Grantee Helps Women Piece Together A Hopeful Future
While incarcerated, Ashlee Gibbs spent a considerable amount of her free time putting together jigsaw puzzles. Since her release in 2023, Gibbs says she’s been working on a more significant puzzle—piecing together a thriving future with the goal of reuniting with her six children.
The 40-year-old credits Keyway Center for Diversion and Reentry in St. Louis for helping her lay down the foundation for a new and fulfilling life.
“There were a lot of things that changed when I got out. I had no idea how to catch a bus when I no longer had a car. When I applied for jobs or housing, I had to explain my background,” said Gibbs. “Keyway helped me by providing for my basic needs and housing. I have also learned for the first time in my life how to budget, plan, set a schedule, and save money.”
Impressed by Keyway’s success in reducing recidivism and evidence-driven wrap-around services to meet individual needs of justice-involved women, We Raise Foundation and the Lutheran Foundation of St. Louis awarded a joint $500,000 three-year GrantsPlus grant in 2022.
“I appreciate everything We Raise donors have done. It shows they have faith in us and want to help us get back into the community. By investing in programs like Keyway, it gives women options. Without the donors, I would be back where I was,” Gibbs said.
At the age of 20, Gibbs began selling cocaine, which led to arrests and parole violations that landed her in and out prison since 2008. Her decisions also led to her losing custody of all her children. When she left Missouri’s Chillicothe Correction Center last year, Gibbs was more determined than ever to break her old habits, especially at her oldest son’s urging for her to stay clean, telling her, “God has a plan. We just need you not to go back.”
“When I was younger, I was attracted to the fast money. I had the mindset that women can make a lot of money. I didn’t have to choose this lifestyle, but I chose it. I was addicted to it and it spiraled out of control,” Gibbs explained. “In the past few months, through Keyway counseling sessions twice a month and other classes, I realized I had to change my people, place, and things in order to break free from the cycle I was in.”
According to a report from the Prison Policy Initiative, the incarceration rate for women in the U.S. is at a historic high and has grown twice the rate for men in recent decades. Missouri’s rate is much higher than the national average. Despite the dramatic increase of women’s incarceration, very few resources are available once they are released.
That is why Keyway aims to address distinct needs of women in the criminal justice system while providing housing stability, vocational support, mentorship, court advocacy, and life skills coaching. The GrantsPlus grant has helped ensure Keyway staff are trained to address specific issues justice-involved women experience. It has also allowed Keyway to increase its program capacity and fundraising efforts.
With Keyway’s support, Gibbs has obtained a full-time assistant manager position at a fast-food restaurant, she has a car, and most importantly, she’s reconnected with some of her children. She says the pieces of her new life are gradually falling into place.
“I always start puzzles with the outside pieces to build the border. I feel like that represents me. I’m being put together. The inside pieces are the things I have accomplished. Completing my treatment is one piece of the puzzle. Getting my own place—that will be a big piece,” Gibbs explained. “My goals and plans are slowly coming together. When my kids are there—my puzzle will be complete.”
Your investment and generous financial gifts are giving formerly incarcerated women, like Ashlee Gibbs, a second chance to pursue an optimistic future to strengthen their families and transform communities.