The Volunteer Commitment
People who give their time to CASA advocacy come from many
different places. Some have years of education and professional
experience working for children and families. Some have themselves
grown up in the foster care system and felt the sorrow of having
to move from home to home. Being a CASA volunteer does not
require any special education or background, simply the desire to help
abused and neglected children find safe, permanent homes. So what
does it take to become a CASA volunteer?
- The first step: Every volunteer passes a background check
and participates in a 30-hour training course.
- After successfully completing the training, the volunteer is
assigned his first case. A volunteer’s average time commitment
to a case is approximately 10 hours per month.
- Volunteer advocates are asked to dedicate themselves to a
case until it is closed. The average case lasts about a year and
a half.
- Advocates are supervised every step of the way and always
have resources readily available.
Click Here to
learn more about the typical duties of a CASA volunteer. |