麻豆女优

Skip to content

New Moms Behind Bars Get Help From Someone Who鈥檚 Been There

Nina Porter gets a kiss from daughter Gianna on Sept. 15, at their Indianapolis apartment. Porter, who gave birth to Gianna while incarcerated at Indiana Women鈥檚 Prison, launched the Mothers on the Rise program to help other moms find essentials like housing, child care and jobs as they鈥檙e released from prison. (Giles Bruce for KHN)

INDIANAPOLIS 鈥 Nine years ago, Nina Porter gave birth in a hospital bed with one of her ankles chained to the frame.

Corrections officers stood watch as Porter held her daughter, Gianna, to her chest for the first time. Back at a , Gianna slept in a crib in her mother鈥檚 cell, about 2 feet from her pillow.

The prison program allowed Porter to keep her baby with her 鈥 including when she went out into the yard 鈥 until her discharge nearly a year later. She didn鈥檛 recall ever bonding so closely with her previous 11 kids. She finally felt her life moving in a positive direction.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to be a messed-up person,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to be a messed-up mom once I realized what a real mom is.鈥

When Porter was released in 2012, however, she didn鈥檛 know how to stay on that path and resorted to what she knew: drugs and crime. She never returned to prison, but her struggles eventually led to a new mission of supporting incarcerated moms as they adjust to life on the outside.

This month, a program Porter developed called Mothers on the Rise is set to launch in the same unit where the 46-year-old raised her daughter. The project, among the first of its kind, aims to help formerly incarcerated mothers maneuver a post-prison world that can often be unwelcoming.

Research shows that recently incarcerated moms are a variety of mental and physical health problems and .

鈥淭hey鈥檙e released with maybe no place to stay and go to. And if they do have a place, it may be transient. They don鈥檛 have money, might not have a cellphone 鈥 and they have to take care of a baby,鈥 said , an Indiana University public health professor who is advising Porter on her project. 鈥淗ow does one navigate all of that?鈥

The number of incarcerated women in the United States exploded from about to , with African American women imprisoned at twice the rate of white women.

But incarcerated women often lack programs that help them transition back into society, even though they expressed more of a need for them than have men or juveniles. There are also few reentry resources outside of prison, especially those designed for the of imprisoned women who have children.

The Indiana Women’s Prison, located on Girls School Road in Indianapolis, is one of the few prisons in America that has a nursery for mothers and babies.(Giles Bruce for KHN)

The group 鈥渁t the greatest disadvantage coming out of prison is going to be women,鈥 said , a leading expert on prison reentry and researcher for the nonprofit research organization . 鈥淔amily support for women is 鈥 we found pretty consistently across our data 鈥 much less than what was available for men.鈥

give birth while incarcerated, but Indiana is that allows new mothers to raise their babies in prison. The nursery 鈥 where moms and infants have private rooms and get help from inmates who are trained to be nannies 鈥 assists the women in planning for reentry with a checklist of needs and services. But until now, there鈥檚 been no peer support or mentoring for new moms or moms-to-be from anyone who鈥檚 been through it.

A Chance Encounter

Until recently, Porter lived such a chaotic, difficult life that she contemplated suicide. Her early years were filled with abuse and neglect. She鈥檇 spent much of her adulthood behind bars, mostly for fraud and forgery.

She thought the last time she left prison would be different. But when she and Gianna got out, they bounced around from place to place for a few years. Porter tried to survive the only way she knew how.

鈥淢y scum of the pond was I took advantage of anything 鈥 however I had to get money. I was just a con artist,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been charged with prostitution. I was actually charged with it, not doing it, but 鈥 when you鈥檙e a crack addict, you鈥檙e going to do anything you need to do to get that dope.鈥

So, in March 2019, she planned to take her life. She had a gun at the ready.

Then there was an unexpected visitor at her apartment. It was Ashley Phillips, project manager for a program Porter was involved in, .

Turman, the IU professor, had started that program in 2018 to help lower the infant death rate in a 鈥 and 鈥 with one of the highest in the nation. The project trains women who have overcome personal struggles to develop initiatives and policies that support other vulnerable moms.

Porter had begun attending the training that same year, but only because it offered $300 in gift cards. She never considered herself a community leader and didn鈥檛 think she had any business telling women how to be mothers.

When Phillips stopped by that day, she handed Porter a flower, comparing it to the women in the project: You plant a seed, watch it grow, and it eventually blossoms into something beautiful.

鈥淪he actually saved my life,鈥 Porter said. 鈥淚 had sent the kids to their dad鈥檚. I was overwhelmed, and I wasn鈥檛 sad about taking my life. I was just so tired and ready. 鈥 Then Ashley came.鈥

From that day until she graduated last December, Porter stuck with the leadership training. She鈥檇 been hoping to help other moms since she was in prison, and the training gave her the tools to start her own program.

Mothers on the Rise was born.

Nina Porter watches her kids play outside their Indianapolis apartment on Sept. 15. Porter, who spent most of her adulthood behind bars, including raising an infant daughter in prison, has created a program to help other moms get by in a sometimes unwelcoming post-prison world.(Giles Bruce for KHN)

Program Offers Support and Savings

Porter鈥檚 idea drew the interest of the , which is providing nearly $60,000 in one-time funding for the project. Agency spokesperson Jeni O鈥橫alley said it 鈥渁ligns with our priorities of reducing preventable deaths among women and children, reducing health disparities and inequities, and strengthening mental, social and emotional well-being.鈥 The program will be evaluated after the first year for possible future funds and expansion.

The state is allowing women in the prison nursery to join the initiative, albeit virtually for now, because of coronavirus. Indiana stands to save money if the women stay out of prison; it to keep them locked up.

Mothers on the Rise will initially assist 10 women, helping them secure housing, child care and, if needed, addiction and mental health treatment. Porter will advise them 90 days before their release and another 90 days afterward on tasks such as connecting with doctors, finding employment and opening bank accounts.

The program will also pay for three months of child care and bus fare for the women and provide infant supplies such as strollers, baby wipes and clothing.

Porter will operate in tandem with the nursery鈥檚 social worker.

鈥淢y advantage is I know the street mentality, if you will,鈥 Porter said. 鈥淚 can cut the crap with the women from the beginning.鈥

She will act as a trusted guide in returning to a society that isn鈥檛 always so forgiving to ex-offenders, particularly mothers of young children.

鈥淲e like to ostracize those in the justice system and then we鈥檙e surprised when they fail 鈥 fail at reentering the community they鈥檙e not welcome in,鈥 said Maranda Sparks, transitional health care manager for the Indiana DOC.

After she last got out of prison in 2012, Porter visited , a historical, 126-acre green space on Indianapolis鈥 south side. She snapped a picture of Gianna sitting on the ground next to a fountain. From time to time, she still looks at it, reminding her of a hopeful yet precarious moment in their lives.

Porter went back to the park on a recent late-summer day, the sky powder-blue. Gianna, now almost 9, was there too. So were Porter鈥檚 younger kids, 6-year-old Kevin and nearly 2-year-old Kamiah. The children raced one another and scrambled up trees. Flowers bloomed all around.

Watching her children play, Porter pondered how her life might have been different had someone helped her navigate the post-prison experience.

鈥淚 think I would have gotten here, but with more healing,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ecause I didn鈥檛 even realize a lot of the stuff I was doing was wrong, that life didn鈥檛 have to be like that.鈥

Related Topics

Public Health States