- Public cost exposure
- Unemployment or instability
- High justice & healthcare utilization
A high-ROI stability and workforce investment for Texas.
Texas already spends $50,000 – $75,000 per year on each chronically unstable, justice-involved man through incarceration, healthcare, and emergency response.
That money is already being spent.
The only question is what it produces.
Figures based on conservative Texas cost assumptions. Full methodology available in the whitepaper.
Chronic instability is not a one-time event. It is a recurring expense. When individuals cycle through incarceration, emergency care, and supervision without structural change, public systems absorb the cost again and again. The spending continues. The outcomes do not.
Most short-duration programs fail for structural reasons, not moral ones. They attempt rapid reintegration before stability has been built. Without long-term behavioral reset, employment discipline, and accountability frameworks, relapse and recidivism remain statistically predictable.
Real Restart operates differently. Extended-duration stabilization allows habits, identity, and work capacity to form before external pressures return. Structure precedes responsibility. Employment follows readiness — not optimism.
When individuals transition into stable work and reduced system reliance, the impact compounds. System load decreases. Wage contribution increases. The shift from public cost to economic participant is not immediate — but it is durable. And durability is what produces measurable return.