| CASA- Court Appointed Special Advocate |
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Overview
In 1977, a Seattle judge conceived the idea of using trained community volunteers to speak for the best interests of abused and neglected children in court. So successful was this program that soon judges across the country began utilizing citizen advocates. In 1990, the US Congress encouraged the expansion of CASA programs with passage of the Victims of Child Abuse Act.
Today, we have grown to a network of more than 50,000 volunteers that serve 225,000 abused and neglected children through 900+ local program offices nationwide. Our advocates, also known as volunteer guardians, ad litem in some jurisdictions, are appointed members of the court. Judges rely on the information these trusted advocates present.
Our Goal by 2008
In the next two years, our goal is to help an additional 100,000 children beyond those we already serve. This is just one step along the way to providing a CASA volunteer for every child who needs one. It is a very ambitious goal, and we cannot do it alone. But we have a plan to get there—by:
- Evaluating our organizational structure and staffing to ensure that we are set up in the most efficient and effective way possible.
- Targeting promotional efforts in areas of the country where the need is the greatest and among groups of individuals most likely to volunteer.
- Focusing our efforts to recruit and retain volunteers of color in several large cities, with an emphasis in 2006 on African-American volunteers.
- Unifying the power of the CASA network. We want to make our corps of 50,000+ advocates feel more connected with each other and with National CASA, which will help with retention, recruitment, awareness and development throughout the country.
- Implementing a fundraising plan that will enable us to initiate and continue the projects outlined above.
For more information about the charity, click here http://www.nationalcasa.org