Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden wants to set a “national goal of ensuring 100% of formerly incarcerated individuals have housing” when they are released from prison, his campaign said Tuesday.

Compared with the general population, the formerly incarcerated are almost 10 times as likely to be homeless, according to a recent report by the Prison Policy Initiative.

Should he be elected in 2020, the former vice president plans to work toward closing that gap by demanding that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development “only contract with entities that are open to housing individuals looking for a second chance,” the campaign said.

Biden additionally wants to increase funding for transitional housing, reversing cuts made by the Trump administration.

The goal is part of a larger criminal justice reform plan released by the Biden campaign Tuesday. According to a document provided to reporters, Biden hopes to enact changes including ending the federal use of mandatory minimums, private prisons and the death penalty; prioritizing hate crimes in the Department of Justice again; and developing a new task force outside the DOJ that will “make recommendations for tackling discrimination and other problems in our justice system that results from arrest and charging decisions.”

“Today, too many people are incarcerated in the United States ― and too many of them are black and brown,” the campaign said in the document. “To build safe and healthy communities, we need to rethink who we’re sending to jail, how we treat those in jail, and how we help them get the health care, education, jobs, and housing they need to successfully rejoin society after they serve their time.