From King County Council Communications
The Metropolitan King County Council unanimously adopted an ordinance today giving the green light to establish a new Veterans Treatment Court as a special unit of the County’s nationally-recognized Regional Mental Health Court.
Based on other therapeutic court models, Veterans Treatment Court will help link veterans involved in the criminal justice system who are suffering from war-related trauma, such as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), to treatment and support services.
“This new Veterans Treatment Court will connect veterans to the services and benefits they have earned and will improve the lives of those veterans who may be struggling as they transition back into civilian life,” said Councilmember Bob Ferguson, prime sponsor of the ordinance. “We can pilot a Veterans Treatment Court without expending additional resources, and we owe it to our veterans to make sure they get the support they need.”
Today’s action follows up on Ferguson’s call last year for identifying ways to establish a Veterans Treatment Court in King County. The legislation launches a one-year pilot project to provide specialty court services to veterans within the existing resources of the Regional Mental Health Court.
The legislation also asks the Executive to review options for continuing veterans treatment court beyond the initial pilot year and to recommend a way to provide ongoing support for the Veterans Treatment Court from the recently renewed Veterans and Human Services Levy.
Following the therapeutic court model, the new Veterans Treatment Court will focus on treatment and rehabilitation rather than incarceration. The Veterans Treatment Court will connect eligible veterans to treatment and counseling services available through the federal Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The VA coordinates with local governments and criminal justice agencies to identify justice-involved veterans and connect them with services as part of its Veterans Justice Outreach Initiative.
By focusing exclusively on veterans and their unique circumstances, the new Veterans Treatment Court will be better equipped to help veterans suffering from PTSD and TBI, which are emerging as the “signature injuries” of the current conflicts. PTSD and TBI can make it more difficult to reintegrate into civilian life and can potentially trigger behaviors that draw veterans into the criminal justice system.
The first Veterans Treatment Court was started in Buffalo in 2008. Since then, at least 80 jurisdictions across the country have established veterans treatment courts. With today’s action, King County joins four other Washington counties – Clark, Pierce, Spokane and Thurston – that have specialty veterans courts.
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