The Queens Community Justice Center works to keep people out of the justice system and create thriving communities. For those in the system, it offers supportive alternatives to incarceration and criminal conviction.
For Adults: The Justice Center provides community-based diversion and sentencing options to reduce the use of incarceration and criminal convictions for people charged with low-level offenses. As part of their engagement, participants may be mandated to social services to address underlying issues, such as substance use disorder, mental illness, unemployment, and trauma. Comprehensive case management, individual and group counseling, and workforce development are available, as well as linkages to longer-term services and offsite referrals for social service needs. Participants may be assigned to community service projects where they can engage in online content and take part in group discussions on the criminal justice system and mass incarceration, facilitated by program staff, or work with community-based organizations to provide relief to isolated and vulnerable community members.
For Youth: The QUEST alternative-to-detention program offers young people, ages 11 to 17 years old, charged with delinquency a community-based trauma-informed alternative to detention. The Justice Center provides young people family support, case management, educational advocacy, and recreational afterschool activities and restorative programming. The Justice Center furnishes Family Court judges with timely updates about compliance. Youth who complete the program are more likely to avoid placement in detention and receive community-based dispositions than those who are detained.
Youth Impact invites teenagers from across Queens to become transformative leaders. The Justice Center provides members with paid internships, where they provide peer-led diversion to keep young people out of the criminal legal system. They also develop and pilot community projects to address the underlying issues that can cause youth contact with the legal system. Queens Youth Impact operates two programs:
Run in collaboration with the Department of Probation, the Intensive Community Monitoring Plus Program provides youth assigned to probation from family court with mentoring services. Staff serve as mentors, using an evidence-based curriculum, to provide one-on-one support, advice, and guidance to help young people develop the skills to enhance interpersonal relationships, achieve academic and employment success, and become more engaged with their communities.
All participants receive ongoing case management informed by evidence-based tools shown to promote positive growth and change, including validated screening and assessment, social-emotional learning approaches, motivational interviewing techniques, and evidence-based treatment groups. Enhanced ATD Services offers additional services for justice-involved adolescents with unaddressed mental health needs and their families.
The Queens Community Justice Center provides specialized direct support and mentoring services to young people ages 12 to 18 who are survivors of or at risk of sexual exploitation/domestic sex trafficking. A social worker and case manager work one-on-one and in group settings, providing intensive case management and trauma-informed, survivor-centered support services, including mentoring when appropriate.
The Community Justice Center operates various workforce development initiatives, for youth, both those who have completed their court mandates and those who are not justice involved. In partnership with the Department of Probation, ECHOES Be Ready and Works Plus programming offers young adults weekly workshops geared to develop skills ranging from resume writing to public speaking, while also engaging in service learning projects and internships that allow them to use the skills they learned.