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What is CASA?
CASA stands for Court
Appointed Special Advocates. A national program, CASA trains volunteers
to help abused and neglected children in the juvenile court system. A
CASA volunteer assesses the child's situation and reports to the judge
what is in the best interest of the child. Our goal is to advocate for
a safe, permanent home for each child.
How Bartow CASA helps
After children have
been removed from their home and entered the Georgia court system, a
judge can appoint a CASA volunteer. The CASA volunteer gathers
information about the child's situation, background, family, friends
and acquaintances, attends court proceedings, and makes a
recommendation to the judge to help the court make a sound
decision about the child's future.
Research suggests that
children who have been assigned CASA volunteers tend to spend less time
in the custody of the court and less time within the foster care
system, than those who do not have CASA's.
Research also
demonstrates that these children can overcome their trauma if the
caring adults in their lives help find a safe, permanent home in which
they can heal. Those who do not have this special advocate in their
lives often experience school failure, joblessness, welfare dependency,
criminality, mental illness and often become abusers themselves.
CASA volunteers
are the most intensely trained of all Advocates' volunteers, with over
30 hours of class time plus experience in DFCS, Juvenile Court, and so
on.
To find out more about becoming a Bartow CASA volunteer, contact Ava Lipscomb, Program Director, at 770-386-1060.
Visit the Georgia CASA web page: www.gacasa.org
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