KALISPELL, Montana (PNN) - January 8, 2026 - In Montana, a focus on restorative justice is reducing juvenile recidivism through a nonprofit program that engages rather than punishes young offenders.
The nonprofit organization believes that it is far more challenging for juvenile offenders to look their victims in the eye and explain why they behaved antisocially than it is to simply serve a suspension from school, where they are distanced from friends and mentors and often fall behind in their education.
The Center for Restorative Youth Justice (CRYJ) is not a new organization, but their influence in Montana is growing. From a background of success in the city of Kalispell, their programs eventually expanded to include Missoula County, and via another group, neighboring Flathead County as well.
By 2023, the number of Kalispell youth receiving out-of-school suspensions decreased, CRYJ recorded, to just 82 individuals compared to over 200 five years earlier. The recidivism rate dropped to just 10% compared to 23% in nearby Flathead County.
At its most elemental, CRYJ receives referrals from Youth Court probation officers, school administrators or school resource officers made on behalf of a juvenile offender who has broken the law.
CRYJ then has a conference with the youth and his or her parents or guardians and creates a tailor-made program of restorative justice. This can involve peer group discussions, victim-offender meetings, and other situations where the youth is given a forum to reestablish a relationship with the community, rather than something like a school suspension.
CRYJ believes that by limiting the overuse of exclusionary discipline and emphasizing a community-driven approach, it can help at-risk youths avoid falling behind in school, which often compounds the problems that resulted in them breaking the law in the first place.
“We spend a lot of time separating people after there has been harm, but often the deepest healing and learning and moving forward can happen when we can actually come together and talk about what happened and how to make things right.”
Those were the thoughts of Emma Schmeltzer, co-director of CRYJ’s Missoula program, who along with her colleague Kaya Juda-Nelson and University of Montana master’s student Tara Cook, receive referrals for students and organize meetings one-on-one or in groups to identify the crime and the best way to reestablish that student’s place in society after something like drug or alcohol use, bullying, assault or theft is perpetrated by the youth.
Schmeltzer and Juda-Nelson spoke with the Montana Free Press about their work in Missoula that began this year, with the latter saying that while it might sound like a lighter touch than Youth Court and probation, it doesn’t let the children off easy.
“I think that asking a (child) to sit down and actually talk about what happened and work through it and express that vulnerability and really have to have an honest conversation about what was going on for (him or her) and why (he or she) engaged in whatever criminal behavior (he or she) engaged, I think that is often much more challenging, for a teenager especially,” she said.
Montana Free Press reported that in the 2024/25 scholastic year, CRYJ received referrals for 118 youths at a program cost of $430 per person, while in nearby Flathead County, the 40 youths eventually detained and sent to Youth Court during the same period cost the taxpayers $6,815 per person.
A similar, unaffiliated organization called the Center for Youth Justice at Georgetown University is applying the Kalispell program template from CRYJ in Flathead County with more of the same success.
Called “Diversion in Action,” organizers stress another benefit of the restorative justice model: it lightens the workload for county attorneys - who have less cases coming across their desks; for school resource officers - who can spend more time keeping the school safe rather than doing paperwork for citations; and for school administrators - who can hand off behavioral issues to those who are actually trained to handle them.