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Vet Treatment Courts
#1
Working but VA Improvement Needed to Increase Access

The growing Veterans Justice Outreach program, which has helped ease criminal justice problems
for veterans’ across the U.S., is working, but the Department of Veterans Affairs needs to make
some improvements for more veterans to participate, according to a new watchdog report. The VA
needs to improve training, outreach, and planning, among other actions, according to a new report
from the Government Accountability Office.
The report names four key barriers identified by both VA and GAO that justice-involved
veterans face in accessing the specialized services through the Veterans Treatment Court
Improvement Act of 2018. According to GAO’s report, these barriers included Veterans Justice
Outreach specialists failing to identify veterans eligible for their services, lack of awareness of the
program within jurisdictions, workforce capacity constraints among specialists, and confusion
within the veteran community on eligibility. In the jurisdictions where they work, these specialists
assist justice-involved-veterans in navigating the courts in order to decrease subsequent risks of
recidivism and homelessness. “VJO officials have said that additional research will help them to
identify how VA can improve access to the program and VA services,” Elizabeth Curda, Director,
Education, Workforce and Income Security Issues for GAO said in an email to Military Times.
“However, VA hasn’t fully demonstrated through its research or other efforts what or where the
needs are.”
Over 50 percent of veterans involved in the justice system live with mental health or substance abuse issues,
 according to VA research. GAO notes that arrest and detention can further increase
veterans’ risk of mental health conditions and homelessness. This increased risk is, in part, why
Veterans Treatment Courts (VTC) were first established in 2008. These courts operate parallel to
state and local criminal courts, modeled after drug courts, with staff specifically trained to address
needs that veterans facing charges might have. Between 2009 and 2016, the number of these courts
in the U.S. grew from 25 to 461. From 2017 to 2019, over 40,000 justice-involved veterans were
assisted by the program, according to the Sept. 14 report (that number dropped to just over 36,000
in 2020, but the VA attributes the drop to COVID-19 restrictions).
Retired Army Colonel D.J. Reyes, a senior mentor program coordinator for the 13th Judicial
Circuit’s Veterans Treatment Court in Tampa, Florida, said improvement to the program comes
down to resources. “The VJO program is a vital and critical requirement for the [Veterans
Treatment Courts] to continue to be successful,” Reyes told Military Times. “Having said that,
there are challenges.”
In 2018, Congress mandated that VA hire at least 50 additional Veterans Justice Outreach
specialists to help execute this veteran-focused avenue of criminal justice. Since the passage of the
bill, GAO found VA hired 51 such personnel, bringing the total number of specialists to almost
400 nationwide. However, VTC courts and VJO specialists are not evenly distributed across the
country. Data mapped by GAO showed that the number of jails where veterans might be detained
was far higher than the number of VJO specialists available per state. In many cases, the report
notes, large distances between VA facility locations where VJO specialists work and justice
jurisdictions limited their ability to provide services.
While VA concurred with the findings, GAO said the agency did inadequate planning to
address them. “Absent a comprehensive risk assessment, VA is not well-positioned to develop
appropriate strategies to mitigate the greatest risks, which may limit its ability to help justice 
involved veterans receive assistance and avoid re-incarceration,” the report reads. Ultimately,
Reyes said he hopes these services continue to grow in availability, particularly in communities
where substance use and mental illness may be elevated. While the recommendations from GAO
may seek to improve the system, Reyes says execution of a better program is actually hinged
around funds rather than organization. “Our problem, which is the problem of 99.9 percent of all
jurisdictions,” he said, “is money.”
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