About Justice
Forward

Breaking the cycle of incarceration and funding essential programs, one person at a time

Our History
How We Started

Justice Forward was established in 2003 as a Social Justice Task Force at the Emerson Unitarian Universalist Church and became an independent nonprofit in 2006. Initially, we focused on providing critical reentry services to clients of Harris County’s STAR Drug Courts. Over the years, we have expanded significantly and now serve as a statewide model, collaborating with 23 Treatment Courts across Harris, Galveston, and Fort Bend counties.

In 2020, the Harris County Drug Court Foundation rebranded as Justice Forward as we broadened our mission to support all 18 Treatment Courts in Harris County. In 2022, our efforts grew further to include two Treatment Courts in Galveston County and three in Fort Bend County.

Rebuilding Lives and Reclaiming Futures

Justice Forward helps individuals, including veterans, those with substance use and mental health challenges, and youth impacted by trafficking and gang involvement, rebuild their lives through transitional housing, counseling, education, job assistance, and more. By reducing recidivism, reuniting families, and saving taxpayer dollars, Justice Forward is leading a collaborative, community-powered movement for long-term recovery and true second chances.

Providing critical guidance, support,
and inspiration

Justice Forward provides housing, counseling, transportation assistance, incentives and gift cards, tuition assistance, and workforce training all of which provide our clients and graduates with a clear path to recovery and success.

Mission

Justice Forward promotes recovery rather than incarceration by helping our neighbors in treatment courts achieve health and independence.

Real Stories, Real Impact

Community Partners

FAQs - Answering Your Questions

What is a Treatment Court?

A Treatment Court is a problem-solving court designed to address the root causes of criminal activity and child neglect by providing a judicially supervised, individually crafted probation with mandated treatment. Treatment Courts bridge the gap between the justice system and therapeutic approaches for participants with drug dependencies, mental illness, and/or other societal challenges. 

Justice Forward is an independent nonprofit and is not operated by the counties we serve nor their court systems. We work closely with all 18 Harris County Treatment Courts as well as courts in Galveston and Fort Bend counties by providing funds for a variety of support services for clients in and graduates of the programs, filling gaps between the court-mandated activities and successful independent living that will help to ensure sobriety and/or success. Funds for support services for this population are not available from other sources.

Specifically, Justice Forward provides funds for counseling and recovery coaching, transitional housing, tuition assistance, and transportation among other services. We work with many local community organizations that offer these services and have established a system for providing grants and stipends for individuals working toward successfully returning to live in the community.

Since its founding in 2006, Justice Forward, has provided services to hundreds of individuals. Recidivism rates for this total population include the following:


Total within 1 year — 85 individuals (12.3%)

Total within 2 years — 132 individuals (19.2%)

Total within 5 years — 187 individuals (27.2%)

Total recidivists — 208 individuals (30.2%)

 

These rates of recidivism are impressive and much lower than the national norm. A study conducted by the Bureau of Justice Statistics in 2014 found that drug offenders were the second most likely group to reoffend (after property offenders); 76.9 percent of drug offenders released in 2005 were rearrested within five years, nearly half of those within the first year of release. Justice Forward’s work with the population of non-violent drug offenders is producing much lower recidivism rates than the national rates cited by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Participation in Treatment Courts is voluntary. Clients can be referred to the various programs by their attorneys, the presiding judge, the prosecutor, the probation officer, or Child Protective Services. Each court program performs an assessment of candidates to determine their suitability for the program and their individual needs.

Grant requests for transitional housing, counseling, transportation and other basic needs are made on behalf of clients by their court representative. Each set of courts has a representative who liaises with Justice Forward leadership. Those requests are divided into two categories: Discretionary Grants requesting goods or services costing less than $10,000; and Major Grants, which involve services valued at $10,000 or more.


Discretionary Grants are reviewed and decided on promptly by the CEO/President and the Chair of the Board. Major Grant requests are placed on the agenda of the next Board meeting and considered and voted on by the Board of Directors. Grants are funded on a first-come, first-served basis.


A separate process is in place for requests involving tuition assistance and workforce training fees. Clients apply directly to Justice Forward by filling out the appropriate application found on this website. The completed application is emailed to CEO/President Devon Anderson. The same categories regarding the amount of the request as described above apply to these grants as well.

We are currently redefining our volunteer assistance program. Some ways to help include offering venues for sober events, providing gift cards for incentives, mentoring graduates, providing internships for our juveniles, and hosting an awareness session to share our mission with your friends and affinity groups.

Yes. On our donation page, there is a drop-down menu that has a list of the courts we support, as well as a “general operations” option. This allows you to direct your contribution to the court program of your choice or to the continued operation of Justice Forward.