Funding cuts don’t stop CoSA volunteers



When Mennonite Central Committee Ontario ended its funding of Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA) in Kitchener, Hamilton and Toronto last June, Janet Young thought it was the end.

A retired psychiatric hospital chaplain in Kitchener, Ontario, Young began volunteering with six CoSA circles in early 2020. She had heard about CoSA through the hospital ward she worked in, which was connected to the correctional system. She learned how its volunteers “circle” a “core member” with support after their release from prison for sexual offenses.

“I thought this is a way I can use my experience,” Young said. “The volunteers are fantastic. They come from all sorts of backgrounds. Their commitment is exceptional.”

In fact, the dedication of some volunteers has meant they have kept the circles going without funding.

Young says, “The point was to build community around the core members. Community is for life if people want it that way. We’ve continued the relationships.”

These circles have partnered with Dismas Fellowship, a volunteer organization supporting former offenders. They meet monthly at Stirling Mennonite Church and share a meal together.

They pass around a hat to help offset some of the costs.

In addition to the monthly gathering, Young and another volunteer run a weekly Bible study and play card games.

CoSA is a tangible “recognition that community makes a difference for people,” Young says.

Two former core members serve with the organization now, including one who is a chef who makes the meals for their gatherings.

Young says the community-building isn’t always easy. “I’ve been involved in two cases where people were accused of reoffending. In both cases, the people were exonerated. But you’re walking a fine line; you know you’re supporting the person, but you’re not sure what the truth is. But you want to make sure that justice is done. The justice system can treat people as offenders that will never change.”

Young says with conviction, “I do believe they can change.”

Cuts to funding, however, mean new circles cannot be safely established. Developing relationships with the parole board, going into prisons to meet with potential new core members and training volunteers are “not something a volunteer can do easily,” said Young. “That was our biggest loss. We had a waiting list of people we could have supported. That was heartbreaking.”

Young says that the work they are doing has protected the wider community, and that, while it’s highly successful, there is a “subtle” element to the changes they nurture.

“We’ve seen some family relationships restored. Not all of them,” Young says, “but there is hope that there is restoration.”

Young estimates less than half of core members express personal faith. But they know that their circles are composed of people of faith. “Jesus didn’t ask people to believe in him before he healed them. I feel it’s Jesus’s example that we help everyone who asks.”

“I’ve heard about how Jesus met core members, particularly through Bible studies, and I’ve learned a lot about the depth of forgiveness. In Dismas they have a saying—“We are all offenders”—and now when I come, particularly to presiding at communion, I recognize that we are all sinners. Jesus died for the big sins as well as the little ones. We’re all equal before God when we approach him for forgiveness.”

To the church, Young says, “As Christians we’re called to be part of the healing of the world.”

To donate to CoSA Canada’s ongoing work, or specifically to support hiring a coordinator for Kitchener, see cosacanada.com/get-involved.



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