Lowell – The Greater Lowell Community Foundation (GLCF) has awarded a $30,000 grant to the Bridge Club of Greater Lowell to support transportation for their Veterans Reintegration Program.
“This grant has allowed the Bridge Club to remove a key barrier, the lack of transportation, to the assist their veteran clients,” said GLCF president and CEO Jay Linnehan. “Transportation should not be an obstacle to a path to a better future.”
The Bridge Club of Greater Lowell’s Veterans Reintegration Program is made possible by a recent grant awarded by Dept. of Labor. This 3-year grant targets reentry initiatives such as housing and employment opportunities for veterans returning from or facing incarceration.
“This grant funding from GLCF solves a transportation problem our veteran community encounter,” said Bob Cox, executive director at Bridge Club of Greater Lowell. “The problem stems from the fact that the Veteran’s court in Framingham is the sole location for the entirety of Middlesex County leaving veterans from across the county with a logistical hurdle to overcome that frequently jeopardizes his/her ability to appear on a scheduled court date.”
Veterans Treatment Courts are specialized courts that provide alternatives to punishments for veterans suffering from PTSD, other mental health issues, or brain injury. These courts seek to divert those with mental health issues and homelessness from the traditional justice system and to give them treatment and tools for rehabilitation and readjustment.
Veterans Treatment Courts are hybrid Drug and Mental Health Courts that serve veterans struggling with addiction, serious mental illness and/or co-occurring disorders. They promote sobriety, recovery, and stability through a coordinated response that involves cooperation and collaboration with the traditional partners found in Drug and Mental Health Courts, with the addition of the VA, volunteer veteran mentors, and veterans and Veterans’ family support organizations. Usually, Veterans Courts hear cases involving misdemeanor charges other than those involving sexual offenses or violent crimes. A veteran’s participation in treatment court is always voluntary. Veterans who choose to participate are assessed by a mental health professional and their treatment needs are determined.
“The Bridge Back Initiative, a collaborative partnership between the Bridge Club, the Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office and the Middlesex County Sherriff’s Office, supports previously incarcerated and court-involved individuals in the Greater Lowell area by connecting them to employment opportunities, addiction and recovery resources, housing and other direct services,” said District Attorney Marian T. Ryan. “This grant moves this community closer to the goal of reducing recidivism and homelessness.”