OHIO NAACP's effort helps inmates



MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) -- The NAACP is taking its message inside prison walls to help inmates make a smoother transition to life on the outside.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People reactivated its Prison Project in 2001, and now Ohio has more chapters than any other state.
The program is part of an effort to address the disproportionate number of blacks in prison. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction statistics show that 49 percent of prisoners in the state are black.
Network of support
The project is intended to help inmates take advantage of the NAACP's network of support from churches, businesses and other groups.
The chapter at Richland Correctional Institution in Mansfield, which started in 2002, was the first chartered in more than 10 years.
Chapter President Bernard Croom, 34, recently led a meeting of 88 men, giving them advice for the future.
"You need to be about getting it together and getting off these streets," Croom, who is also an inmate, told them.
More than 800 inmates at prisons in Mansfield, Marion, Noble, North Central, Richland and Trumbull are getting similar advice through NAACP chapters. There are more than two dozen chapters nationally with more than 2,000 members. Prisoners pay $12 annual dues.