Two families in Washington are getting ready for a release date from different places.
One is an older parent whose adult child is coming home after time in a Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) facility. That parent has been running their household their way, without anyone's authority over their space. That changes now, because the address they offered is the approved supervision address, and the supervision system operates inside their home for the length of the supervision period.
The other is a parent whose children have grown up watching her hold everything together while their father was away. She has been the income, the schedule, the discipline, the steady presence. He is coming home into a household that learned to run without him, and everyone has to figure out who they are to each other now.
Washington's supervision runs through the DOC's Community Corrections division, with community corrections officers (CCOs) assigned by region. Washington abolished traditional parole decades ago; most people leaving prison serve a term of community custody, a mandatory supervision period set as part of the sentence. The CCO who visits your home enforces the community custody conditions. Know whether your person is on community custody or probation and who their officer is.
The Approved Residence
Before release, the person must have an approved residence. A community corrections officer investigates the address, which can include a pre-release home visit, to confirm it is appropriate and free of disqualifying conditions.
Washington has residency restrictions for some people with certain sex offense convictions, particularly those at higher risk levels, including community protection zone restrictions near schools. Know whether any apply before submitting your address.
If you rent: check your lease. Washington has the Fair Chance Act and strong tenant screening protections that limit how landlords can use criminal history, but landlords can still consider certain factors within legal limits. Washington's housing markets, especially around Seattle and the Puget Sound, are expensive and tight. Resolve the lease question before the address is submitted.
If you are in federally assisted housing: federal HUD rules on conviction types apply to public housing, Section 8, and vouchers. Drug-related and violent conviction types can affect the household's eligibility. Know your program's policies.
Get every supervision condition in writing before the person arrives. Washington conditions commonly include curfews, drug and alcohol restrictions, drug testing, prohibitions on weapon possession, restrictions on leaving the state without permission, mandatory reporting, supervision fees, and required program or treatment attendance.
What the Officer Will Do in Your Home
Washington community corrections officers conduct home visits. They can come without advance notice, including evenings. They verify that the person resides at the approved address, that no prohibited conditions exist, and that the community custody conditions are being met. Washington supervision conditions commonly include a search condition for community custody.
If the conditions prohibit weapons and there is a firearm in your home, that is a potential problem if the supervised person has access to it -- regardless of your right to own it. If alcohol is prohibited, you need to know whether keeping it in the home is an issue under the specific conditions. Read the conditions carefully and ask the officer about anything ambiguous. Anything in your home you do not want found in a search should not be where the supervised person has access to it.
You are not on supervision. But your home is the supervision address, and that makes the officer's presence a regular reality. Run a clean, honest household and have the hard conversations with your person before the first visit.
When the Parent Is Taking in an Adult Child
Your child comes home as an adult who survived something you did not go through with them. They will resist anything that feels like being managed. The community custody conditions already feel that way.
Before they arrive, have the conversation as two adults. Separate the supervision conditions -- the state's terms, operating in your home because your address is the supervision address -- from your household expectations, which are yours to set and negotiable between adults.
Cover the thing most families avoid: you will not lie for them. If an officer asks whether your son was home last night and he was not, you will tell the truth. Not to get him in trouble. Because lying to protect someone from consequences delays and compounds what is coming.
When your adult child pushes back on the curfew because they are grown, agree that they are grown, and remind them the curfew applies because of the conviction, not their age, and that it is not coming from you.
When the Father Is Coming Home to His Children
She has been the household. The children's routine, discipline, and sense of stability run through her. He is coming back into a rhythm he did not build and will feel like an outsider in a home that is supposed to be his.
He will try to find his place. The instinct is right, but the way he asserts it early will bump against an established household. The children will feel the friction between the adults before either of you names it.
Prepare the children before he comes home.
For younger children: Daddy is coming home, and sometimes a person from the state will check in to make sure everything is okay. That is normal and nothing to worry about.
For older children and teenagers: their father has conditions on his release, an officer will check in, and it does not mean he is going back. The family's job is to be steady while things settle.
Do not use supervision as a weapon between the two of you. Build his supervision requirements into the household schedule before he arrives.
Washington has strong employment protections for people with records. The Washington Fair Chance Act prohibits most employers from asking about criminal history or running a background check until after determining the applicant is otherwise qualified. Washington has also expanded vacating (the state's term for clearing) certain convictions. Washington's healthcare, technology (the Seattle-area tech sector), aerospace and manufacturing (Boeing), construction, logistics, agriculture, and maritime sectors offer accessible employment, though the cost of living in the Puget Sound region absorbs wages.
Money is the early stressor, sharpened by Washington's housing costs. He may not earn immediately. Build a budget that does not depend on his income in the first month.
The First 90 Days in Washington
Reporting: Washington requires prompt reporting to the community corrections officer after release. Know the officer, location, and reporting date before release. Missing the first appointment is a violation.
Drug testing: Testing begins early and continues. If there is substance use history, the first 90 days carry the highest relapse risk. Address it honestly before the person comes home.
Identity documents: Washington driver's license or state ID, Social Security card, and birth certificate are needed to work, bank, and access benefits. Washington ID is issued through the Washington Department of Licensing. Birth certificates for those born in Washington come through the Washington Department of Health, Center for Health Statistics, or the local health department. Social Security cards are replaced at the local SSA office.
Medicaid: Washington expanded Medicaid under the ACA, and Washington was in the first wave of states approved for Medicaid pre-release enrollment, meaning some people can be enrolled in Apple Health before they leave custody. Apple Health (Washington Medicaid) is available to income-eligible returning citizens, most of whom qualify immediately. Apply through Washington Healthplanfinder (wahealthplanfinder.org) immediately after release if not already enrolled. Coverage includes prescriptions, mental health services, substance use treatment, and primary care.
Employment: Washington's Fair Chance Act delays criminal history inquiry until after the applicant is found qualified. Vacating convictions helps over time. Target healthcare, technology, aerospace and manufacturing, construction, logistics, agriculture, and maritime.
If There Is a Violation
Washington community custody violations are handled by the DOC, which can impose sanctions or return the person to custody. Probation violations go before the sentencing court. Both can move quickly.
If you know about a violation in your home, you are not required to report it, but you cannot lie when an officer asks directly. Encourage your person to self-report technical violations before they are caught. Contact an attorney immediately if a warrant or hold is issued.
What Families Can Do Before Release
Contact the DOC facility counselor 60 to 90 days before the expected release date. Ask about supervision conditions, whether the person is on community custody or probation, the residence approval process, and the reporting requirements that apply immediately after release.
Contact the Washington DOC Community Corrections division for supervision questions.
Contact Washington reentry organizations. The DOC reentry program, the Post-Prison Education Program (Seattle), Pioneer Human Services, Interaction Transition, and Washington's reentry councils provide navigation, housing support, and employment assistance.
Contact Washington 211. Dial 2-1-1 or visit wa211.org to find housing, food, mental health, and reentry resources statewide.
Contact the Northwest Justice Project (nwjustice.org) for civil legal assistance including vacating convictions, housing, and reentry matters.
Frequently asked questions
What will a Washington officer check in my home?
A Washington community corrections officer conducting a home visit will verify that the supervised person resides at the approved address, that no prohibited conditions exist, and that community custody conditions are being met. Washington community custody conditions commonly include a search condition, so officers can search the supervised person's residence and property. Prohibited items depend on conditions and may include firearms, alcohol, or drugs. Anything you do not want found should not be where the supervised person has access.
Can a returning person live with me in public housing?
Federal HUD rules governing public housing, Section 8, and vouchers allow housing authorities to restrict certain conviction types, most commonly drug-related and violent offenses. Washington public housing authorities follow these federal rules. Washington has strong tenant screening protections, but federal housing rules still apply for federally assisted housing. Check your specific program's policies before the address is submitted. Private leases may also contain relevant terms, and Puget Sound housing is expensive.
How do I prepare my children for their father coming home?
For younger children: Daddy is coming home, and sometimes a person from the state will check in to make sure everything is okay -- it is normal and nothing to worry about. For older children and teenagers: be honest that their father has conditions on his release and an officer will check in, but that it does not mean he is going back. Do not use supervision as a threat between the two of you. Children learn from how the adults treat the supervision reality.
What Washington conditions affect my household?
Conditions vary by individual but commonly include: curfews; prohibition on alcohol or drug possession; prohibition on weapon access; a search condition; mandatory drug testing; restrictions on leaving the state without permission; mandatory reporting; supervision fees; and required program or treatment attendance. Higher-risk sex offense classifications may carry community protection zone residency restrictions. Know every condition before the person moves into your home.
Does Washington ban-the-box apply to employers?
Yes. The Washington Fair Chance Act prohibits most employers from asking about criminal history or running a background check until after determining the applicant is otherwise qualified. Washington has also expanded vacating certain convictions. Target healthcare, technology (Seattle-area), aerospace and manufacturing (Boeing), construction, logistics, agriculture, and maritime sectors, while noting that Puget Sound cost of living absorbs wages.
What is the highest-risk window after release in WA?
The first 30 days. Reporting must happen promptly after release. Drug testing begins immediately. The search condition is active from day one. The address must already be approved. Apple Health enrollment should be initiated or confirmed (Washington allows pre-release enrollment for some). Identity documents need to be in hand. Everything that can be arranged before the release date should be done before the person leaves the facility.
How do I hold the line with an adult child who pushes back?
Separate the supervision conditions from your household expectations. The conditions -- including the search condition -- are the state's terms, not your rules, but they operate in your home. Your household expectations are what two adults sharing a space negotiate. Have both conversations before they arrive. Tell them explicitly you will not lie to their officer, will not cover for violations, and that this is not about your authority -- it is about what you will and will not absorb on their behalf.
When does Apple Health restart after release?
Washington expanded Medicaid under the ACA and was in the first wave for Medicaid pre-release enrollment, meaning some people can be enrolled in Apple Health before leaving custody. Apple Health (Washington Medicaid) is available to income-eligible returning citizens, most of whom qualify immediately. Apply through Washington Healthplanfinder at wahealthplanfinder.org immediately after release if not already enrolled. Coverage includes prescriptions, mental health services, substance use treatment, and primary care.
What Washington reentry resources help families?
Contact the DOC facility counselor 60 to 90 days before release to confirm supervision type and start the residence approval process. The Washington DOC Community Corrections division handles supervision. The Post-Prison Education Program, Pioneer Human Services, and Interaction Transition provide reentry support. Dial 2-1-1 for local resources. The Northwest Justice Project (nwjustice.org) provides civil legal assistance including vacating convictions.
What if my person violates supervision in my home?
Washington community custody violations are handled by the DOC, which can impose sanctions or return the person to custody. Probation violations go before the sentencing court. If you know about a violation you are not required to report it, but you cannot lie when directly asked. Encourage self-reporting of technical violations before they are discovered. Contact an attorney immediately if a warrant or hold is issued. ---
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