All About Change - Tom Vozzo: Ending Recidivism through the Homeboy Way
Episode Date: January 20, 2026Tom Vozzo came to Homeboy Industries in a moment when they needed his skills. Around 2012, the organization was facing a financial crunch, and Tom stepped up from Homeboy volunteer to CEO steering the... company to financial stability. Working at Homeboy changed Tom as well. Writing in his book, ‘The Homeboy Way,’ Tom said that after years of working with the poor, forgotten, and demonized people of our society, he came to learn that he didn’t really know as much about life as he thought. Tom and the rest of the Homeboy team continue to support formerly gang-involved and previously incarcerated people, helping them redirect their lives and become contributing members of our community. In doing so, they make a bold and critical statement: No life is disposable, no person is beneath society, no person cannot be better, and no person will not benefit from helping another person reach the potential of who they can be. Episode Chapters 0:00 Intro 2:31 The role of healing in the Homeboy Way 3:57 How people first choose to leave gang life 7:38 How has Homeboy Industries changed Tom? 14:47 Expanding the Homeboy influence across the globe 16:20 Pushing back on stigma against formerly gang-involved folks 19:33 Tom makes the case for why minimizing recidivism needs to be a bipartisan cause 22:32 Activism in and out of the workplace 24:14 Tom’s book: The Homeboy Way 28:38 Outro and Goodbye For video episodes, watch on www.youtube.com/@therudermanfamilyfoundation Stay in touch: X: @JayRuderman | @RudermanFdn LinkedIn: Jay Ruderman | Ruderman Family Foundation Instagram: All About Change Podcast | Ruderman Family Foundation To learn more about the podcast, visit https://allaboutchangepodcast.com/ Jay’s brand new book, Find Your Fight, in which Jay teaches the next generation of activists and advocates how to step up and bring about lasting change. You can find Find Your Fight wherever you buy your books, and you can learn more about it at https://www.walmart.com/ip/Find-Your-Fight-Make-Your-Voice-Heard-for-the-Causes-That-Matter-Most-Hardcover-9781963827071/10817862336
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to All About Change.
Hey, All About Change listeners, it's Jay here.
And I wanted to tell you my book, Find Your Fight, is now available in 800 Walmart stores.
In the book, I talk about my biggest successes and those of others and also failures as an activist.
And my personal philosophy on how to make a difference.
It's the perfect gift for friends and family who care about making a positive change in our society.
Tom Vozo came to Homeboy Industries in a moment.
moment when they needed his skills. Homeboy Industries provides hope, training, and support to
formerly gang involved and previously incarcerated people, allowing them to redirect their lives
and become contributing members to our community. As an organization, they strive for five key
outcomes. Reduce recidivism, reduce substance abuse, improve social connectedness,
improve housing safety and stability, and reunify families. But around 2,000,
12, the organization was facing a financial crunch. Tom joined Homeboy Industries as CEO steering the
company to financial stability. But working at Homeboy changed Tom as well. In writing his book,
The Homeboy Way, Tom said that after years of working with the poor, forgotten, and demonized people
of our society, he came to learn that he really didn't know as much about life as he thought.
Thank God, the gang crisis is not as prominent as it was in late 80s and 90s when Homeboy
industries was first founded. But Tom and the rest of the Homeboy team continue to support
formerly gang involved and previously incarcerated people, helping them redirect their lives
and become contributing members of our community. In doing so, they make a bold and critical
statement. No life is disposable. No person is beneath society. No person cannot be better.
And no person will not benefit from helping another person reach the potential of who they can be.
recently retired as CEO transitioning to a senior advisor position. He's still heavily involved with
Homeboy Industries and now hosts a podcast called The Homeboy Way, where he shares stories of
growth and healing. Tom Vozo, welcome to All About Change. Thank you, Jay. Appreciate you having me.
I am really looking forward to this discussion. I learned a lot about you and about Homeboy Industries,
and it's an important conversation, so thank you. You're welcome. I've already
given an introduction about the Homeboy Way in the intro, but can you briefly tell listeners
about the process and why has it been such a success and the key role that healing plays
in the Homeboy Way? You know, Homeboy Industries, we're based here in Los Angeles, and we're a
nonprofit organization, and in short, we help gang members leave gang life behind and not
recidivate back into prison. Now, we work with over...
10,000 people every year, 500 people, part of our paid program, which we can talk more about in a minute.
But essentially, when people come out of prison and jail, they really don't want to go back to that lifestyle.
But most times they have no other option.
I mean, they've got to survive on the streets.
They've got to get enough money for food and shelter.
But when they walk through our doors at Homeboy Industries, we help them.
We give them a tangible help.
And now every one of our folks are victims of complex trauma, their second, third generation gang members.
They were told your life is about the only way to survive is join a gang.
And that's what they did.
And they joined a gang was a false hope.
They did something bad, go to prison, and they're coming out, they want something different.
And so really, because of their trauma, they perpetuated trauma.
What we're all about is helping people heal, stabilize their life situation,
help them develop positive relationship for the first time.
And healing is a key ingredient, all of that.
I listened to a recording of your podcast that you did with Father Greg Boyle.
And you guys talked about that.
So maybe you can talk a little bit about that, about how someone gets to the point where they're like,
I don't want that life anymore.
I don't want to hang out with these people.
I want to make a change.
I'm seeking healing in my life.
How does that come about?
How does someone make that decision?
Yeah.
No, I definitely understand your question.
And what's interesting is people don't use those words as they're walking through our doors looking to change life.
They're just tired of that lifestyle.
They're tired of being always hustling on the street for money.
They know what they're doing is illegal, but they don't find another way around it.
They're tired of the family telling them they're not going to amount to anything.
And mostly they don't want their children to be in that same situation as they were in.
And so what Homeboy has been around for now 38 years, and what we represent is I really hope that someone can walk through our doors and change their life going forward.
So many people come into Homeboy and say, I just need help.
Now, they're not really exactly sure.
They can't put words of the type of help you're looking for, but they're tired of that lifestyle.
They're tired of what it does to them and their family.
And they don't even know, they use the words of their, they're broken or they've been traumatized.
I mean, they just, really, they come out of the prison system angry and frustrated.
You know, all their life, they've been told they're not going to amount to anything.
The educational system has failed them.
The criminal justice system is always pointing their finger at them.
Society sort of demonizes them.
And so they're tired to be on that side of it.
And as you walk through the doors at Homeboy and anybody listening,
we definitely invite you all to come to Homeboy and visit.
You feel an energy.
You see how people want to be their best selves when they're at Homeboy
because in a safe environment,
there are over 200 different gangs in the county of Los Angeles,
but we work with the gang member.
And so we, as I said, we have an 18-month program,
but not many people go through from beginning of the end
in the straight 18 months, people fall backwards.
There's a lot of challenges in their life,
the pull of their gang, trying to bring them back into the fall there,
whether it's drugs or alcohol or a situation with a parole officer.
So we give people multiple chances.
The thing we, one few rules we have is that you can't be running with the gang,
though, and that's the banging hangar, or slanging, no selling drugs,
no hanging around with the gang members, no doing gang activity.
because if you're not willing to leave that gang behind,
then you're not really doing our program.
You're not working on yourself.
But the draw is tough, you know,
because it's the only relationships they've had in their life.
And so oftentimes, as we're asking them not to hang around with the gang,
that means we're telling them,
don't hang around with your siblings.
Don't hang around with your uncle, you know.
And the people that you thought were there all your life were saying,
stay away.
And so that, it's the loyalty pull more so than anything else.
And a lot of people think there's violence involved and threats.
That's not as much in place, but it's the loyalty that they had developed at a young person's age to the gang.
That's that we're trying to sort of show there's a better way.
You don't have to be loyal to that type of lifestyle.
I'm really fascinated by the way Homeboy Industries has shaped you personally.
As you said, you had a whole career as a CEO at several different, you know, major organizations.
And now that you've moved out of the position of CEO of Homeboy Industries and you're touring and you're lecturing on the value of Homeboy Industries.
How did this become a defining mission for you?
No, that's a good question.
No, I mean, I'll probably give you a little bit of a long answer to this.
You know, I show up at Homeboy.
Father Greg, I show up as a volunteer.
A couple months in, the organization was going through some financial stresses.
Father Greg asked me to come on board as CEO.
I already retired.
I thought I was just going to volunteer and do that type of thing for the rest of my life.
Didn't want to work again.
But the opportunity to be Father Greg's orbit was too good at an opportunity to pass up.
But what I loved about Homeboy from those first days is the authenticity of our
people of how, again, how they view how God's helping them on their path, that they're realizing
that God's not judging them. And as, you know, Greg would say, you know, God is too busy loving us
to be judging us. And I sat there and thought, oh, my gosh, if someone who has been in prison
for 25 years, if someone who's been in solitary confinement can sort of sit there and just feel
God's love, I'm thinking to myself, Tom, what are you missing? You've been
pay more attention, right? And so that has pushed me on to my spiritual journey. While I see Father
Greg often, we are our best exchanges really when we write emails to each other. It's like pen palest type of
thing. And I remember being stressed. And one year I was so focused on raising money and we're
coming up short. And even everything in my life got colored by. I thought about my friends.
Hey, I know how much money they have. They should give us more money. I started having a negative view of
people weren't donating enough, which is an awful attitude to have.
But then I was doing some spiritual reading at the end of the year.
And in my faith, and I've learned from Father Greg on Ignatian spirituality,
his concept called the king.
But it's really about the faith is about understanding, praying for God,
but also putting those values to action and to show up every day for someone who needs you.
And so then I, so I've been chatting with Greg.
agony, and he talks about that's where we look for joy and see our efforts.
That it's not about me saving somebody, but it's about me finding joy through others.
And when he explained that to me, a switch happened in my brain that, oh, every day, my job
is to show up, priority is to show up and find joy through others, seek joy through others.
And then all the other stuff, I eventually work on it and get it done.
But it's that attitude change that made a big difference that really has then propelled me.
deeper into my spiritual path.
So someone comes into Homeboy Industries and they're former gang member, they've been
incarcerated.
What are they ultimately receiving?
What type of benefits do they get?
And sometimes being in a gang, the money comes very quickly and there's a lot of money.
And how do you work against that?
Where do they see the benefit from moving away from that sort of easy life?
not easy life, I shouldn't say that, that easy money.
Easy money.
But it sounds cliche for me to give you this answer.
But what they get is love and they get a sense of family,
get a sense of people that care about them.
Early in my time, my homeboy, you know, I'm trying to, I'm the CEO now,
I'm management by walking around and I'm walking to the bakery one day.
And I hear one of our guys, George, talking to the manager asking for the weekend,
And George was one of our best farmers market guys, and he was asking for the weekend off, which is a big deal in the farmers market world.
And so the manager said yes, and then I went up to George, more glibly say, hey, you know, what do you do?
And I was just trying to create small talk.
And George says to me, I'm reporting in.
I say, reporting in, what's that mean?
He said, well, I'm going to county jail this weekend.
And you can see the expression on my face.
And so he explains, well, he was reporting at the county jail.
because he owed money.
And at that time, you can go into jail,
you can report into county jail for three days
and earn off what you owe.
Now, as an aside,
it is just nutty in our society
that when people leave the prison system,
they have thousands of dollars of debt,
not just restitution costs,
but court costs, parole officer costs.
And then to think that once they got out of prison
that first month, they're going to be able to get a job
that pays enough money for food shelter
and pay off the day,
it's just the nuttiest, nuttiest thing.
But George owed money, and he wanted to do it the legal way.
And I went on that and I thinking about it, wow, how great.
It's tough that he's going to jail, but he chose not to borrow money from his homies because he didn't want to be indebted with them.
He chose not to go to a loan shark.
He chose not to sell drugs on the street to get the money.
He was going to report into county jail and earn off half the money he owed, you know, trying to do it the right way because he felt like that's, that's, that's,
what we're asking of him.
Thought about it all weekend.
And then on Tuesday, I made a B-line-in, I wanted to see how it went.
And I go into the bakery, I see George.
And I say, George had to go.
And I can see the stress on his face, stress still on his face.
And what makes George's story different is that he was about six months.
He came out of prison six months prior.
And he got custody of his two kids, a 10-year-old and an 8-year-old.
It's not often the father gets custody of their kids.
Now, he's leaving gang life behind, so he has no family support to help with the kids.
And what happened on that weekend, the person who was going to watch his kids couldn't make it.
And so he reported to the county jail, left his 10-year-old, 8-year-old in their apartment,
in his apartment by themselves for the three-day weekend.
Now, just think about that as a parent.
Oh, my gosh.
How stressful would that be?
Now, the kids end up five, so that part of the story worked out.
But, like, what that taught me was people want to do the right thing, want to earn honest
day's wage, but also taught me not the judge that our folks faced enormous and possible
circumstances.
And so our instinct is sometimes judge, well, maybe you shouldn't have sort of reported into jail,
right?
And the other thing is, our other instinct is to try to problem solve.
And really, at that point, what George needed was just sort of support and caring and a hug, right?
because he kind of knew the tough situation he's in.
So it is an interesting dynamic about,
it's not about the mind.
These folks just want to move their life forward
in a positive, loving, caring way.
Tom, the Homeboy Network has expanded worldwide
under your leadership.
When you launched the global Homeboy Network in 2014,
you took local lessons from Homeboy's decades
of operating in L.A.,
but how did you expand it across the world?
You know, our network is something that,
like, a lot of the kids,
things at Homeboy just kind of grew organically. It's not something we planned and there's no
strategic plan in place or business development plan in place to grow the network. But over the years,
even today, there'll be over 8,000 visitors to Homeboy every year coming in, seeing what we're about,
taking a tour. We freely share our experiences in our programs and how we do our work.
Many colleges, universities, high schools come visit us. And then along the way, other organizations,
who are starting up, come the homeboy and say, hey, our city needs what you all do.
Can you come to our city?
And we said, no, no, we're not going to go, but we'll teach you, we'll tell you, we'll share it with you.
So over the years it has developed.
So now there are over 150 organizations that have modeled themselves after us.
And those organizations are in 42 states and seven countries.
And it really is about sharing best practices.
We're really clear early on that we don't want to be.
in other cities with our own teams that to really do gang rehabilitation and reentry,
it's got to be born from the local flavor there.
And so find leaders there and we'll teach them how we do it.
How do you deal with stigma?
Obviously, you know, you've reduced the stigma within Homeboy Industries,
but when you're dealing with the outside world and it hits you or it hits the clients
or the employees, how is that dealt with?
Because it's obviously prevalent in our society that people, once they have served time in prison, once they've been involved in a gang, there's a stigma that they face when they go out to the world.
Yeah, I want to give two answers to that question.
You know, obviously, it's one of our goals is to shine a light on the goodness of people, all people.
There's no such thing as bad people.
Everybody's got goodness in them.
And while Father Greg goes out and give speeches and I give speeches and we invite people a visit, it's really,
Again, it's this philosophy of getting relationship with people on the margins.
You can see that there's a whole bunch of reasons why they've had this tough lifestyle.
And if you can take away those hurdles, then they're actually going to have a lifestyle that everybody else wants to have.
You know, if I'm talking to a business community, I'll sit there and say, listen, we have a homegirl cafe.
It's a Zaggart rated cafe.
There's only seven other restaurants in downtown Los Angeles where that's high as a rating.
And it's fully run by gang members and felons.
So if your organization doesn't want to hire felons or gang members, well, you're missing
out on a workforce that, you know, every one of our businesses is run by a former gang member
and felon, right? And so we, that's a way of showing it.
You know, the other part of the answer I want to give is that we're realistic and our team's
realistic. We're not changing everybody's mind. And over and over again, our folks face the
stigma phase face the quiet rejections, whether they're trying to rent an apartment and they
don't, you know, they may get a Section 8 voucher, but they're not allowed to the apartment,
right? Or whether they're going to another county agency getting mental health services,
somehow our folks are put at the end of the line. So, you know, it's, I don't say our folks
are used to it and they're okay by it, but they're, they understand that's kind of like the
score and they're just going to keep putting the head down and kind of marching forward and we,
And we help them through that.
But sometimes it's heartbreaking the stigma that's out there that people still hold on.
But we're trying to get the message out that it's a group that's worth investing in.
And we are living proof that if you love somebody, trust them and invest in them, they change their life around.
It sounds like because of what some of the people at Homeboy Industries have gone through in their lives, in some ways they're better employees because they're not taking
for granted what many of us who are getting a job may take for granted. They're like, okay, well,
you know, this is another job and I want what's in it for me. But they may be saying, you know,
listen, this is a second chance at life. And maybe that makes them better. And they become very
loyal employees. Right. They really do. So maybe that's something that we miss out as a society,
that we're judging people and we're not realizing what we're missing. Yeah, amen to that.
Absolutely true.
Earlier this year, I talked to Steve Preston of Goodwill on the podcast.
We talked about Goodwill's work of reintroducing formerly incarcerated people into the workforce.
And I'd like to ask you a question that I presented to Steve as well.
Can you make the case for why minimizing recidivism needs to be a bipartisan cause?
And we're a living example of that because of Homeboy's reputation and the
work we've done. We've had people on both sides of the aisle come visit us and we sit down and we
talk to them. And, you know, it's on, I can kind of go on the stereotypical side. You know, it's the
healing part. It's the mental health crisis that's out there. All our people are victims of mental
health and complex trauma. So how do you heal so they don't recidivate? If you want to talk from the
business community side, investing in jobs, right? If people don't have meaningful employment,
they're going to be running in the streets and running with gangs to make money.
And so without it now, it's like any angle you take, it makes sense to invest in this community
with healing, education, and jobs, because we have shown they don't recidivate.
And so let me give you this, our statistics.
Now, we don't like talking about numbers that much.
Wouldn't be what Father Greg would do, but I talked enough foundations that I have to give out
my numbers.
But a number of years ago, a study was conducted about Homeboy Industries
and it showed independently funded study that two years later,
Sony was part of Homeboy Industries,
only had a 30% recidivism rate.
So in other words, 70% did not go back into the jail system under new charges.
And if you take the statewide average, that's two and a half times better.
So statewide average, it was the opposite.
It was 70% recidivated back in.
So look what that's costing society of all that,
incarceration. And yet we have serious violent offenders and we're able to, just by sheer caring for
them and loving them and trusting them, they change the life around. And that's a story that
resonates on both sides of the aisle. You'd think that you'd have the state of California banging
down your door saying, you know, how do we replicate this all across the state? Right. Now,
there you're, you've teed me up this sort of rant for a little bit. But I think what I've see, though,
is, you know, elected officials, whatever, but there's a big bureaucracy in state government.
And there's a, you know, look, the county of Los Angeles has a $50 billion budget, $50 billion
budget. And it's hard for us to get a million-dollar grant to do what we're doing because
they've got to keep the jails going and the sheriff's department going and all that going.
So it's a, it's a tougher story to talk through.
and it's, but what I've seen is community-based organization with private investment with a little bit of money.
That's a good confluence and it works.
I want to get back to you for a second.
And some of the folks who come onto my show, you know, they talk about their, that their activism happens outside of the nine to five.
But for you, for the past 15 years, your activism has been at work.
Have you made a conscious effort to keep the.
activist spirit in you now that you're no longer CEO of Humboy Industries?
Very much so.
And I appreciate how you frame up that question.
Because one of the ideas I want to communicate to people is helping out a nonprofit,
whether that's called activism, volunteering, don't even mean.
It doesn't have to happen on your off hours.
Right.
You can adopt those same philosophies in your life all day long.
So if you're waking up every day and your mantra to seek joy through others,
well, you can do that no matter of any workplace along the way.
If you're waking up in your life and you're doing what we ask people at homeboy
is to move ourselves to be on a relationship with people on the margins of our society
and just be on the, let's be in a relationship with them.
Don't wag your finger.
Just be in a relationship.
Well, that can happen.
It doesn't have to happen sort of only on off hours.
There's always marginal, wherever you are of any situation.
It's always someone who's marginalized there.
You can kind of be in that relationship.
And so to me, it's more of a sort of a life philosophy.
And so now I'm always, you know, six plus months into my senior-revisor role,
but I still get to come out on the Homeboy and live that out.
And so I don't see it being different.
No.
I want you to talk a little bit about your book.
And why did you write it?
And how has been the process of marketing and getting it out there, getting the message out there?
Called the Homeboy Way. It's been out for a couple of years now.
You know, the context is, again, I'm this corporate CEO of 26 years for-profit sector.
I saw up a Homeboy, and I really just want to help.
I want to see if my business skills can be used in a different way.
And I had, the way I approached Homeboy was, like, I already had a successful career.
I don't need to sort of find success or find my platform or reputation at Homeboy.
I'm just here to help.
You know, it was easy me to be that servant leader in that sense.
But every day, all those from early on, it's like, boy, homeboy approaches people in a way I didn't learn in the corporate world.
Homeboy approaches topics.
I never learned in my life in the corporate world, almost like a 180 degree difference.
In the corporate world, you're taught to don't, you have to set precedent.
If you do one thing for one person, you got to do for the other, not a homeboy.
Like, if you come to me today, if you come to the staff today and you need money for electricity,
you also going to shut your power off, we'll give you the money.
And so it might come us tomorrow with the same almost request, but we know more of their story.
And so we're going to say, no, we're not going to give you the money.
We may loan you the money or we may do something else for you.
And there's not this worry about setting precedent.
It's more about helping the individual.
So anyway, so there's lots of examples like that.
And the more extreme example is we, you know, one of the scourgers are still around in the world.
And our homeboy world is domestic violence, right?
And it's a terrible thing in that community.
And at homeboy, we have the victim and we have the abuser.
In the corporate world, you just drum that abuser out.
You just not have them part of your organization.
But we know if we're not helping that guy, women sometimes, no one else is going to help them.
They're going to keep on abusing people.
So we lean in to help.
Now, it's those types of things that I think, wow, Homeboy has a different approach.
And so I always thought, oh, if I was to go back into the for-profit world, what would I take with me from Homeboy to bring it back?
And so that's why I started writing the book.
Then along the way, I have a bunch of those lessons in there.
And then along the way, I wanted to highlight the struggles of the poor in our society, that there are to America, the America of you and I and America of the poor.
Not a great insight, but I was on the front lines with people who are poor.
and see the struggles of it.
And I see that, look, poverty rate in America
has been the same for the last 60 years,
has the same narrow band 12 to 13%.
And I take a step back at Homeboy.
We take people out of the prison system
who are poor, dirt poor,
and we're able to help them and help,
really not just help them heal,
but help lift them out of poverty
and get a job outside of Homeboy
that moves them up the line.
So I try to sort of shine
the life of how to help the working core
in America. And the third reason that I went into the book is my own spiritual path. And if a hard
charging type A personality, corporate executive can find his spiritual path. I think others can
as well. And it's made my life much more fulfilling. So I try to tell those stories as well.
You know, you touch on some things that, you know, really resonated with me. First of all,
I was a former prosecutor many years ago. And I prosecuted domestic violence. And what you say is true. We
focus on the victim and helping the victim. And the defendant or the person that's charged
often, you know, gets punished and pushed out and ostracized. And it doesn't help society.
And I don't think we've yet figured out how to deal with that. So I think that's a really important
point that you made. Also, you know, poverty in America, we don't seem to be solving that problem.
You know, it's an underclass that is always there and is from generation to generation continuing.
And I think as Americans, we have to learn how to fix that problem.
Yeah, and me as I call it as a business guy, look, what's the definition of poverty, not earning enough money?
So let's create more jobs.
And again, my workforce is a great work worth.
Let's create more jobs that gives them a decent pay and lift them out of poverty.
And that's how you lower poverty is getting people up the economic ladder.
Tom, thank you so much for being my guest in All About Change.
I appreciate having me.
I learned so much, and I really appreciate everything that you've done and what you've devoted your life to.
So thank you so much.
Well, thank you.
Thank you for being part of the All About Change community.
We aim to spark ideas for personal activism, helping you find your pathway to action beyond awareness.
So thank you for investing your time with us, learning and thinking about how just one person can make the choice to build a community and improve our world.
I believe in the empower of informed people like you to drive real change,
and I know that what we explore today will be a tool for you in that effort.
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