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The San Diego Restorative Justice
Mediation Program (RJMP) was founded in 1993 as the
Victim Offender Reconciliation Program (VORP). Pearl
Hartz, a retired school teacher and guidance counselor,
was trained in the VORP program in Fresno, California
and came to San Diego to start a similar Program.
The program was accepted well by the community, and
by 1999, using a team of volunteer mediators, it was
receiving as many as 140 case referrals a year. In 1998,
the program hosted a Restorative Justice conference
in San Diego, featuring Police Chief Jerry Sanders (now
Mayor of San Diego) and Presiding Judge of Juvenile
Court James Milliken (now retired), and Alan Crogan,
Chief Probation Officer (now retired).
In 2003, Ms. Hartz retired as Executive Director of
the RJMP. For the next four years, the Program went
through many transitions of leadership, both in the
office of Executive Director and on the Program's Working
Board. By the summer of 2007, relationships with county
officials were almost non-existent.
In the fall of 2007, the Board asked Ms. Hartz to come
out of retirement to re-start the Program. A consultant
was hired to help re-establish relationships in the
communities of San Diego and to raise the necessary
funds to hire an Executive Director, Case Manager, and
a Fund Raiser.
By Spring of 2008, the Program was able to establish
its first Advisory Committee. Through that Committee,
an alliance was forged with National University. The
university has for several years wanted to host a Center
for Alternative Dispute Resolution, and the RJMP is
to be the first part of that Center.
By mid-2008, the Program was stable enough that Ms.
Hartz was able to step down from the position of Executive
Director. Ben Conarroe was contracted as Interim Executive
Director in June, and the organization began its search
for a permanent leader.
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