Second Chance Jobs: Where to Get Real Help and a Fresh Start

If you’ve been turned away for a job because of your record, you know how frustrating it can be. The rejection can get old fast. For most returning citizens, finding that second chance job is the biggest hurdle of all.
Here’s something that can give you that boost you’ve been hoping for.
All across the country, there are places built to help the formerly incarcerated. They’re called American Job Centers, and they exist in every state.
They were created to help you get a real shot at work, even with a record. You might not have heard of them before, but these centers are the front lines in the fight for second chances.
What Are American Job Centers?
American Job Centers are local offices that help people find jobs, prepare for interviews, and connect with employers who are willing to give someone a fair chance. They are funded by a federal law called the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA).
Here’s how WIOA supports the formerly incarcerated:
- Priority of Service: WIOA places a strong emphasis on serving people who face significant obstacles to finding work, which explicitly includes those who have been incarcerated. Many programs funded under WIOA are required to give priority to returning citizens.
- Access to Job Centers: Formerly incarcerated individuals can use American Job Centers for help with job searches, resume preparation, interview coaching, and career counseling. Staff are often trained to work with people who have a criminal record and can help them address gaps in employment history.
- Training and Education: WIOA funds can be used for job training, apprenticeships, and other educational opportunities that help people develop skills needed in the current job market. This can be especially helpful for people coming out of prison or jail who may need to update their skills or learn new ones.
- Supportive Services: Besides job search and training, WIOA can help with things like transportation, uniforms, tools, and sometimes even legal assistance (like help with expungement), making it easier for people to get and keep a job.
Just walk into an American Jobs Center, and you’ll find real people who understand what you’re up against. Many have helped hundreds of folks with records get back to work and rebuild from the ground up.
How These Centers Help You
- Job Search: Staff will help you look for jobs with employers who have hired people with records before. They know which companies are open-minded, and they can connect you with openings you might not find on your own.
- Resumes and Interviews: If your work history has gaps or you’re not sure how to talk about your time away, they’ll help you build a resume and practice what to say in interviews, honestly and with confidence.
- Training and Certifications: If you need to learn new skills, whether it’s construction, culinary, warehouse, or tech, the centers can connect you to short-term training that makes you more hirable fast.
- Support for Barriers: Need help with bus passes, work boots, or even a cell phone? Many centers have resources to help you get what you need to show up and succeed.
- Someone in Your Corner: The rejection stings, but you don’t have to face it alone. Coaches and case managers are there to listen, encourage you, and keep you moving when things get tough.
The Path from Any Job to Your Dream Career
Some people show up with doubt, others with determination, but all carry hope that things will get better. And every week, someone walks out with a real job offer in hand.
It might not be your dream job on the first day. Sometimes it’s stacking boxes in a warehouse, washing dishes in a busy kitchen, or greeting guests at a hotel front desk. They are the first step toward something bigger. They’re proof that someone is willing to give you a chance, not just at a paycheck, at rebuilding your life.
Rashod was in the same situation. Here are his tips to success.
Here’s what often happens: that first job leads to another. You pick up new skills, meet people who notice your work ethic, and start to build trust, maybe for the first time in a long while.
Rashod’s experience is a perfect example. While in a work-release program, he held down two jobs, working mornings at Miami Fish House and nights at Burger King, riding his bike between shifts and saving money to pay off fines and rebuild his life.
At Burger King, his manager noticed how he handled tough situations with patience and a positive attitude, even when orders were wrong, or customers complained. That earned him a chance to move up to a shift supervisor, despite his background.
Over time, a kitchen job can turn into a supervisor position. A warehouse shift can become a role in logistics. A hotel job can open paths to management or even inspire you to start something of your own. None of this happens overnight, but it does happen, one step at a time.
That first “yes,” after a hundred “no’s,” is not just a job. It is momentum. It is a sign to the world and to yourself that your story is moving forward. You never know how far that first opportunity might take you.
Find the Nearest American Job Center Office
You don’t have to figure this out on your own. We built the GEO Reentry Connect Resource Map so you can find your closest American Job Center or reentry-friendly resources in just a few clicks. Type in your city or zip code, and you’ll see locations, contact info, and directions. It’s that simple.
Getting a job is about more than money. It’s about dignity, purpose, and hope. If you’re ready to work, there’s help waiting. Take that first step. “Yes” could be just down the block.