What to Expect If You Are the Person Who Caused Harm
This process is not about shaming you. It is about accountability, honesty, and making things right.
How You Got Here
You were referred to RRDRJ because someone believes you are capable of:
- Taking responsibility for what happened
- Understanding the impact of your actions
- Making meaningful repair instead of just being punished
This might have come through police, a school, the court, or a community referral.
1
An Initial Conversation
You’ll meet with a trained restorative justice facilitator. This meeting is:
- One-on-one
- Confidential (within legal limits)
- About understanding what happened and where you’re at
You’ll be asked things like:
- What happened?
- What were you thinking at the time?
- What have you thought about since?
- Who do you think has been affected?
- Are you willing to take responsibility?
Important:
If you are not ready to take responsibility, the process will not move forward.
If the process continues, you’ll be prepared carefully before anything else happens.
That means:
- You’ll know exactly who will be involved
- You’ll know what questions will be asked
- You’ll have support people identified if needed
- You’ll be helped to speak honestly without becoming defensive or shutting down
Step 2: Preparation
Depending on the situation, this might include:
- A restorative conference
- A circle process
- Written accountability (letters, reflections)
- Non-contact options where appropriate
If there is a conference:
- Everyone speaks one at a time
- There is no yelling, blaming, or attacking
- Facilitators hold the structure so things don’t spiral
- The focus stays on impact, responsibility, and repair
Step 3: The Restorative Process
Together, an agreement is created that answers: “What needs to happen to repair the harm?”
Agreements might include:
- Apologies (verbal or written)
- Repairing or replacing damaged property
- Community service
- Counselling or support programs
- Education or skill-building
- Actions that rebuild trust
Agreements must be:
- Realistic
- Achievable
- Meaningful to the person harmed
- Something you genuinely commit to completing
Step 4: Making an Agreement
You’re not left to figure it out alone.
- Someone checks in on progress
- Support or mentorship may be offered
- Adjustments can be made if something truly isn’t working
- Completion is confirmed before the file is closed
If this was a police or court referral, completion is reported back.
Step 5: Follow-Through and Support