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    Justice Center~Main Page


    Justice Center subsection links
    Main Page   |   Who We Are   |   How We're Organized   |   What We Do   |  Reparative Board Meeting Schedule  |   2004 Annual Report   |   2005 Annual Report   |   2006 Annual Report   |   Contacts


    Join us for a free Workshop series at Kellogg-Hubbard Library:
    "Those Difficult Conversations -
    How to talk about what matters most with less stress and more success"


    download program flier 104 KB

    Note: As of January 2006, the Capital Community Justice Center (CCJC) has changed its name to the Montpelier Community Justice Center (MCJC).


    WHO WE ARE
    The Montpelier Community Justice Center (MCJC) was established in 2003 with the following mission:
    To ensure that the people it serves have the resources they need to resolve conflicts and promote problem solving in creative ways that encourage feelings of fairness, safety, and inclusion.
    The work of the Montpelier Community Justice Center (MCJC) is to create and promote opportunities for learning about, developing skills in, and participating in restorative justice programs and other problem solving processes for the people it serves, defined as those who live, work, conduct business, commit crimes, or play in Montpelier and its allied communities. MCJC assistance may include consulting, advising, educating, referring, convening, advocating for, and/or delivering conflict management, dispute resolution, and restorative justice programs in response to actual or potential conflicts and wrongdoings in the community.

    The MCJC Citizen Advisory Board, staff, and volunteers recognize the value of and potential for each citizen to contribute to the civility and well being of the community. The MCJC provides services that support people in attaining the ideal of a just community where every person is asked to take active responsibility for actions that harm or rebuild and to make choices that avoid infringing upon another person's basic human rights. For those people who have been affected by another's choice to do harm, the MCJC offers conflict resolution options that recognize and honor the emotional consequences and accompanying needs for restoration.

    The MCJC has a responsibility for building a community of people concerned about justice who have the skills necessary to contribute in practical and unique ways to the advancement of core democratic ideals such as all voices being heard and treated with equal respect. MCJC initiatives support individuals, families, and the community in making important decisions about issues that affect their lives where professionals facilitate rather than impose and where government's role is assumed to be one of doing things with the people it represents rather than to them or for them.

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    HOW WE'RE ORGANIZED
    The MCJC, while originated as a grass roots, citizen-based organization, operates under the auspices of the City of Montpelier in order to meet eligibility requirements for the funding it receives through a grant provided by the Agency of Human Services. The MCJC is housed in City Hall. The City of Montpelier employs an Executive Director, Yvonne Byrd, who assumes day to day responsibility for operating the MCJC within the parameters set by an agreement between the Citizen Advisory Board, the City of Montpelier, and the Agency of Human Services. The MCJC employs a program coordinator, Karen Blazer, who administers Justice F.Y.I. and the Reparative Boards and assists with other MCJC activities.
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    Citizen Advisory Board
    Members
    June Bascom, Chair
    Marina Back
    Paul Coates
    Jane Edwards
    Barbara Floersch
    Allie Francis
    John Gorczyk
    Mary Hooper
    Doug Hoyt
    Richard Jenney
    Evan Meenan
    Joanne Pereira
    Steve Reynes
    Glenn Sturgis
    Connie Weems
    Elizabeth Wigren
    A municipal/community partnership for the MCJC is guaranteed by giving responsibility to citizen volunteers for sharing in the governing of the center and delivering many of the services, and by the Agency of Human Services and the City, who provide support necessary to enable citizen volunteers to take on that responsibility.

    WHAT WE DO
    Currently, the MCJC operates programs that serve the community in five main ways, as outlined and described below.
    Adjudicated Offender Programs
    Reparative Boards - A group of citizen volunteers meets with people sentenced by the court to Reparative Probation. Victims and other affected parties are invited and welcomed into the process to participate at a level that they choose. Those responsible for offenses are expected to engage in a dialogue with the Board and the affected parties who attend the meeting in order to understand and acknowledge their wrongdoing and its effect on others and the community; to collaboratively develop a plan to make amends and to engage in activities that lessen the likelihood of repeating the offensive behavior. Currently there are two Reparative Boards in Montpelier with ten Board members and four meetings per month.

    Offender Re-entry & Graduated Sanctions - The MCJC will be developing a community based approach to planning for and supporting successful re-entry into the community for those people from the area who have been incarcerated and who are returning to live in our community.
    Direct Referral Programs
    Pre-charge police referrals - For certain low level disturbances, neighborhood disputes, and municipal violations, the police may refer those involved directly to the MCJC for a restorative justice process. Those who do not successfully complete the process are referred back to the police where the case is handled within the criminal justice system.

    Justice F.Y.I. (Restorative Responses For Young Individuals) - This pre-charge program is designed to keep young people age 17 and under who commit low level offenses out of the youth or criminal justice systems. Police officers refer those who commit low level offenses to the MCJC. The MCJC, utilizing trained volunteer service providers, arranges a process for bringing the young person who has committed an offense together with victims and other affected parties, including immediate and extended family members, friends, school personnel, etc. The person who has committed the offense learns about the effects on others and collaborates in designing a plan for making amends. The MCJC, in addition to providing a restorative justice response, screens for and arranges needed services to support healthy choices in the future. Justice F.Y.I. is supported by the Children and Family Council for Prevention Programs, through the Agency of Human Services with funding from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, and it relies on its partnership with the Youth Service Bureau, the Montpelier Police Department and the area schools for its success.
    Programs To Support Those Affected By Crime
    The MCJC is committed to provide support to people who are affected by crime and is currently engaged in a process to determine an appropriate program.
    Non Criminal Conflict Management and Dispute Resolution Programs
    Ad hoc responses to conflict in the community - The MCJC will intervene in conflict that is of a public or community nature. The MCJC receives referrals, identifies an appropriate process, serves as convener, and either supplies or helps parties locate a suitable dispute resolution provider.

    Targeted programming - The MCJC has held preliminary conversations with the principals of Montpelier Middle School, Montpelier High School and U-32 to explore possibilities for providing conflict resolution services for school based issues, such as those between home and school. The MCJC has identified as one of its priorities this year to pursue conversations with school administrators, staff, and parent groups to determine how it might best serve the school community.
    Community Forums and Educational Programs
    Community education about restorative & community justice - The MCJC is in the process of planning and developing ways to build community understanding of what it means to use a restorative justice approach in responding to criminal behavior. It also hopes to engage the community in resolving conflict by balancing the interests of those on all sides of an issue while attending to the basic needs of all parties for fairness, safety, and inclusion.

    Organization of public forums - The MCJC offers its services to manage potential or actual public conflicts by designing processes to disseminate accurate, unbiased information and by offering neutral facilitation of structured dialogue. For example, in December, the MCJC held a forum attended by approximately 50 people to talk about the issue of whether it is appropriate for City Hall to be decorated with Christmas symbols.

    Conflict resolution skills development - The MCJC is busy training and supervising volunteer service providers in knowledge, skills, and attitudes appropriate to conferencing, mediation, and reparative board processes. In the future, the MCJC is likely to provide workshops for general or targeted audiences in conflict management and dispute resolution techniques.
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    OUR GREATEST ASSET
    The MCJC relies on trained volunteers to provide most of the services offered by the MCJC. Volunteers serve on the Citizen Advisory Board, various committees, and Reparative Boards and as conference facilitators, mediators, victim liaisons, etc. Volunteers receive training and ongoing support and supervision while providing a valuable service to the people of our community.

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    SCHEDULE OF REPARATIVE BOARD MEETINGS IN MONTPELIER
    meetings are open to the public

    Mondays, 5:30-7:30 pm
    Conference Room
    City Hall, 39 Main Street
    Tuesday, 5:30-7:30 pm
    Conference Room
    City Hall, 39 Main Street
    Thursday, 8:15-10:15 am
    Bethany Church
    115 Main Street
    Jan 8 Jan 22
    Feb 5 Feb 26
    Mar 5 Mar 19
    Apr 2 Apr 16
    May 7 May 21
    Jun 4 Jun 18
    Jul 2 Jul 16
    Aug 6 Aug 20
    Sep 17 Sep 24
    Oct 1 Oct 15
    Nov 5 Nov 19
    Dec 3 Dec 17
    Jan 9 Jan 23
    Feb 13 Feb 27
    Mar 13 Mar 27
    Apr 10 Apr 24
    May 8 May 22
    Jun 12 Jun 26
    Jul 10 Jul 24
    Aug 14 Aug 28
    Sep 11 Sep 25
    Oct 9 Oct 23
    Nov 13 Nov 27
    Dec 11  
    Jan 4 Jan 18
    Feb 1 Feb 15
    Mar 1 Mar 15
    Apr 5 Apr 19
    May 3 May 17
    Jun 7 Jun 21
    Jul 5 Jul 19
    Aug 2 Aug 16
    Sep 6 Sep 20
    Oct 4 Oct 18
    Nov 1 Nov 15
    Dec 6 Dec 20

    Please contact Judy Gibson at 223-9606 if you plan to attend a meeting, as times are subject to change.

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    Contacts

    Updated March 14, 2007
     
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