|
|
 |
 |
News
|
News Archives
|
Sports
|
TTU News
|
TTU Sports Archives
|
Search
Putnam County CASA to Hold Volunteer Training
By Ellen Thurman - Program Coordinator/*VISTA Volunteer
Putnam County CASA
April 11, 2006
Putnam County CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) is a volunteer driven program. Volunteers are trained members of the community wanting to make a difference in the life of an abused or neglected child. Once trained, the volunteers become child advocates appointed by the juvenile court judge. Advocates are mandated to always keep the child’s best interests in the forefront. They have a great impact on the emotional and physical well being of the child. Volunteers are diverse as the children in which they serve. There is no special educational background required. A volunteer needs only to be 21 years of age and have to ability to pass a criminal background check.
CASAs assist the court by offering an independent perspective about the child’s current situation. They monitor the emotional health of a child and make sure the system does what is in the child’s best interest. Advocates investigate and give written reports to the courts. During the life of a case, a CASA volunteer monitors the child’s situation to make sure the child remains safe. CASA volunteers may be the only constant person the child knows as they move through the labyrinth of the child welfare system. Having this constant presence can take some of the scariness and uncertainty out of the process.
The legal system can sometimes be intimidating and scary even to the most seasoned professionals, let alone a small child who has been victimized by those closest to them. A CASA volunteer will advocate for the child the entire time they are involved with the state. The children’s cases range from those who have been neglected to babies exposed to drugs. Regardless of why they entered the foster care system, they all have one thing in common: they are in need of an advocate. The Advocate is a special person who looks out for just them.
CASA FACTS
MISSION OF PUTNAM COUNTY CASA:
To represent the best interests of abused or neglected children in court proceedings from birth to eighteen years of age.
THREE KEYS TO CASA
SERVES AS A FACT FINDER
SPEAKS ON BEHALF OF THE CHILD
ACTS AS A WATCHDOG FOR THE CHILD
THREE RESPONSIBILITIES
FOCUS ON CHILD’S BEST INTEREST
REVIEW DOCUMENTS
EXPRESS THE CHILD’S NEEDS AND WISHES
CASAs are indeed agents for change in the lives of children. Research confirms the positive impact that CASAs can have on children.
- Children with a CASA spend less time in foster care than children who are wards of the court and do not have a CASA
- Children with a CASA are less likely to become involved in the criminal justice system
- Children with a CASA receive more, and more appropriate, services such as mental health therapy, health care and education.
If you are interested in becoming a CASA volunteer or want to learn more about the role of CASA please, contact CASA at 931-520-8733 x. 138 or 159. You may also visit our website at www.putnamcasa.org.
Training will begin April 20, 2006 at the Light of Hope Ceremony. This will be held at the old court house lawn. The Light of Hope Ceremony is dedicated to the many children who live with abuse and neglect. During the month of April, hundreds of communities across the United States will come together at candle-lighting ceremonies to honor the promise of remembering the plight of America’s abused, abandoned, and neglected children.
Children deserve to be safe and everyone is responsible for keeping them safe.
Comment on this Article
|
 |
 |
|
 |
|