GUEST COMMENTARY ENTARY
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month and Hill Country CASA is raising awareness of the need for more dedicated members of the community to step up and become CASA volunteers, and help end child abuse and neglect, through supporting children and their families.
CASA volunteers, or Court Appointed Special Advocates, are everyday people from all walks of life who are recruited and specially trained to advocate for children in foster care and provide a consistent, reliable adult presence for them during a difficult time in their life.
Our volunteers’ first priority is to keep families together whenever safe and possible. Foster care is only a temporary solution to the problems at hand. We need to create long-term support networks that work to care for families, make reunification a possibility, and help break the cycle for the next generation.
CASA volunteers are assigned to one child or sibling group to advocate for their best interest in court, in school and in other settings.
They get to know the child, and everyone involved in their life, such as their parents and other family members, foster parents, therapists, case workers, and teachers, to develop a realistic picture of the child’s unique situation.
They engage those important to the child and family to build a network of support around them, so that the family has access to support and resources after the case ends.
They make recommendations to the judge overseeing the child’s case, with the goal of ensuring that the child is safe, and the family has the resources, support and healthy relationships needed to heal.
Locally, Hill Country CASA in 2024 served 144 children in the foster care system in Kerr, Kendall, Bandera and Gillespie counties. This month, consider stepping up to make a difference by becoming a CASA volunteer.
There is always a need for more CASA volunteers. By becoming a volunteer, you can take your efforts beyond just awareness and do your part to help support children and families in crisis right here in our community.
When reunification is not a possibility for the children they serve, CASA volunteers work to find others that can provide a positive, healthy and loving environment. These can include relatives, friends or other adults that are important in the child’s life — keeping a child connected to their home community.
We at Hill Country CASA always hope for the day when CASA, foster care and a national month dedicated to child abuse prevention are no longer needed because all children are growing up safe, secure and supported with their families.
Until then, we will continue to seek more members of the community to join our growing movement so that we can continue to provide a CASA volunteer for every child who needs one.
To learn more about Hill Country CASA and how to get involved, we are hosting a Community Open House from 9 a.m. to noon on April 23 at 309 Earl Garrett in Kerrville, Texas. The public is invited and encouraged to come see what Hill Country CASA is about, and how you can help.
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. If you see abuse, report it to 800-252-5400 or go to www.txabusehotline.org.
If a child’s life is in danger, call 911. For details on CASA, visit www.hccasa.org.

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