Funding Opportunities
Name:
Specialty Courts Grant Program, FY2025
Available
12/11/2023
Due Date
02/08/2024
Purpose:

The purpose of this announcement is to solicit applications for specialty court programs as defined in Chapters 121 through 130 of the Texas Government Code as well as the continuation of a training and technical assistance resource center.

Available Funding:

State funds are authorized under the Texas General Appropriations Act, Article I, Rider 12 for Trusteed Programs within the Office of the Governor. All awards are subject to the availability of appropriated funds and any modifications or additional requirements that may be imposed by law.

Eligible Organizations:

Applications may be submitted by county governments affiliated with a specialty court authorized under Chapters 121 through 130 of the Texas Government Code. Applications may also be submitted by a public institution of higher education for the continuation of a training and technical assistance resource center. 


Counties seeking to establish a new specialty court program are eligible to apply but must meet registration requirements, as defined in 121.002 Texas Government Code, within 30 days of award. Existing specialty court programs that do not currently receive PSO funding are also eligible to apply but must annotate in their application how the additional funds will expand the program beyond its current capacity. Priority for applications received from new applicants may be given to courts operating in jurisdictions without a currently operational court or based on demonstrated need.

Application Process:

Applicants must access PSO’s eGrants grant management website at https://eGrants.gov.texas.gov to register and apply for funding. 


Note: Special application procedures apply to this program. See the Special Application Procedures Addendum for more information.

Key Dates:
Action
Date
Funding Announcement Release
12/11/2023
Online System Opening Date
12/11/2023
Final Date to Submit and Certify an Application
02/08/2024 at 5:00PM CST
Earliest Project Start Date
09/01/2024
Project Period:

Projects must begin on or after 09/01/2024 and may not exceed a 12-month project period.

Funding Levels

Minimum: $10,000 

Maximum: None

Match Requirement: Optional. There is no match requirement under this program, but an eligible entity may choose to include match in the application. If match is included in the application, the applicant agency will be held to provide that specified amount over the course of the project period.

Standards

Grantees must comply with standards applicable to this fund source cited in the Texas Grant Management Standards (TxGMS), Federal Uniform Grant Guidance, and all statutes, requirements, and guidelines applicable to this funding.

Eligible Activities and Costs

Funding may be used to support the following types of specialty court programs:

  1. Adult Drug Court;
  2. Family Drug Court;
  3. Veterans Treatment Court;
  4. Mental Health Court;
  5. Juvenile Specialty Court;
  6. Commercially Sexually Exploited Persons Court; and
  7. Public Safety Employees Treatment Court;

Funding may also be used to provide training, professional development, and/or technical assistance in furtherance of the Specialty Courts Resource Center operated through a public institution of higher education.

Program-Specific Requirements

Risk Assessment Tools 

Grantees are required to perform the full, felony-level TRAS (Texas Risk Assessment System) assessment on each participant enrolled during the project period. Sub-section scores must be recorded and reported in the annual progress reports. Grantees must also include the TRAS scores for all adult participants (including those in pre-adjudication court programs) in their regular reports to the Criminal Justice Assistance Division (CJAD) of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, as directed by CJAD. 


The TRAS is not applicable to family reunification courts, courts dealing with adults without pending criminal charges, and juvenile courts. Juvenile courts are required to perform the PACT risk assessment as mandated by the Texas Juvenile Justice Department.


Registration Requirements 

The court program must meet all requirements in the Texas Government Code, Section 121.002, which include:

  1. Written notice of the program;
  2. Any resolution or other official declaration under which the program was established; and
  3. A copy of the applicable community justice plan that incorporates duties related to supervision that will be required under the program.

For more information on how to register please contact the Office of Court Administration at: SpecialtyCourts@txcourts.gov.


Best Practices Assessment Requirement

All applicants are required to have completed the BeST Assessment (Best Practices Self-Assessment Tool) within the last two years. Applications that have not completed the BeST Assessment prior to the application due date will be ineligible. The Specialty Courts Resource Center (SCRC) operated by Sam Houston State University will collect all assessment results and provide them to PSO to be included with each application during the review and scoring process. In order to access the BeST Assessment, please contact the SCRC Project Manager at agregory@shsu.edu.


Judge Requirements 

The presiding judge of a drug court must be an active judge holding elective office, an associate judge, a magistrate, or a retired judge available as a sitting judge.


Participation in Training and Technical Assistance Program 

Grantees are required to participate in activities under the Specialty Courts Resource Center (SCRC) operated by Sam Houston State University and funded by PSO. Information about services and resources provided by SCRC can be accessed at http://txspecialtycourts.org/.


Adult Drug Court Best Practice Standards 

The Texas Judicial Council unanimously approved the National Association of Drug Court professionals (NADCP) Adult Drug Court Best Practice Standards (Volumes I & II) as the best practices for adult drug court programs. All adult drug court programs must have substantially implemented best practice standards.


Family Drug Court Best Practice Standards 

The Texas Judicial Council unanimously approved the National Association of Drug Court professionals (NADCP) Family Treatment Court Best Practice Standards as the best practices for family drug court programs. All family drug court programs must have substantially implemented these best practice standards.


Veterans Treatment Court Requirements

Pursuant to HB 1457, all applicants that provide mental health services to veterans or veterans’ families must demonstrate: (a) prior history of successful execution of a grant from the Office of the Governor; (b) that the entity provides training to agency personnel on military informed care or military cultural competency or requires those personnel to complete military competency training provided by any of the following:

  • the Texas Veterans Commission;
  • the Texas Health and Human Services Commission;
  • the Military Veteran Peer Network;
  • the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services;
  • the U.S. Department of Defense;
  • the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; or
  • a nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(a), Internal Revenue Code of 1986, by being listed as an exempt entity under Section 501 (c) (3) of that code, with experience in providing training or technical assistance to entities that provide mental health services to veterans or veterans’ families.
Eligibility Requirements

1. Local units of governments must comply with the Cybersecurity Training requirements described in Section 772.012 and Section 2054.5191 of the Texas Government Code. Local governments determined to not be in compliance with the cybersecurity requirements required by Section 2054.5191 of the Texas Government Code are ineligible for OOG grant funds until the second anniversary of the date the local government is determined ineligible. Government entities must annually certify their compliance with the training requirements using the Cybersecurity Training Certification for State and Local Governments. A copy of the Training Certification must be uploaded to your eGrants application. For more information or to access available training programs, visit the Texas Department of Information Resources Statewide Cybersecurity Awareness Training page.


2. Entities receiving funds from PSO must be located in a county that has an average of 90% or above on both adult and juvenile dispositions entered into the computerized criminal history database maintained by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) as directed in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 66. The disposition completeness percentage is defined as the percentage of arrest charges a county reports to DPS for which a disposition has been subsequently reported and entered into the computerized criminal history system.


Counties applying for grant awards from the Office of the Governor must commit that the county will report at least 90 percent of convictions within five business days to the Criminal Justice Information System at the Department of Public Safety.


3. Eligible applicants operating a law enforcement agency must be current on reporting complete UCR data and the Texas specific reporting mandated by 411.042 TGC, to the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) for inclusion in the annual Crime in Texas (CIT) publication. To be considered eligible for funding, applicants must have submitted a full twelve months of accurate data to DPS for the most recent calendar year by the deadline(s) established by DPS. Due to the importance of timely reporting, applicants are required to submit complete and accurate UCR data, as well as the Texas-mandated reporting, on a no less than monthly basis and respond promptly to requests from DPS related to the data submitted.


4. In accordance with Texas Government Code, Section 420.034, any facility or entity that collects evidence for sexual assault or other sex offenses or investigates or prosecutes a sexual assault or other sex offense for which evidence has been collected, must participate in the statewide electronic tracking system developed and implemented by the Texas Department of Public Safety. Visit DPS’s Sexual Assault Evidence Tracking Program website for more information or to set up an account to begin participating. Additionally, per Section 420.042 "A law enforcement agency that receives evidence of a sexual assault or other sex offense...shall submit that evidence to a public accredited crime laboratory for analysis no later than the 30th day after the date on which that evidence was received." A law enforcement agency in possession of a significant number of Sexual Assault Evidence Kits (SAEK) where the 30-day window has passed may be considered noncompliant. 


5. Local units of government, including cities, counties and other general purpose political subdivisions, as appropriate, and institutions of higher education that operate a law enforcement agency, must comply with all aspects of the programs and procedures utilized by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) to: (1) notify DHS of all information requested by DHS related to illegal aliens in Agency’s custody; and (2) detain such illegal aliens in accordance with requests by DHS. Additionally, counties and municipalities may NOT have in effect, purport to have in effect, or make themselves subject to or bound by, any law, rule, policy, or practice (written or unwritten) that would: (1) require or authorize the public disclosure of federal law enforcement information in order to conceal, harbor, or shield from detection fugitives from justice or aliens illegally in the United States; or (2) impede federal officers from exercising authority under 8 U.S.C. § 1226(a), § 1226(c), § 1231(a), § 1357(a), § 1366(1), or § 1366(3). Lastly, eligible applicants must comply with all provisions, policies, and penalties found in Chapter 752, Subchapter C of the Texas Government Code.


Each local unit of government, and institution of higher education that operates a law enforcement agency, must download, complete and then upload into eGrants the CEO/Law Enforcement Certifications and Assurances Form certifying compliance with federal and state immigration enforcement requirements. This Form is required for each application submitted to OOG and is active until August 31, 2025 or the end of the grant period, whichever is later.


6. Eligible applicants must be registered in the federal System for Award Management (SAM) database and have an UEI (Unique Entity ID) number assigned to its agency (to get registered in the SAM database and request an UEI number, go to https://sam.gov/).


Failure to comply with program eligibility requirements may cause funds to be withheld and/or suspension or termination of grant funds.

Prohibitions

Grant funds may not be used to support the unallowable costs listed in the Guide to Grants or any of the following unallowable costs:

  1. Construction, renovation, or remodeling;
  2. Medical services;
  3. Law enforcement equipment that is standard department issue;
  4. Transportation, lodging, per diem or any related costs for participants, when grant funds are used to develop and conduct training;
  5. Legal assistance;
  6. Judges; and
  7. Any other prohibition imposed by federal, state or local law or regulation.
Selection Process

Application Screening: The Office of the Governor will screen all applications to ensure that they meet the requirements included in the funding announcement. Applications that meet those requirements will move forward to the merit review phase. 


Peer/Merit Review: The Office of the Governor will convene a panel, to include the Specialty Courts Advisory Council (SCAC), to review and score applications in an effort to prioritize funding. The merit review panel will assess and score each application on a 100-point scale, and then report its findings to the Office of the Governor. For adult drug courts (including alcohol/DWI courts), adherence to the Adult Drug Court Best Practice Standards will be an important factor in decisions. PSO will generally not fund projects that serve primarily low-risk participants, as determined by a TRAS assessment. 


Final Decisions: The Office of the Governor will consider rankings along with other factors and make all final funding decisions. Other factors may include cost effectiveness, overall funds availability, PSO or state government priorities and strategies, legislative directives, need, geographic distribution or other relevant factors. 


The Office of the Governor may not fund all applications or may only award part of the amount requested. In the event that funding requests exceed available funds, the Office of the Governor may revise projects to address a more limited focus.

Contact Information

For more information, contact the eGrants help desk at eGrants@gov.texas.gov or (512) 463-1919.

Total Funds
$TBD