Resource Letter for Judges and Attorneys Handling Cases Involving Mental Health and IDD

October 17, 2023

This resource letter is designed to facilitate communication among the JCMH, the judiciary, attorneys, and mental health stakeholders. Please forward this letter to any judges, attorneys, mental health professionals, law enforcement, or other community and state leaders who might be interested. To ensure that you regularly receive this letter, please click on the subscribe button at the bottom of this page, if you have not already. 

Announcing the Mental Health Courts Collaborative!

Without accessible resources, some people with mental illness cycle through the court system repeatedly. Mental Health Court Programs can interrupt this cycle by connecting justice-involved individuals with long-term community-based treatment, resources, and ongoing judicial monitoring. Texas counties with a population of 200,000 or more are required by law to create a Mental Health Court Program unless the county seeks but does not receive funding for such a program. See Tex. Gov’t. Code 125.005. Currently, over fifty percent of the counties of this size do not have a Mental Health Court Program that serves adults.

 

JCMH is launching the Mental Health Courts Collaborative, a program providing technical assistance and support for judges who want to start a Mental Health Court Program or judges whose Mental Health Court Program is less than a year old. Consisting of three online sessions in early 2024 and an in-person component at the annual conference of the Texas Association of Specialty Courts, the small group will cover topics critical to the creation of a Mental Health Court Program: model courts, judicial ethics, grant writing, and more. This Collaborative will be for judges, by judges, with the chance to learn from experienced mentor judges and collaborate with other judges facing the same challenges.

 

Applications are now open and must be received by November 1, 2023. More information can be found here.

For a complete list of Resources, please visit the Judicial Commission on Mental Health webpage. Information provided by the JCMH should not be read as a commentary by the Supreme Court of Texas, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, or any other court. The JCMH website is not equipped to facilitate dialogue or conversation about matters related to the information in this communication. For more information about the JCMH, please visit our website.

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Judicial Commission on Mental Health | TexasJCMH.gov