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Fox News
Fox News
9 Feb 2023


"The ideal candidate is a diligent and ambitious individual with lived experience as a [formerly] incarcerated individual," the posting adds.

The job is part of a larger effort in Washington to "destigmatize" criminals, KTTH radio host Jason Rantz reported

WASHINGTON STATE PRISONS TO IMPLEMENT ‘EQUITY,’ 'ANTI-RACISM' POLICIES TO ASSIST ‘MARGINALIZED’ INMATES

Man in handcuffs.

Man in handcuffs. (REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson)

"The position is designed to bring the voice of incarcerated individuals to the department’s practices, and that is why someone with that lived experience is preferred," a DOC spokesperson told "The Jason Rantz Show."

The job will pay anywhere from $108,636 up to $133,044 a year, in addition to benefits. 

If hired, the employee would "serve as a senior member of the agency’s Executive Leadership Team and provide direct oversight of various strategic initiatives with the goal of working to continue to reduce recidivism and improve the reentry of incarcerated adults."

SEATTLE MAN ACCUSED OF MURDER EXPECTED TO RECEIVE $36K FROM STATE FOR NOT RECEIVING MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT

A plane flies overhead the King County Correctional Facility in downtown Seattle.

A plane flies overhead the King County Correctional Facility in downtown Seattle. (Reuters/Lindsey Wasson)

The job listing does not specify if certain criminal backgrounds would keep a candidate from the job, with the spokesperson telling Rantz the position is open to all former inmates, not matter what crimes they committed.

WASHINGTON TO PAY SEATTLE ALLEGED CRIMINAL $250 EACH DAY HE DOESN’T GET MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT: REPORTS

"There isn’t necessarily a criminal background that would preclude someone from being considered. DOC will ensure that whoever is hired is thoroughly vetted," the DOC spokesperson said. 

The Space Needle and Mount Rainier are seen on the skyline of Seattle on Feb. 11, 2017.

The Space Needle and Mount Rainier are seen on the skyline of Seattle on Feb. 11, 2017. (REUTERS/Chris Helgren)

Rantz noted that a person’s felony record does not matter much for the application process anyway, citing the state’s Washington Fair Chance Act. The law took effect back in 2018 and prevents public and private entities from asking applicants about their potential criminal histories until after they are deemed qualified for a job. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the state’s Department of Corrections early Thursday morning but did not immediately receive a reply.