 So mae project Building Futures yn rhywbeth ddiddorol iawn i ni, rhywbeth i ni'n brod iawn o honni, a mi'n gwytho gyda carchar presgoid ac yn cyflogi dynion sydd o hyd yn y carchar i wneud swyddi hi'r dymor, swyddi sydd angen achno ni, felly dim bod ni'n cael ei wneud swyddi i'r dynion yma, swyddi sydd angen, swyddi skilled, a mae nhw'n dod at o wneud tra bod nhw yn y carchar, yn gwneud y shift ac yn angen am fynd yn ôl i'r carchar. Before my incarceration, I've done construction, I've run tire shop, but mainly it's in management of people because they were all my businesses, so I have that experience and brought that with me. Normally in the prison environment the jobs that get offered are jobs where they get a bit repetitive. It's all labour-intensed rather than using your abilities and your experience, which you've got before I went to prison. So my responsibilities now are that I look after a team full of lads up and down the valleys and I manage 17 compounds at the moment. I enjoy feeling the responsibility, being involved. I committed myself to make a change, to empower myself to learn as I went through my incarceration to obtain the knowledge in different sectors. So health and safety management, I've done all them courses in prison and sometimes I do feel it that I am a prisoner and I'm still here working, but that just empowers me even more because all I want to do is prove more to myself and my family that nothing's going to knock me off my standing now. From a personal perspective, the pathways programme has probably been as impactful for me as it has the individuals themselves. So far we've had 11 delegates come in from H&P Prescoid and us and they've been working with the programme. So far seven of those individuals have now left the justice system and they've actually got sustained employment still working and helping to deliver the self-wilts metro programme. And that means the absolute will to me to understand that as a collective we've really provided opportunities for people which ordinarily would have really struggled once they left the justice system. So effaith ar y dynion yn rhywbeth positif iawn maen nhw'n gweud o'r thon i, dim yn unig angen nhw, ond ar ei ddelioedd, ar y gymuned, maen nhw'n byw yn ddi, ar yr economi, maen nhw'n rhywbeth positif ti'ch hwnt, maen nhw'n taim nhw'n gynnain nhw'n dyfodol wehannol, i'r dyfodol nhw'n weithiau yn meddwl sydd yn ar unig llwydbyr oedd gynnain nhw, a nawr mae gynnain nhw rhywbeth wehannol, rhywbeth positif ac mae'n i gwaith hynny aeth mawr i nhw'n i'w aetelioedd. So, what's happened with the opportunity that they've given to me is that I might be able to give back to the community where I took from. I've also got a career that at the end of it now I can come out, I can have been on a very good wage, and more to the point, I mix in with the right people, I'm making new friends, new colleagues, and the fact that I'm getting out to my family in ten months' time, a different man to when I come in, that is the best for me.