REFORM BEGINS WITH TRUTH. JUSTICE BEGINS WITH HUMANITY.

We don’t just support individuals—we challenge the system that failed them.

At Ashes and Bars, our advocacy is rooted in the belief that justice must be more than punishment. We push for a model built on rehabilitation, reintegration, and responsibility—one that understands the deep ties between trauma, addiction, and incarceration.

TRISA – A New Model for Rehabilitation

We are pioneering the TRISA Program (Treatment, Rehabilitation, Integration, Support, Accountability)—a comprehensive framework that starts inside jail and continues into real-world reintegration. TRISA shifts the focus from punishment to permanent change.

Goals:

Support recovery while demanding responsibility.

End revolving-door incarceration.

Provide trauma-informed, accountability-based rehabilitation.

The Right to Rebuild Act

We are drafting and pushing for legislation that allows people who’ve completed certified recovery programs to petition for record sealing or modification—a true second chance for those who’ve done the work.

Goals:

Incentivize rehabilitation through legal restoration.

Offer a legal pathway to reintegration.

Reduce stigma and barriers to employment and housing.

Rehab System Reform

Most rehabilitation in the U.S. is underfunded, outdated, or profit-driven. We’re calling for evidence-based standards, public accountability, and integration of trauma care and reintegration tools.

Goals:

End “revolving door” detox centers that fail to support long-term change.

Create national and state-level rehab certification standards.

Redirect funding to programs with proven outcomes.

Jail and Prison Reform

Rehabilitation should not start after release—it must begin inside. We advocate for transforming jails and prisons into spaces of restoration, with trained staff, mental health resources, and reentry planning.

Goals:

Eliminate barriers to treatment and education behind bars.

Replace punitive housing with rehabilitation-based facilities.

Require trauma-informed training for correctional officers.