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A Coding Program at San Quentin Offers Hope for Careers After Prison

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A room full of men sitting at computers and working in blue uniforms.
Incarcerated people learn coding through the The Last Mile coding program at San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin on July 26, 2023. In March, California Governor Gavin Newsom announced that the state would seek to transform the maximum security prison into a center focused on the rehabilitation of incarcerated individuals. (Martin do Nascimento/KQED)

Humanitarian Parole Program Can Continue

An Oakland man is breathing easier … after a program that protects a Nicaraguan friend survived a court challenge by several Republican-led states. But with a notice of appeal filed this week, his relief could be short lived.
Reporter: Tyche Hendricks, KQED Senior Immigration Editor

People Incarcerated at San Quentin Graduate from Coding Program

Roughly 50 people incarcerated at San Quentin are now one step closer to getting a career out of prison. That’s through a program that gives job training in skills like coding and audio production to prisoners.
Billy Cruz, KQED

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