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API Chaya supports Asian, South Asian, and Pacific Islander survivors and families impacted by domestic violence and sexual assault, as well as human trafficking survivors from all communities. API Chaya engages communities to change societal conditions that enable domestic and sexual violence, human trafficking and all forms of oppression, especially violence against women and the most vulnerable in our society.
The Saint Paul & Ramsey County Domestic Abuse Intervention Project (SPIP) exists to eliminate violence against women and their children, and the social and system responses which condone or allow its oppression. SPIP believes that domestic abuse is a crime and every victim has the right to access the criminal justice system, receive safety through the laws which are designed to protect them and obtain the critical support and services that they and their children deserve. We further believe that regardless of gender, race, socioeconomic background, age, mental and physical ability, sexual orientation, spiritual belief, or partner/marital status, no one has the right to abuse anyone and no one deserves to be abused.
Rahab's Daughters specializes in rescue, rehabilitation & reintegration of survivors of trafficking. We offer survivors of human trafficking, shelter, clothing, education, vocational training, and the ability to create a dream Plan that empowers them to start making choices for their own lives and break free from being controlled by someone else.
The Latisha's House Foundation has a unique place in our community. It provides a safe, residential home for young women who are victims of human sex trafficking and sexual exploitation. Our overriding goal is to rescue these young survivors and restore their shattered lives to wholeness by providing:Long term housingEducational supportAssistance in recovery from substance abuseTrauma based counselingMedical interventionStructure, guidance, life-skills and job training In conjunction with more than 25 community partners, Latisha's House is committed to increasing the opportunities for these young victims to holistically build new lives with dignity, purpose, value, independence and free choice.Our second, but equally important, goal is to educate the public and our legislative leaders about the realities of human sex trafficking at all levels: local, state and national. (According to the F.B.I. this is one of the most lucrative and fastest growing crimes in our nation. It is NOT ""victimless"". It is pervasive at every level.)
CASA of Adams & Broomfield Counties is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization established in 2000 in response to the need to improve the representation of abused and neglected children living in the two counties. The Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) Program recruits, screens, trains and supervises community volunteers who are independent lay advocates and appointed by judges to advocate for child abuse victims, birth to age 21, who were physically or sexually abused, who witnessed domestic violence, or who were severely neglected by their parents or guardians and are involved in the court system. CASA volunteers bridge the gap between the limits of the court and human services and the youth they all faithfully serve.