Overview
Whatever time you have to devote to a child, it’s more than that child has ever had. You don’t need any special skills. It’s all about caring and common sense.
~ Sue and Steve Forestadt, CASA Volunteers
Today, approximately 780,000 children in the US are caught up in the court and child welfare maze because they are unable to live safely at home. Imagine what it would be like to lose your parents, not because of something you did, but because they can’t—or won’t—take care of you. Now, into these children’s lives come dozens of strangers: police, foster parents, therapists, social workers, judges, lawyers, and more. Hopefully, one of these strangers is a CASA volunteer.
CASA volunteers are appointed by judges to watch over and advocate for abused and neglected children, to make sure they don’t get lost in the overburdened legal and social service system or languish in an inappropriate group or foster home. They stay with each case until it is closed, and the child is placed in a safe, permanent home. For many abused children, their CASA volunteer will be the one constant adult presence—the one adult who cares only for them.
Last year, more than 68,000 CASA volunteers served more than 240,000 abused and neglected children through 1,018 program offices. CASA volunteers have helped more than two million abused children since the first program was established in 1977.
See the results of independent research documenting the value of CASA advocacy.
Learn about current employment opportunities with National CASA and throughout the CASA/GAL network.
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Learn More About the Important Work of CASA
Volunteers from a Former Foster Youth
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To give a child a CASA is to give them a voice.
To give them a voice is to give them hope.
And to give them hope is to give them the world.
—Pamela Butler, former foster youth |
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National CASA's Services
In addition to providing leadership, training, technical assistance and grants to CASA programs across the country, the National Court Appointed Special Advocate Association stages an annual conference and promotes CASA programs through public awareness efforts.
A 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, National CASA offers consultation and resources that help start CASA programs and provides vital assistance to established programs.
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