Service Link Stop Extended HoursApril 25, 2023 | 9am-6pm
25April
Curbside Care, Health & Harm Reduction Services, Screenings & SuppliesApril 25, 2023 | 11am-5pm
27April
FeedMore WNY Mobile Food Pantry DistributionApril 27, 2023 | 9:00am-11:00am
Medication Assistance Program (MAP)
Located at ECMC – if you need medications before being linked up with a provider.
Call 716-898-4245 leave a message with name, DOB and medication needed to set up an appointment.
Related News
May 06, 2022
Governor Hochul Signs Legislation to Provide Addiction and Mental Health Services Training for First Responders
Legislation Provides Addiction and Mental Health Services Training, Including Crisis Intervention Team Training, Mental Health First Aid, Implicit Bias Training and Naloxone Training READ MORE >
Feb 08, 2023
We Need Treatment Instead of Jail
The Treatment Not Jail Act, proposed in Albany, can start to change how individuals are cycled through our criminal courts, never getting the help they needed, only a short-term jail sentence and a criminal conviction that would make it harder for them to get a job, housing, or any kind of meaningful stability. READ MORE >
May 19, 2022
Incarcerated people face barriers to reentry post prison. How one initiative aims to help.
Leaving incarceration doesn’t necessarily mean a return to normal life, with barriers, both officially sanctioned and systemic, preventing access to basic needs like housing or restricting job opportunities, even if it has been years since the formerly incarcerated have been released. READ MORE >
Dec 17, 2020
CRJ to open Buffalo reentry center in early 2020
Community Resources for Justice will open a 42-bed community-based residential reentry program in Buffalo early next year, expanding its services for individuals transitioning from incarceration to the community into Western New York. READ MORE >
Apr 17, 2019
Erie County ReEntry Resource Center to be established to strengthen reentry services
Advisory coordinating committee calls for hub on W. Eagle Street in Buffalo to improve coordination of services, decrease further involvement in criminal justice system. READ MORE >
Oct 28, 2019
New Erie County reentry initiative aims to ease transition from jail
A new reentry program called Project Blue is a first-of-its-kind partnership to help formerly incarcerated individuals in Erie County transition back into society. READ MORE >
Apr 12, 2021
‘A Resource for Change’: The Role of Peer Recovery Support Specialists in Reentry Programs
Staff from the Erie County (NY) Jails Co-occurring Enhancement Reentry Initiative—a partnership between the Erie County Sheriff’s Office and BestSelf Behavioral Health that is supported by Second Chance Act funding—discuss the unique ways that peer recovery support specialists can enhance reentry programs. READ MORE >
Apr 13, 2023
Erie County eyes Buffalo Grand Hotel for modernized jail
Erie County plans to create a new jail that brings the holding center and correctional facility under one roof in the City of Buffalo. READ MORE >
Mar 21, 2023
How Do People Released From Prison Find Housing?
Thousands of people released from prison in New York go directly to homeless shelters. Among all releases to community supervision in New York state during 2021, about 23 percent went directly to shelters, according to the New York Department of Corrections and Community Supervision; another 8 percent were “undomiciled,” or went to places like halfway houses. READ MORE >
Apr 17, 2023
Expanding Medicaid Coverage to the Incarcerated and Those Recently Released
A group of House members introduced? a bill? to provide Medicaid coverage to people in the last 30 days of their sentence in prison or jail. The Medicaid Reentry Act would give states a powerful tool to reduce the drug overdose deaths ravaging the country.? READ MORE >
Apr 25, 2022
New York set to pass ‘Clean Slate’ bill which could help millions seal old criminal convictions
The Clean Slate Act would automatically seal convictions for crimes other than sexual offenses if the person has no subsequent arrests. For felonies, that step would be taken seven years after sentencing or release from incarceration if it lasted longer than a year. READ MORE >