard Frederick is a perfect example of who this new law will help.

Since leaving prison nine months ago after finishing his eight-month sentence for burglary, 43-year-old Norwalker Bernard Frederick found shelter, sobriety, religion and a support system but finding a job is the hardest part of his quest to stay out of trouble.

Frederick has been tirelessly searching for a full-time job and it took him six months just to find a part-time job at a car wash. He feels that his history is hindering his job search and he hopes a recently passed law that eliminates a question about an applicant’s criminal history from state employment applications will help in his quest for full-time employment.

The feeling, of those that support the new law, is that applicants should be evaluated based on their experience and skills and not on whether or not they made a mistake in the past that resulted in a felony conviction.

Mr. Frederick is quoted as saying:

“Every time I fill out an application and I get to that point, I think: ‘Should I lie or should I tell the truth?’” he said. “I tell the truth. When I tell the truth, a lot of people look at me different.”

No More Lies on Applications for Jobs For Felons

Well now, convicted felons will not have to decide whether to lie or not on a job application when the State is the employer. This can only help but reduce the recidivism rates in the State, which in turn will be beneficial to both the convicted felon and those with no criminal records.

To read the whole story simply follow the following link: Law aims to help felons find work

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Felon Succeeds Online – Case Study | jobs for felons

Posted on | June 18, 2010 | No Comments

Jobs for felons online, seem to be making some convicted felons a tidy income. A friend of mine, Pete, who has some basic experience building websites through the automated software, WordPress, which is what I used to build this site, called me recently with some good news. Now remember Pete is a convicted felon, non -violent.

Seems Pete figured out a way to get websites to appear high in the Google search results for local term like – dentist paterson, nj.

Seems its easier to rank higher for local terms. Anyway, he came up with the idea of renting ad space on these websites to local businesses, in the example above, it would be to local dentists.


Make a long story short, he started about 5 months ago and now has 20 websites up and running based on businesses in his local and surrounding area, which he rents to local businesses in the form of ad space. The businesses love it it because they don’t have to spend thousands on advertising or thousands on search engine optimization, to get their sites on page 1 of google’s search results.

Instead, they pay Pete between $50 a month and $325 dollars a month depending on how much of the site they rent out to put their advertising on. So 20 websites at an average of $225 per month, that $4,500 per month or $54,000 per year.

It is possible, felons make money online, you just need to take some time and learn.

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