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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Therapeutic Court Association of Washington and Washington Association of Drug Courts
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260506T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260506T113000
DTSTAMP:20260430T171505Z
CREATED:20260430T171505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260430T171505Z
UID:9707-1778061600-1778067000@tcaofwa.org
SUMMARY:Best Practices in Trauma-Informed Care for Unhoused Populations
DESCRIPTION:Details \nPeople experiencing homelessness often face significant trauma\, including violence\, loss\, instability\, poverty\, and systemic barriers that can deeply impact trust\, behavior\, and engagement with services. This webinar will provide participants with a practical understanding of trauma-informed care and why it is essential when working with unhoused individuals and families.\nParticipants will explore how trauma can shape responses to stress\, relationships\, and service systems\, while learning strategies to create safer\, more respectful\, and person-centered interactions. The session will focus on approaches that reduce traumatization\, build trust\, and improve connections to housing\, behavioral health care\, and community support.\nDesigned for outreach teams\, shelter staff\, behavioral health providers\, case managers\, healthcare professionals\, and community partners\, this webinar offers actionable tools to strengthen engagement and improve outcomes for people experiencing homelessness. \nObjectives/Takeaways (at least three please)\n  Understand the Impact of Trauma\nRecognize how trauma\, chronic stress\, and adverse life experiences can affect behavior\, decision-making\, trust\, and engagement among people experiencing homelessness.\nApply Trauma-Informed Practices\nUse practical strategies that promote safety\, dignity\, choice\, empowerment\, and culturally responsive support when interacting with unhoused individuals.\nImprove Service Engagement and Outcomes\nIdentify ways to reduce traumatization\, strengthen relationships\, and increase successful connections to housing\, behavioral health\, and supportive services. \n“Therapeutic Court Association of Washington is sharing this event for informational purposes only and is not affiliated with\, endorsing\, or sponsoring the event.”
URL:https://tcaofwa.org/event/best-practices-in-trauma-informed-care-for-unhoused-populations/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Advocacy,Behavioral Health,Community Supervision,Treatment,Webinar
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260507T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260507T133000
DTSTAMP:20260430T201653Z
CREATED:20260430T201653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260430T201653Z
UID:9712-1778155200-1778160600@tcaofwa.org
SUMMARY:Responding to Serious Behavioral Health Symptoms in the Courtroom: The Role of Each Court Partner
DESCRIPTION:Brought to you by SAMHSA: \nDate & Time\nMay 7\, 2026 12:00 PM in\nPacific Time (US and Canada)\nDescription\nMaintaining court procedures and ensuring procedural fairness can be difficult if a defendant is experiencing serious symptoms stemming from behavioral health disorders in the courtroom. Interactions in the courtroom related to mental and substance use disorders\, including psychosis\, suicidal ideation\, or severe anxiety\, can result in delays\, appeals\, or aggression towards court staff. Maintaining a safe courtroom environment requires courtroom professionals to understand approaches and tools that support person-centered and trauma-informed responses. \nThis webinar will discuss ways judges and other court partners\, including defense attorneys and prosecutors\, can manage serious symptoms of mental and substance use disorders that can show up in the courtroom while navigating their non-clinical\, judicial role. Additionally\, other court partners\, such as court security personnel or behavioral health providers\, may play key roles. This webinar will review practical strategies that support trauma-informed and coordinated responses among court partners.  \nSpeakers\ncustom photo of speaker\nMarcia Hirsch \nFormer Presiding Judge·Queens Treatment Court \nHon. Marcia P. Hirsch was the Presiding Judge of the Queens Drug Treatment Court\, the DWI Treatment Court\, the Mental Health Court\, the Veterans Court\, the Gun Diversion Part\, and the Drug Diversion Court. She was appointed to the New York Court of Claims in March 2005 and was assigned to Queens Supreme Court\, Criminal Term. She presided over hearings and trials before she was assigned to the therapeutic courts in October 2005 where she remained until her retirement in December 2024.  \nJudge Hirsch has lectured extensively on therapeutic justice\, treatment courts\, trauma-informed courts\, and procedural justice. She has provided technical assistance to treatment court teams\, law enforcement\, behavioral health professionals working with justice populations\, and more. She is a board member and the immediate past president of the New York Association of Treatment Court Professionals.  \nJudge Hirsch is a graduate of Union College and Syracuse University College of Law. She served for nine years on the Rockville Centre School Board and was a member of her community’s Drug & Alcohol Task Force. Prior to taking the bench\, Judge Hirsch was the General Counsel and Deputy Commissioner at the New York State Division of Housing & Community Renewal. \ncustom photo of speaker\nJennifer Johnson \nFounder and Principal·J.K. Johnson Advisors \nJennifer Johnson is the founder and principal of J.K. Johnson Advisors and provides education\, consulting\, and technical assistance at the intersection of mental health and law. Ms. Johnson is a 20-year veteran of the San Francisco Public Defender’s office\, where she was one of the founders of San Francisco’s Behavioral Health Court. \nIn addition to her work in the courtroom\, Ms. Johnson has helped shape mental health and criminal justice policy at the local\, state\, and national levels. She was a cofounder of the San Francisco Police Department’s Crisis Intervention Team Training in 2011. She is a Senior Consultant with SAMHSA’s GAINS Center for Behavioral Health and Justice Transformation\, and she is a member of the Criminal Justice Advisory Panel for the Arc’s National Center on Criminal Justice and Disability. \nMs. Johnson recently authored a chapter on mental health courts in the American Bar Association publication\, Representing People with Mental Disabilities: A Criminal Defense Lawyer’s Best Practices Manual. Other publications include: Burn Out and Compassion Fatigue: What Lawyers Need to Know\, UMKC Law Review\, Vol. 84:4 (Summer 2016) and Justice that Heals: Promoting. \n“Therapeutic Court Association of Washington is sharing this event for informational purposes only and is not affiliated with\, endorsing\, or sponsoring the event.”
URL:https://tcaofwa.org/event/responding-to-serious-behavioral-health-symptoms-in-the-courtroom-the-role-of-each-court-partner/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Advocacy,Behavioral Health,Webinar
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260515T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260515T160000
DTSTAMP:20260513T164127Z
CREATED:20260513T164127Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T164127Z
UID:10314-1778835600-1778860800@tcaofwa.org
SUMMARY:WDVA Workshop: Chronic Pain\, Trauma\, and Recovery
DESCRIPTION:Time: 9:00pm-4:00pm \nLocation: Virtual \nInstructor: Matthew Jakupcak\, Ph.D. \nCE credits: 6 CE’s (pending) \nCourse Description: \nThis workshop highlights for learners the prevalence and high rate of comorbidity between chronic pain and trauma-related reactions such as PTSD\, depression\, and health-related anxiety\, particularly among veteran populations. Theoretical mutual-maintenance models (Asmundson\, Coons\, Taylor & Katz\, 2002; Sharp & Harvey\, 2001) are helpful for clinicians to understand how these two conditions interact to create a “vicious cycle” of arousal and avoidance\, where physical pain\, bodily vigilance and cued trauma reactions reinforce one another\, leading to significant disability and reduced quality of life. \nDr. Jakupcak will present information specific to the interrelationships between chronic pain and trauma\, including posttrauma reactions such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)\, depression\, and healthy anxiety. In addition\, Dr. Jakupcak will review the applications evidence-based treatments that can address both chronic pain functioning and common co-occurring mental health conditions\, including Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)\, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)\, and Behavioral Activation (BA). \n Objectives: \nAt the end of this training participants will: \nBe able to describe theoretical frameworks where PTSD symptoms (like hyperarousal and avoidance) increase pain sensitivity and bodily vigilance\, informing greater disability and impairment. (Mutual Maintenance Models)\nLearn about specific evidence-based therapies such as CBT\, ACT and BA to help patients re-engage in life activities despite pain and stress. This course emphasizes “valued living”—moving toward what matters rather than just “fixing” symptoms. (Breaking the Cycle)\nDevelop strategies for addressing specific common hurdles to recovery such as opioid use\, sleep disturbances\, and the “numbing” symptoms of trauma and PTSD that often interfere with traditional pain rehabilitation. (Clinical Challenges) \nReferences: \nHolley AL\, Wilson AC\, Noel M\, Palermo TM. Post-traumatic stress symptoms in children and adolescents with chronic pain: A topical review of the literature and a proposed framework for future research. Eur J Pain. 2016 Oct;20(9):1371-83.  \nOtis JD\, Comer JS\, Keane TM\, Checko Scioli E\, Pincus DB. Intensive Treatment of Chronic Pain and PTSD: The PATRIOT Program. Behav Sci (Basel). 2024 Nov 16;14(11):1103.  \nRavn S\, Hartvigsen J\, Hanse M\, Sterling M\, Elmose T. Do post-traumatic pain and post-traumatic stress symptomatology mutually maintain each other? A systematic review of cross-lagged studies. Pain 2018;159:2159–69. \nFeatured Speakers\nINSTRUCTOR\nPhoto of Matthew Jakupcak\, PhD\nMatthew Jakupcak\, PhD\nClinical Psychologist\, Matthew Jakupcak\, Ph.D. \n“Therapeutic Court Association of Washington is sharing this event for informational purposes only and is not affiliated with\, endorsing\, or sponsoring the event.”
URL:https://tcaofwa.org/event/wdva-workshop-chronic-pain-trauma-and-recovery/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Advocacy,Behavioral Health,Skill Building,Treatment,Veteran,Webinar
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260518T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260518T120000
DTSTAMP:20260428T174644Z
CREATED:20260428T174644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260428T174644Z
UID:9657-1779098400-1779105600@tcaofwa.org
SUMMARY:Supporting FCS Participants Experiencing Psychosis: Practical Communication and Care Planning Tools for Supported Employment Providers
DESCRIPTION:Brought to you by DSHS: \nDetails\nSupported employment staff are often called on to help when a job seeker is experiencing paranoia\, delusional thinking\, or other psychosis related symptoms and is declining practical services because they do not believe anything is wrong. In these situations\, trying to argue the facts usually does not help and can quickly damage trust. This webinar offers supported employment providers a respectful\, practical approach for staying connected\, reducing escalation\, and continuing to support the person’s employment goals.  \nParticipants will learn a non-confrontational communication approach and practice brief\, usable scripts that acknowledge feelings without reinforcing inaccurate beliefs. The training then translates those skills into a one-page Shared Job Support Plan\, a tool for identifying next steps together even when a person is declining treatment or other services.  \nObjectives: \nIdentify how reduced insight can show up in psychotic disorders and how it affects engagement\, helping staff shift from trying to convince someone to focus on connection and practical planning.\nApply a structured\, non-confrontational communication approach to respond to delusional beliefs in a way that reduces escalation\, supports trust\, and avoids reinforcing the belief itself.\nDevelop a Shared Job Support Plan that helps move services forward even when a person declines support\, by focusing on goals\, day to day functioning\, early warning signs\, and small\, realistic next steps.\nRecognize when it may be appropriate to involve behavioral health partners\, crisis supports\, or coordinated specialty care resources\, especially when workplace functioning or safety concerns begin to increase.\nSpeakers (1)\nMehrnoosh\, Nicholas (DSHS/HCLA/HCS)\nR1 BEHAVIOR SUPPORT TRAINER\nDSHS-ALT\nNicholas “Nick” Mehrnoosh is a Behavior Support Trainer with Washington State’s Home and Community Services within the Home and Community Living Administration. He holds a Master of Science in Psychology from Eastern Washington University and is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor and designated Mental Health Professional in Washington State.
URL:https://tcaofwa.org/event/supporting-fcs-participants-experiencing-psychosis-practical-communication-and-care-planning-tools-for-supported-employment-providers/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Advocacy,Behavioral Health,Webinar
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260519T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260519T130000
DTSTAMP:20260507T191033Z
CREATED:20260507T191032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260507T191033Z
UID:10136-1779192000-1779195600@tcaofwa.org
SUMMARY:NAMI Webinar: Navigating Schizophrenia in Black & Hispanic Communities (Rompiendo el Silencio)
DESCRIPTION:Date & Time\nMay 19\, 2026 12:00 PM in\nPacific Time (US and Canada)\nDescription\nSchizophrenia remains largely unspoken\, yet for millions\, it is a lived reality shaped by resilience\, family\, and the pursuit of dignity. In recognition of World Schizophrenia Awareness Day (May 24)\, we welcome you to a meaningful webinar focused on humanizing this diagnosis and highlighting often overlooked voices in the mental health conversation.  \nJoin us for an intimate conversation exploring the intersection of culture\, storytelling\, and advocacy within Black and Hispanic communities.  \nWhat We’ll Explore: \n1) How open dialogue can dismantle cultural taboos and foster healing.\n2) Insights into the unique challenges faced by Spanish-speaking and Black communities.\n3) How personal journeys with schizophrenia can drive policy change and criminal justice reform.\n4) Moving beyond clinical labels to prioritize support\, access\, and human connection.  \n“Therapeutic Court Association of Washington is sharing this event for informational purposes only and is not affiliated with\, endorsing\, or sponsoring the event.”
URL:https://tcaofwa.org/event/nami-webinar-navigating-schizophrenia-in-black-hispanic-communities-rompiendo-el-silencio/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Advocacy,Behavioral Health,Support,Treatment,Webinar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260527T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260529T235959
DTSTAMP:20260327T190721Z
CREATED:20260327T190721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260327T190721Z
UID:9309-1779840000-1780099199@tcaofwa.org
SUMMARY:NAMICON 2026
DESCRIPTION:Brought to you by NAMI: \nBe part of a compassionate community where connection fuels learning\, conversations spark ideas\, and support turns into action\nlong after the conference ends. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTransformation \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nInspiration \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCollaboration \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n→ Communities of faith \n→ Community leaders \n→ Local\, state\, and federal policymakers \n\n\n\n\n\n\n→ Service members\, veterans\, and their families \n→ Mental health care providers \n→ People with lived experience \n→ Family caregivers and supporters \n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n→ Youth and young adults \n→Voices of Communities Facing Barriers to Care \n→Mental health champions \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFind Your Community\nWhether you’re living with a mental health condition\, supporting a loved one\, or advocating for systemic change\, you’ll find a space where your experiences are valued and your voice is heard. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nIgnite Your Passion\nEngage in thought-provoking discussions\, discover new approaches to mental wellness\, and explore ways to turn your passion for mental health advocacy into meaningful action. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDrive Lasting Change\nAttend engaging sessions\, making meaningful connections with other advocates\, and gain practical tools that will help shape policy changes\, reduce stigma\, and make a lasting impact on the future of mental health. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nRegister Here: Attend: NAMICon 2026 \n“Therapeutic Court Association of Washington is sharing this event for informational purposes only and is not affiliated with\, endorsing\, or sponsoring the event.”
URL:https://tcaofwa.org/event/namicon-2026/
LOCATION:Atlanta Marriott Marquis\, 265 Peachtree Center Ave NE\, Atlanta\, GA\, 930303\, United States
CATEGORIES:Advocacy,Behavioral Health,Conference,SUD,Treatment
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