Editor’s note: This story is presented as a tribute to the life of Cynetra Freeman and the work of the organization she founded, the Mississippi Center for Reentry, a Southern Poverty Law Center Vote Your Voice grant recipient. Freeman died late last year, after the SPLC interviewed her for this story. The SPLC extends its sympathies to her friends and family. Friend, When Cynetra Freeman moved from Florida to northwest Mississippi in 2012, she was looking for a job that could help her get back on her feet. The next five years would prove a difficult test. Physically, she was ill. Freeman had end-stage renal failure that required dialysis three days a week. Mentally, she was tired. The dialysis pushed her body to the brink, leading her to heart failure. It wasn’t until 2017 that her doctor deemed her stable enough to work. Emotionally, she felt raw. When she entered a county workforce office that year, she was hoping to make a fresh start. The clerk who approached her seemed happy to help. She asked Freeman what kind of professional experience she had — a bachelor’s degree in criminology. The clerk wanted to learn more. “I wasn’t going to hide my background,” Freeman said. Years prior, while living in Florida, she had been convicted of a crime. She had worked hard to get her life back on track, paid her fines and fees and successfully petitioned Florida to reinstate her right to vote. She was free and clear to move on with her life. So, she told the county workforce clerk about her record. The woman had been flipping through the pages of a binder that Freeman presumed were job listings. She slammed it shut. The woman told her, “You will never get a job because you have a felony,” Freeman recalled. Here she was, sitting in an office that received federal funding, in part, to help jobseekers like her with legal records. “And this how I was treated.”
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