Australia's National
Prison Newspaper

Australia's National
Prison Newspaper

Welcome to About Time

About Time is the national newspaper for Australian prisons and detention facilities

Your browser window currently does not have enough height, or is zoomed in too far to view our website content correctly. Once the window reaches the minimum required height or zoom percentage, the content will display automatically.

Alternatively, you can learn more via the links below.

Donations via GiveNow

Email

Instagram

LinkedIn

ISSUE NO. 20

March 2026

Donate Here

Experiences

Employment After Prison: Give Us a Chance

By

Ashleigh Chapman

Ashleigh Chapman spent 10 years in prison and two years in solitary confinement. She uses her time learning, unlearning and relearning to help and advocate for those who are incarcerated. 

Markus Winkler via Unsplash

After getting out of prison in May 2025, I have been looking for employment. I have multiple qualifications and a strong work history with references. I go into an interview, and they speak highly about my resume and my long educational history and how I would make a great fit to the team.

Then either someone comes in and whispers to the interviewer or the question comes up about a police check and working with children’s check.

The atmosphere changes in an instant. All of a sudden, I am looked at differently – and then the words change. “Oh, I am sorry, but you need to pass these checks in order to work here.” I think of the stereotypes of people getting out of prison. How they just get on Centrelink and won’t get a job; that they are lazy and never took advantage of the rehabilitation programs etcetera etcetera.

I see job after job advertisement, looking for staff. I fit almost every category for multiple industries. I get excited and think, “finally, this is the one.” I scroll down and there it is: Police Check and Working with Children’s Check required.

One of the positions I applied for was sitting in an office ringing people and their businesses. Not being anywhere other than sitting down and calling people. There was no mention of Police Checks or Working with Children’s Check in the job advertisement, so I applied. I have all the skills and experience. I received a letter of offer to attend an interview; I accepted and attended. Getting to this point was not easy – I required phone credit to contact them; Myki money to get there; clothes to wear and a printout of my resume and cover letter. I get $1200 a fortnight from Centrelink and after paying my rent, I have $400 left. So, I am not unnecessarily applying for jobs that I can clearly see won’t be acceptable due to these checks.

After getting out of prison in May 2025, I have been looking for employment. I have multiple qualifications and a strong work history with references. I go into an interview, and they speak highly about my resume and my long educational history and how I would make a great fit to the team.

Then either someone comes in and whispers to the interviewer or the question comes up about a police check and working with children’s check.

The atmosphere changes in an instant. All of a sudden, I am looked at differently – and then the words change. “Oh, I am sorry, but you need to pass these checks in order to work here.” I think of the stereotypes of people getting out of prison. How they just get on Centrelink and won’t get a job; that they are lazy and never took advantage of the rehabilitation programs etcetera etcetera.

I see job after job advertisement, looking for staff. I fit almost every category for multiple industries. I get excited and think, “finally, this is the one.” I scroll down and there it is: Police Check and Working with Children’s Check required.

One of the positions I applied for was sitting in an office ringing people and their businesses. Not being anywhere other than sitting down and calling people. There was no mention of Police Checks or Working with Children’s Check in the job advertisement, so I applied. I have all the skills and experience. I received a letter of offer to attend an interview; I accepted and attended. Getting to this point was not easy – I required phone credit to contact them; Myki money to get there; clothes to wear and a printout of my resume and cover letter. I get $1200 a fortnight from Centrelink and after paying my rent, I have $400 left. So, I am not unnecessarily applying for jobs that I can clearly see won’t be acceptable due to these checks.

Pitch Your Idea!

Do you have a story you want to share, or an issue you want to investigate?
About Time is always looking for more stories and contributions from people outside prison.

Pitch it here!

I understand the need for these checks, for certain careers, certain jobs. But what I don’t understand is why these checks are necessary for jobs like I mentioned above. I also don’t understand – I did my time, did every program, every educational course the prison offered – the same educational courses I am being praised for in job applications. I worked hard, did high level jobs, sought counselling. I grew and developed. I am never breaking the law again as I now understand what I did and how I needed to change. And I have.

I am being shut out of a market desperate for hard working people. When are we going to say, “let’s give them a chance to show us they can do it, that they can be great assets to our company?”

We are all human beings with pasts. We broke the law and are doing everything we can to be better people. Employers, can you please look at who we are now and see how we can help you? We are hard working mothers, sisters, aunties and human beings who deserve employment, to provide for ourselves and our families. Let us show you who we are and our character now.

I don’t want to be on Centrelink – I want to work. I will cook, clean, waitress, pick up rubbish – anything. But I cannot because of a Police Check and Working with Children’s Check.

Can you give me and others a chance?

I understand the need for these checks, for certain careers, certain jobs. But what I don’t understand is why these checks are necessary for jobs like I mentioned above. I also don’t understand – I did my time, did every program, every educational course the prison offered – the same educational courses I am being praised for in job applications. I worked hard, did high level jobs, sought counselling. I grew and developed. I am never breaking the law again as I now understand what I did and how I needed to change. And I have.

I am being shut out of a market desperate for hard working people. When are we going to say, “let’s give them a chance to show us they can do it, that they can be great assets to our company?”

We are all human beings with pasts. We broke the law and are doing everything we can to be better people. Employers, can you please look at who we are now and see how we can help you? We are hard working mothers, sisters, aunties and human beings who deserve employment, to provide for ourselves and our families. Let us show you who we are and our character now.

I don’t want to be on Centrelink – I want to work. I will cook, clean, waitress, pick up rubbish – anything. But I cannot because of a Police Check and Working with Children’s Check.

Can you give me and others a chance?

Leave a Comment

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
0 Comments
Author Name
Comment Time

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique. Duis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere. uis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere.

Stolen Culture: How Victorian Prisons Are Losing Aboriginal Art and Getting Away With It

By Kelly Flanagan

The handling of Aboriginal art and the ignorance around cultural significance by prisons in Victoria is appalling. This was my experience. It happened to me more than once, and no one was ever held accountable.

Experiences

ISSUE NO. 20

5 MIN READ

The Impact of No Internet

By Daz Scott

Walking out of prison without keeping up with digital advancements is like emerging from a cave clutching a Nintendo 64 while everyone else is coding in quantum and you’re still trying to pay with Monopoly money in a now cashless society.

Experiences

ISSUE NO. 20

4 MIN READ

The Pain of Leaving Family Behind

By Anonymous

My loved ones go about their lives, their stories unfolding; while mine is caught in an endless, irrelevant loop. I’m a ghost, haunting their lives as they deal with issues and overcome hardships, with no ability to help them.

Experiences

ISSUE NO. 20

4 MIN READ

Inside Insights: A Survivor’s Guide to Jailhouse Etiquette

By Jonny

Save the dramas, forget the muster, and if one or two people are missing, they’ll be out, charged, denied bail, and back in before the next count anyway.

Experiences

ISSUE NO. 19

3 MIN READ

Get the full paper in print each month.

6-Month Subscription:

Physical copy of About Time delivered to your home or organisation each month for six months. Paid upfront.

Subscribe for $70

12-Month Subscription:

Physical copy of About Time delivered to your home or organisation each month for twelve months. Paid upfront.

Subscribe for $125

Newsletter

Be the first to learn about our monthly stories, plus new initiatives and live events

You've successfully registered!
Something went wrong when we tried to register your details. Please try again.

Support Australia's First National Prison Newspaper

A place for news and education, expression and hope

Help keep the momentum going. All donations will be vital in providing an essential resource for people in prison and their loved ones.

All donations of $2 or more are tax deductible. If you would like to pay directly into our bank account to avoid the processing fee, please contact donate@abouttime.org.au. ABN 67 667 331 106.

It's
About Time.

A place for news and education, expression and hope.

Help us get About Time off the ground. All donations are tax deductible and will be vital in providing an essential resource for people in prison and their loved ones.

Donate Here

Newsletter

Be the first to learn about our monthly stories, plus new initiatives and live events

You've successfully registered!
Something went wrong when we tried to register your details. Please try again.