Court Appointed Special Advocates® (CASA) are community volunteers, just like you, who stand up and speak out to help abused and neglected children.
Our CASA program belongs to a network of nearly 950 community-based programs that recruit, train and support citizen-volunteers to advocate for the best interests of abused and neglected children in courtrooms and communities. Learn more and get involved.
-
CASA recruits, trains and supports community volunteers who advocate on behalf of abused and neglected children in our community.
Read more. -
You do not have to be a lawyer or social worker to be a volunteer. We welcome people from all walks of life. We are simply looking for people who care about children and have common sense.
Read more. -
You don’t necessarily have to donate money to make a big impact. Showing up and showing support in a young person’s life is vital to their development and self-esteem.
Check out our upcoming events.

Supporting Children
By speaking for the child, CASA ensures that the wishes and needs of the child are not overlooked by the many competing interests at play.
Our impact this year has changed lives!
-
Children Helped
1,000+
-
Volunteer Hours
250
-
Dollars Raised
$10,000

Secondary
When a foster care case begins, the courtroom is crowded with a judge, a representative from a foster care agency, biological parents, family members, attorneys, other courtroom staff and, of course, the child.
Even though the child should be the priority in the room, the judges, caseworkers and service providers who determine the child’s future simply do not have adequate time to understand the specific needs of each and every child.
Tertiary (left)
Tertiary left is 2/3 and tertiary right is 1/3 if both are used. If only one is used, it will display the full width.
-
Accordion List
A collection with a table of contents show as an accordion list. The first item is expanded open on page load.
-
Another Item
Additional collection items display closed.
-
Program notes
When a foster care case begins, the courtroom is crowded with a judge, a representative from a foster care agency, biological parents, family members, attorneys, other courtroom staff and, of course, the child.
Tertiary (right)
Accent script headline style can be applied using the <span> tag.>
-
Collection Items
-
Set to double spacing
-
Show with custom checkmark icons
An additional description option is available for each item as well.
Testimonials
When a foster care case begins, the courtroom is crowded with a judge, a representative from a foster care agency, biological parents, family members, attorneys, other courtroom staff and, of course, the child.
-
First Last * City
When a foster care case begins, the courtroom is crowded with a judge, a representative from a foster care agency, biological parents, family members, attorneys, other courtroom staff and, of course, the child.
-
Location * Organization
Even though the child should be the priority in the room, the judges, caseworkers and service providers who determine the child’s future simply do not have adequate time to understand the specific needs of each and every child.