New prison nursery program helps incarcerated moms bond with their babies, learn parenting skills and access programming.
Story by Marcus Wilkins, Photos by Garry Brix
![Prison Nursery Program caregivers, incarcerated residents of the Vandalia prison, help support moms and babies, providing childcare, respite and advice.](/sites/doc/files/styles/original/public/media/image/2025/02/Resident%20caregivers%203.jpg?itok=Xndszgh5)
Select residents who are expectant mothers at Women’s Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center (WERDCC) in Vandalia, Missouri, will begin welcoming their newborns to a newly completed nursery as soon as February.
![Kim Perkins manages the Prison Nursery Program, which includes parenting classes and other programming to help prepare moms for success after release.](/sites/doc/files/styles/max_width_325/public/media/image/2025/02/Perkins%202.jpg?itok=L9vmCNAs)
Thanks to bipartisan legislation passed in 2022 by the Missouri General Assembly and signed by former Missouri Governor Mike Parson, a WERDCC housing unit wing has been remodeled and furnished to include cribs, infant bathing rooms, designated areas for educational sessions, kitchen space for heating up bottles and seven rooms for up to 14 mothers and their babies.
The correctional center nursery program, which officially opens this winter, awaits seven babies within the first several months. Infants will remain at the nursery for up to 18 months while mothers provide full-time care for their little ones, participate in educational and therapeutic programming, assist in maintaining a safe and loving environment, and prepare to return to the community.
“This is going to be transformative for the women who come through this program,” said Kim Perkins, WERDCC nursery program manager. “I believe we are going to see huge changes in the lives of the women — and reduced recidivism rates — because they’ll be leaving with a strong bond with their baby.”
![Bedrooms in the newly remodeled wing at Women's Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center provide space for up to 14 moms and babies to bond for up to 18 months after birth.](/sites/doc/files/styles/original/public/media/image/2025/02/DSC_3139.jpg?itok=f4SRb9-5)
Senate Bill 683 set a target date to open the nursery by July 2025. With the renovations and the procurement of supplies and equipment completed — and new department procedures and educational curriculums in place — the program is opening months ahead of schedule.
Missouri is now one of 10 states with a correctional center nursery program, a list that includes California, Illinois, Indiana, Nebraska, New York, Ohio, South Dakota, Washington and West Virginia. Nebraska, which launched its program in 1994, found that women who participated saw a 28% reduction in recidivism, a 39% reduction in returning to prison and savings of more than $6 million over the first 10 years.
In addition to eight Missouri Department of Corrections staff members (including Perkins) on the unit, five resident caregivers have been trained to assist with the babies and mothers — and provide daycare services while moms complete continuing education courses. The nursery also facilitates regular visits from an outside pediatrician and services from federally funded programs including Head Start and Parents as Teachers.
![The Infant Development Center in the nursery wing at Women's Eastern Reception, Diagnostic & Correctional Center provides games, toys and equipments for babies born to incarcerated moms and a place for resident caregivers to look after the little ones while their moms are in class.](/sites/doc/files/styles/original/public/media/image/2025/02/DSC_3119.jpg?itok=BSXbeRNP)
Perkins, a Vandalia native with 25 years of experience in social-service work, joined the Missouri Department of Corrections and WERDCC in 2021 as an institutional parole officer. As a mother of two who was widowed in 2016, she offers a unique perspective on navigating trauma and motherhood.
“I had to really think about my priorities in life and what was most important to me and to my family,” Perkins said. “That’s when I went back into behavioral health because it just helps so much in my healing process. Helping other people through times of difficulty, whether it’s substance abuse or a loss or having grown up in a family that didn’t provide a solid base for them. Most of these moms experienced trauma at a young age.”
Donate!
The nursery program welcomes donations of items such as diapers, wipes, formula, diaper pail refills, diaper bags, lotion, baby shampoo, pacifiers, baby soap, diaper rash ointment, collapsible play pens, burp cloths, receiving blankets, bottles, and teethers. Contact Nursery Program Manager Kim Perkins at 573-594-2498 or kimberley.perkins@doc.mo.gov.