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CASA Valentine’s Day

 

 

CASA

Every Child Deserves a Loving Home This Valentine’s Day

Mount Pleasant, Texas – While many children eagerly await candy and cards this Valentine’s Day, children in the child welfare system wait for something much more permanent – a loving home.

Last year, more than 17,000 children were removed from their homes due to evidence of abuse or neglect and placed in the child welfare system. These children are often placed far away from their friends and family and forced to navigate the system on their own.

Volunteers with CASA of Titus, Camp and Morris Counties help these children find loving homes as quickly as possible by speaking up for their best interests in court.

CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate) volunteers are everyday members of the community that are specially trained and appointed by judges to advocate for the best interests of children in foster care. A CASA volunteer’s main goal is to help move the child out of the temporary foster care system and into a safe, permanent home as quickly as possible.

CASA of Titus, Camp and Morris Counties is one of the 72 CASA programs in Texas that recruit, screen and train these volunteers to advocate for children in court.

“If children in foster care don’t have a consistent adult to guide them, it’s easy for them to get lost in the chaos of the child welfare system,” said Michelle Cobern, Executive Director of CASA of Titus, Camp and Morris Counties. “Our volunteers make sure this doesn’t happen, by speaking up for these children in court and ensuring that their voices are heard.”

CASA Volunteers get to know the child personally and speak with everyone involved in the child’s life. They learn about the child’s physical, educational and emotional needs so that they can make well-informed and holistic placement recommendations to the court.

“CASA Volunteers advocate first and foremost for reunification with the child’s immediate family,” said Cobern. “But when that’s not an option, they work to place the child in a loving adoptive home.”

In 2015, more than 47,300 Texas children were in the child welfare system. Roughly half of these children did not have a CASA volunteer, and many of them were left to navigate the system without a consistent adult to help them.

At this time, 41 CASA volunteers serve 86 children in the child welfare system in Titus, Camp and Morris Counties, but 13 children still need a volunteer to advocate for their best interests.

“Every child deserves to have a safe, permanent and loving home this Valentine’s Day,” said Cobern. “Make a difference in the life of an abused or a neglected child by becoming a CASA volunteer.”

For more information, call 903-717-8940 or visit www.casatcm.org. The next CASA Volunteer Training is scheduled to begin February 22, 2016.