Office of Problem-Solving Courts
The Office of Problem-Solving Courts (OPSC) provides support to problem-solving courts through technical assistance, training, data collection and analysis, research, policy development, legislative analysis, and technology to support case management.
Background
In 1989, Florida started the national problem-solving court movement by creating the first drug court in the United States in Miami-Dade County. Other types of problem-solving court dockets subsequently followed, using the drug court model, and were implemented to assist individuals with a range of problems such as drug addiction, mental illness, domestic violence, child abuse/neglect, and homelessness.
Defining Elements
Problem-solving courts offer a specialized court docket and include, but are not limited to, the following elements:
- Problem-solving team. A broad-based team of justice system stakeholders including judges, case managers, prosecutors, defense attorneys, treatment professionals, law enforcement officers, corrections personnel, and guardians ad litem.
- Non-adversarial approach. A commitment to offering alternatives to the traditional adversarial litigation process.
- Continuum of individualized treatment services. An array of evidence-based services designed to identify and meet the unique needs of each participant.
- Judicial leadership and interaction. A judge who leads the problem-solving team and monitors the court case using an increased number of hearings for monitoring compliance and progress.
- Responses to participant compliance. The use of graduated, individualized, and coordinated responses, both for incentives and sanctions, to promote both public safety and the participants’ success.
Each problem-solving court type is unique. A side-by-side glance of the core components of the six most prevalent types of problem-solving courts in Florida can be found here: Problem-Solving Courts Core Components
Problem-Solving Court Month and Opioid and Stimulant Use Disorder Awareness Month
The Florida State Court System proclaims May as a month of recognition of the contributions made by problem-solving courts in meeting the challenges of substance use and mental disorders and as a month of awareness regarding opioid and stimulant use disorder. Please visit the Problem-Solving Court Month web page for further details on the Problem-Solving Court Month and Opioid and Stimulant Use Disorder Awareness Month.