(a) Diversion strategies include:
(1) requiring a child to participate in a program, including:
- (A) a court-approved teen court program operated by a service provider;
- (B) a school-related program;
- (C) an educational program, including an alcohol awareness program, a tobacco awareness program, or a drug education program;
- (D) a rehabilitation program; or
- (E) a self-improvement program, including a program relating to self-esteem, leadership, self-responsibility, empathy, parenting, parental responsibility, manners, violence avoidance, anger management, life skills, wellness, or dispute resolution;
(2) referring a child to a service provider for services, including:
- (A) at-risk youth services under Subchapter D, Chapter 137, Human Resources Code;
- (B) juvenile case manager services under Article 45A.451;
- (C) work and job skills training, including job interviewing and work preparation;
- (D) academic monitoring or tutoring, including preparation for a high school equivalency examination administered under Section 7.111, Education Code;
- (E) community-based services;
- (F) mental health screening and clinical assessment;
- (G) counseling, including private or in-school counseling; or
- (H) mentoring services;
(3) requiring a child to:
- (A) participate in mediation or other dispute resolution processes;
- (B) submit to alcohol or drug testing; or
- (C) substantially comply with a course of treatment prescribed by a physician or other licensed medical or mental health professional; and
(4) requiring a child, by court order, to:
- (A) pay restitution not to exceed $100 for an offense against property under Title 7, Penal Code;
- (B) perform not more than 20 hours of community service; or
- (C) perform any other reasonable action determined by the court.
(b) A diversion strategy may be imposed under:
- (1) an intermediate diversion under Article 45A.509;
- (2) a diversion by a justice or judge under Article 45A.510; or
- (3) a system of graduated sanctions for certain school offenses under Section 37.144, Education Code.
(c) A diversion strategy under this subchapter may not require a child who is a home-schooled student, as defined by Section 29.916, Education Code, to:
- (1) attend an elementary or secondary school; or
- (2) use an educational curriculum other than the curriculum selected by the parent.
Added by Acts 2025, 89th Leg., R.S., Ch. 204 (H.B. 1620), Sec. 5.027(a), eff. September 1, 2025.