Announcements:
Registration for the Drug Court Planning Initiative (DCPI) is open from August 18-September 29, 2008. The National Drug Court Institute will deliver five-day
training programs for eligible jurisdictions who are planning to develop an adult drug court. DCPI is designed to educate jurisdictions on the basic concepts of a drug
court program and equip teams with fundamental skills necessary to implement a program.
Visit the "Recent Additions" tab of the American University Drug Court Clearinghouse web site, where
our partners have recently updated their Frequently Asked Questions list with hyperlinks to directly connect drug court
practitioners to commonly asked drug court questions and valuable responses.
Planning a drug court and need information to begin? Go to Taking Aim
How to Develop and/or Redefine Your Target Drug Court Population
September is National Recovery Month.
Overview:
The Drug Court Discretionary Grant Program provides financial and technical assistance to states, state courts, local courts, units of local government, and Indian tribal governments to develop and implement treatment drug courts that effectively integrate substance abuse treatment, mandatory drug testing, sanctions and incentives, and transitional services in a judicially supervised court setting with jurisdiction over nonviolent, substance-abusing offenders. Programs funded by Drug Court Discretionary Grant Program are required by law to target nonviolent offenders and must implement a drug court based on 10 key components. This program supports the following drug court activity:
- Adult drug court implementation and enhancement.
- Statewide enhancement.
Legislation: The Drug Court Program was established by the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (Public Law 103-322).
Funding: FY 2008 funding was $13 million.
Eligibility: States (including Guam, American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia), state courts, local courts, units of local government, and Indian tribal governments may apply for funding.
How/When To Apply: The FY 2008 solicitation was released November 13, 2007, and applications were due January 10, 2008. Applicants must apply through Grants.gov.
Performance Measures: Starting with the January-June 2008 reporting period, the performance measures will now be collected quarterly
through BJA's Performance Measurement Tool (PMT). Grantees will upload their performance measures results from the
new web site to the Grants Management System (GMS) on a semi-annual basis. The BJA PMT will support grantees' ability to
identify, collect, and submit performance measures data for BJA grant awards. An assigned userID and password is needed to access the system. Please contact the
help desk at 1-888-252-6867 to obtain a userID. The Drug Court User's Guide
provides more information about this process.
Results from Performance Measure Data:
Implementation Grants: January-June 2008
Enhancement Grants: January-June 2008
Statewide Grants: January-June 2008
Training and Technical Assistance:
The National Drug Court Training and Technical Assistance Program (NDCTTAP) supports DCDG by increasing the knowledge and skills of drug court practitioners to plan,
implement, and sustain effective drug court programs. It also builds capacity at the state and local levels to provide comprehensive practitioner-based training and
technical assistance. The following are the three components of NDCTTAP:
- The goal of the Drug Court Planning Initiative (DCPI) is to provide communities with the knowledge, skills,
and tools necessary to implement a drug court. Particular emphasis is placed on learning new roles, cross training, and developing both a team and a coordinated
strategy across justice and treatment systems.
- The goal of the Drug Court Training Initiative (DCTI) is to provide state-of-the-art training on a variety of subjects to operational adult, juvenile, family,
and tribal drug courts and state agencies.
- The goal of the Drug Court Technical Assistance Initiative (DCTAI) is to provide technical assistance on a variety of subjects to operational adult, juvenile,
family, and tribal drug courts and state agencies.
Related Information:
Drug Court Discretionary Grant Program (FY 2008 Competitive Grant Announcement)
Frequently Asked Questions
FY 2007 Drug Court Grant Awards
Tribal Drug Courts Training and Technical Assistance Program (Competitive Grant Announcement)
Drug Court Discretionary Grant Program (FY 2007 Competitive Grant Announcement)
FY 2006 Drug Court Grant Awards
FY 2005 Drug Court Grant Awards
BJA Drug Court Discretionary Grant Program (FY 2005 Competitive Grant Announcement)
FY 2005 Resource Guide for Drug Court Applicants
FY 2004 Drug Court Grant Awards
FY 2003 Drug Court Grant Awards
FY 2002 Drug Court Grant Awards
Related Publications:
Painting the Current Picture: A National Report Card On Drug Courts and Other Problem-Solving Court Programs in the United States PDF
Drug Court Case Management: Role, Function, and Utility PDF
Local Drug Court Research: Navigating Performance Measures and Process Evaluations (PDF)
Drug Courts: The Second Decade (PDF)
Defining Drug Courts: The Key Components (PDF)
Strategies for Court Collaboration with Service Communities (PDF)
Methamphetamine Resources:
Drug Courts: An Effective Strategy for Communities Facing Methamphetamine (PDF)
MethResources.gov
Methamphetamine Fact Sheet